Certified Medical Waste Disposal Providers Serving Everett
Every provider in our Everett network operates in compliance with Washington State’s biomedical and dangerous waste frameworks. Medical Waste Pros works exclusively with providers meeting Snohomish Health District biomedical waste requirements under the county’s Board of Health Code — and with the Washington State Department of Ecology’s Dangerous Waste Regulations (WAC 173-303) for hazardous pharmaceutical and chemical waste streams. Use our free Medical Waste Wizard to identify the right service type and frequency for your facility.
Washington State and Snohomish Health District Regulations Governing Medical Waste in Everett
Washington’s medical waste framework is genuinely dual-track, and understanding which track applies to which waste stream is the foundation of compliance in Everett.
Biomedical waste — sharps, human blood and blood products, cultures and stocks, pathological waste, and animal waste — is regulated at the local level by the Snohomish Health District under authority derived from RCW 70A.228. All hospitals, clinics, dental offices, medical laboratories, nursing facilities, and veterinary practices in Snohomish County must maintain a written Biomedical Waste Management Plan. All biomedical waste must be treated — by autoclave, incineration, retort, or another approved method — before disposal. Untreated waste may not be compacted. Pathological waste (human biopsy materials, tissues, and anatomical parts from surgery or autopsy) must be disposed of by incineration or interment. Untreated liquid biomedical waste may be discharged to a sanitary sewer only with approval from the jurisdictional sewer utility. Storage areas must be secured, marked with biohazard signage visible at 25 feet, and kept clean and free of vectors. Records must be retained for three years.
Dangerous waste — including Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA)-listed and state-only hazardous pharmaceutical waste — is regulated by the Washington State Department of Ecology under WAC 173-303. Washington’s framework is notable in two respects: it includes state-only dangerous waste classifications that go beyond federal RCRA, and in 2020 it adopted special requirements for the management of dangerous waste pharmaceuticals (WAC 173-303-555) based on the Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) Subpart P standards. Hazardous pharmaceutical waste must not enter biomedical waste streams. Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA)-regulated controlled substances require DEA-compliant reverse distributor disposal under the non-retrievable standard.
Federal overlays include the OSHA Bloodborne Pathogen Standard (29 CFR § 1910.1030) — see our guide to the OSHA Bloodborne Pathogens Standard — HIPAA and HITECH (see Does HIPAA Apply to Medical Waste?), the Needlestick Safety and Prevention Act, and DOT Hazardous Materials Regulations (49 CFR Parts 171–180) for all off-site transport. For a full overview of agency roles, see our article on who regulates medical waste disposal.
Everett Shredding Company Network Statistics
Commercial vs Residential Shredding in Everett
Average Local Shredding Order Size
Businesses/large organizations and high-volume residential customers are matched to Everett-area shredding companies with the required certifications and service offerings.
| Shredding Customer | Average # of Boxes |
|---|---|
| Business and Government | 1.32 |
| Residential and Home Office | 1.4 |
| Small Volume Drop-Off | 1.23 |
| Local Shredding Drop-Off Sites | 2 |
Most Popular Industries Served
| Healthcare Systems |
| Medical and Surgical Centers |
| Property Management Companies |
Industry Spotlight: Occupational Health and Aerospace Employer Clinics in Everett
Boeing’s Everett campus is the largest single employment site in Snohomish County. Like any major industrial employer, Boeing operates an on-site medical clinic that provides occupational health services that generate biomedical waste subject to the full requirements of the Snohomish Health District’s biomedical waste code. Beyond Boeing, the aerospace supplier network clustered around Paine Field employs thousands of additional workers whose on-site or contracted occupational health programs generate similar waste streams.
Medical Waste Pros connects Everett’s occupational health clinics and industrial employer facilities with local providers who understand Washington’s biomedical waste framework and offer service programs scaled to lower-volume, high-frequency industrial health settings. For a broader look at compliance across facility types, see our guide to disposing of medical waste: the industry-by-industry breakdown.
Our Most Commonly Requested Medical Waste Disposal Services in Everett
Our network of compliant providers handles virtually any medical waste disposal need across Snohomish County. For a full breakdown by facility type, see our guide to disposing of medical waste: the industry-by-industry breakdown.
Biohazardous Waste Disposal for Everett Healthcare Facilities
Biohazardous waste — blood-soaked materials, surgical waste, contaminated patient care items, and infectious materials generated in patient care — flows from Providence Regional’s two campuses, the outpatient surgery centers and specialty clinics surrounding the hospital, and the network of urgent care and primary care practices serving Snohomish County. Under the Snohomish Health District code, all biomedical waste must be treated before disposal and may not be compacted untreated. Our Everett providers offer scheduled pickup programs with containers supplied at each visit and full manifest documentation. See our article on regulated medical waste categories and examples for a clear breakdown of what requires this service.
Pharmaceutical Waste Disposal for Everett Facilities
Washington State’s dual-track pharmaceutical waste framework makes accurate waste classification essential for hospitals, research laboratories, and other Everett generators. Standard non-dangerous pharmaceutical waste follows the biomedical waste pathway under Snohomish Health District oversight. Dangerous waste pharmaceuticals — including Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA)-listed P- and U-listed compounds and Washington’s state-only dangerous waste classifications — are separately regulated by the Department of Ecology under WAC 173-303-555. These must not enter biomedical red bag streams. Our Everett pharmaceutical waste disposal services include containers, scheduled pickup, controlled substance disposal, and segregation guidance. For a breakdown of hazardous pharmaceutical classifications, see our article on hazardous pharmaceutical waste as defined by RCRA.
Chemotherapy Waste Disposal for Everett Oncology Programs
The Providence Regional Cancer Partnership offers comprehensive outpatient cancer care in Everett, generating trace chemotherapy waste, hazardous pharmaceutical residue, and contaminated IV materials from infusion programs serving patients across northwest Washington. Patients requiring more complex care are referred to Seattle’s major cancer centers, but a substantial portion of ongoing infusion and treatment takes place locally. Trace chemotherapy waste must be segregated from standard biomedical waste and transported under the Department of Transportation’s (DOT) hazardous materials protocols. Our chemotherapy waste disposal services match Everett oncology programs of every scale with local providers certified for chemotherapy-specific transport and treatment.
Long-Term Care, Hospice, and Behavioral Health Facility Waste Disposal in Everett
Providence Regional’s Pacific Campus includes dedicated inpatient substance use treatment and acute rehabilitation. These facilities generate steady, lower-volume streams of sharps, pharmaceutical, and biohazardous waste from medication administration, wound care, and patient care procedures. Washington’s Snohomish Health District code applies to long-term care and hospice facilities with the same requirements as acute hospitals — written Biomedical Waste Management Plan, treatment before disposal, full manifest documentation. Our Everett providers offer service programs sized and priced for these generators. For more on waste management in senior care settings, see our article on senior care facility medical waste disposal.
Medical Waste Pros makes it straightforward to find a compliant local provider who understands Washington’s dual-track biomedical and dangerous waste framework, the Snohomish Health District’s specific biomedical waste requirements, and the particular waste streams of Everett’s manufacturing-driven healthcare ecosystem. For tips on building a more efficient program, see our guide to optimizing your medical waste disposal program. Contact us today for same-day competitive quotes from vetted providers serving Everett and the northern Puget Sound region.
