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Under Florida law, it is illegal to discard nickel-cadmium or small sealed lead acid rechargeable batteries or products
containing such rechargeable batteries in the trash. The batteries must be recycled or sent to a facility permitted to
dispose of those batteries. This prohibition applies to every resident as well as every business, institutional, government,
industrial, commercial, communications or medical facility in the state.
Florida lawmakers passed the prohibition because of growing concern over the effects of the toxic heavy metals cadmium and
lead on public health and the environment. Cadmium and lead can enter the environment from several sources including solid
waste landfills and municipal waste combustors. Once in the environment both can accumulate in food crops and edible fish
as well as appear in drinking water and the air we breathe. In humans and animals, long term exposure to these metals can
result in brain, lung and kidney damage and is suspected to cause cancer. Lead exposure is especially harmful to unborn and
very young children and can result in premature birth, slow growth and decreased intelligence.
This current ban enhances the existing solid waste disposal ban on vehicular (car, truck, boat) lead-acid batteries in effect
since January of 1989. A similar disposal ban on mercuric oxide batteries has been in effect since January of 1994. The DEP
estimates that without this new comprehensive ban on the disposal of rechargeable batteries more than 100 tons of cadmium and
400 tons of lead could be disposed of in the trash each year as a result of Floridians discarding rechargeable batteries.
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