The legislature finds
that land disposal and incineration of solid and hazardous waste
can be both harmful to the environment and costly to those who
must dispose of the waste. In order to address this problem in
the most cost-effective and environmentally sound manner, and to
implement the highest waste management priority as articulated in
RCW 70.95.010 and 70.105.150, public and private efforts should
focus on reducing the generation of waste. Waste reduction can
be achieved by encouraging voluntary efforts to redesign
industrial, commercial, production, and other processes to result
in the reduction or elimination of waste by-products and to
maximize the in-process reuse or reclamation of valuable spent
material.
In the interest of protecting the public health, safety, and
the environment, the legislature declares that it is the policy
of the state of Washington to encourage reduction in the use of
hazardous substances and reduction in the generation of hazardous
waste whenever economically and technically practicable.
The legislature finds that hazardous wastes are generated by
numerous different sources including, but not limited to, large
and small business, households, and state and local government. The legislature further finds that a goal against which efforts
at waste reduction may be measured is essential for an effective
hazardous waste reduction program. The Pacific Northwest
hazardous waste advisory council has endorsed a goal of reducing,
through hazardous substance use reduction and waste reduction
techniques, the generation of hazardous waste by fifty percent by
1995. The legislature adopts this as a policy goal for the state
of Washington. The legislature recognizes that many individual
businesses have already reduced the generation of hazardous waste
through appropriate hazardous waste reduction techniques. The
legislature also recognizes that there are some basic industrial
processes which by their nature have limited potential for
significantly reducing the use of certain raw materials or
substantially reducing the generation of hazardous wastes. Therefore, the goal of reducing hazardous waste generation by
fifty percent cannot be applied as a regulatory requirement.
[1990 c 114 § 1; 1988 c 177 § 1.]
NOTES:
Severability -- 1990 c 114: See RCW 70.95E.900.