Healthy Sewers
When rinsed down the drain or flushed down a toilet, fats, oils, and grease (FOG); prescription and over-the-counter medications; personal hygiene products; and household hazardous waste can wreak havoc on the sewer system.
Overflowing sewers are often caused by blockages resulting from FOG in the pipelines, causing damage to homes and businesses and negatively impacting public health.
Wastewater treatment facilities are not designed to remove or treat all chemicals present in prescription or over-the-counter medications. These chemicals in wastewater may contaminate surface water, negatively impacting the environment and wildlife.
Take these simple steps to help us maintain a healthy sewer, ensuring the safety of our communities and environment.
DON’T BE A PAIN IN THE DRAIN
Fats, Oils, and Grease (FOG)
To properly dispose of FOG products, let the FOG cool and then place it into your organic waste bin. Also, make sure to wipe food scraps from plates and pans and dump them in the compost or organic waste bin, rather than your garbage disposal.
Personal Hygiene Products
Throw flushable wipes, cotton pads and swabs, and other personal hygiene products into the proper waste bin. While “flushable” wipes infer that they can be flushed down the toilet, these wipes and other personal hygiene products get hung up on pumps and in pipes, which cause major blockage in sewer systems.
Household Hazardous Waste
Disposing of your hazardous materials such as household chemicals, cleaning paint, cement, stucco, and pool grout down a drain will not only impact your sewer pipes but also EMWD’s ability to provide safe and reliable wastewater service. Please clean tools properly and take all household hazardous waste to a collection facility or collection event.
You may contact Riverside County Department of Waste Resources — Household Hazardous Waste at (800) 304-2226 or at www.rcwaste.org/hhw for more information.
Learn more about protecting your community sewers: English Español
DON’T RUSH TO FLUSH MEDICATIONS
Dispose of unused medications using a pharmaceutical or homemade drug disposal pouch.
EMWD recommends that customers adhere to Riverside County Department of Waste Resources’ guidelines for the proper disposal of medications, which can be found online at rcwaste.org/wasteguide/medication.
Customers may also use a commercial drug disposal pouch similar to the Deterra Drug Deactivation System. The Deterra Drug Deactivation System is an environmentally friendly, cost-effective product that safely deactivates unused pill, liquid, or patch medications. Learn more at deterrasystem.com.
The U.S Food and Drug Administration provides steps to making your own at-home drug disposal pouch.
Make an at-home drug disposal pouch
Collect
Without crushing tablets or capsules simply mix your medications with dirt, kitty litter, or used coffee grounds
Mix
Place the mixture in a sealable zip-top plastic bag
Trash
Throw the sealed bag away in your household trash
Return unused medications to a pharmacy
Contact your local pharmacy to see how and where you can return unused pill, liquid, or patch medications.
Find a disposal location by visiting the Riverside County Department of Waste Management website by clicking the button below: