The Chemical Management Center (CMC) is YSU's dedicated facility for receiving, storage and transport of laboratory chemicals. It is also home to the campus Hazardous Waste Central Accumulation Area. The CMC provides support and guidance in helping to safely conduct laboratory work in compliance with environmental, health and safety regulations, policies and procedures. CMC staff strive to provide laboratory safety training & resources for the campus community.
330-941-1327
124 Lincoln Ave.
Youngstown, OH. 44503
Only authorized personnel will have access to storage areas of the CMC. Visitors must be accompanied-by or receive permission from a full-time CMC staff member in order to access any area other than the general office/reception (room #202).
Requests to ship samples, etc. shall be submitted by sending an email to cmc@ysu.edu.
Normally, the CMC can process shipment requests within one business day. For urgent, same-day shipment requests, the request must be sent to the CMC by 10:00 AM.
Please visit ysu.edu/ehs/cmc/chemical-orders for a detailed outline of chemical purchasing procedures.
Before ordering chemicals for your laboratory, contact CMC staff for help in searching the Chemical Inventory System for surplus material, which may already be on-campus & in storage.
Laboratory chemicals must be ordered using account code 701115: Instructional Chemical Supplies. This will ensure workflow routing for chemical hygiene review, inventory stock-check, CMC delivery, handling and chemical inventory/SDS entry. During this process, EHS will assist in determining applicable regulatory requirements (such as DOT, DHS, DEA, EPA), as well as any additional storage, handling or disposal considerations.
Orders may be picked up at the CMC during normal operating business hours. The order owner or end-user should schedule delivery or pickup of their order by calling or emailing the CMC. If pick up is not possible, the end user must make delivery arrangements for a time they will be present to receive the chemical.
Chemical containers must be placed in their original packaging/shipping container and re-sealed with packaging tape for transport. If this is not feasible, appropriate transport vessels and carts must be used. Stairs must be avoided when transporting chemicals; please use the Chemical Management Center elevator.
All hazardous chemicals delivered to the CMC are barcoded and entered into a chemical inventory database. Each individual chemical container is assigned a unique barcode. This includes orders with multiple containers of the same chemical. Inventory information includes chemical name, quantity/unit of measurement, building and room number where the chemical will be stored. The corresponding safety data sheet will be linked to the chemical inventory container record.
YSU's Chemical Safety & Inventory database can be accessed at ysu.chemicalsafety.com. Login information can be obtained by emailing ehs@ysu.edu or calling 330-941-3700. A Chemical Inventory walkthrough guide can be found here.
Along with providing digital SDS linked to the chemical inventory, the CMC also maintains an electronic SDS repository via SharePoint.
Up-to-date SDS for chemicals not previously used or stored in the lab will be distributed to the responsible faculty/end-user via email attachment and physical copy, accompanying the chemical delivery.
Faculty lab managers (PI's, teaching lab coordinators) are responsible for maintaining their local chemical inventory of the labs for which they oversee. They must also ensure the current SDS are reviewed & readily accessible by all lab personnel, during and prior-to beginning work with the materials. Labs can maintain their local inventory through Quartzy, the lab management workflow/request system, or via spreadsheet, logbook, binder, etc. Any changes to the lab inventory must be communicated to CMC personnel, in order to update the web-based master compliance & inventory database tracking system.
Lab managers are also responsible for ensuring chemical container labels are maintained following CMC receiving or delivery. This includes tracking, documenting or denoting on the label: date received, opened and expiration date for any time-sensitive or peroxide-forming chemicals. They are also responsible for ensuring that all labels and barcodes remain affixed and in good, legible condition. All transfer vessels and secondary containers, such as jugs, amber glass jars, dropper & wash/squeeze bottles must also be labeled to identify the chemical or reagent as the contents of the container.
Lab managers are responsible for all aspects of waste management in the lab. They must know what chemicals are present, as well as by-products and intermediates produced by the process that are needed to classify the type of waste. Waste streams must not be mixed with one another without EHS approval. Never pour hazardous chemicals or waste down the drain. Please consult EHS or CMC personnel for help in determining whether a waste is non-hazardous and safe for drain disposal.
All containers holding waste must also be labeled to identify their components. The contents of each waste container must be listed on the label.
This includes each chemical/compound full name (no abbreviations or formulas) and its approximate quantity (percent, volume or mass) and concentration, when applicable. The label must also display the waste accumulation start date, building, department, room number and PI/responsible faculty generating the waste. Physical copies of stick-on labels are available from the CMC, along with additional label templates, write-on, fillable and printable labels. A fillable pdf waste label can be accessed for print or download here.
Hazardous waste Satellite Accumulation Areas (SAA's) are designated in labs generating chemical waste.
These locations must remain unobstructed, with signage to indicate hazardous waste accumulation, as well as all waste containers stored within secondary containment. Waste stored in these locations must total less than 55 gallons. Chemical spill-response kits are also placed in an accessible location within the lab and must not be obstructed or used for any reason other than a chemical spill. If a container holding hazardous waste is not in good condition or begins to leak, the lab manager must make sure the material is transferred to a compatible container in good condition.
A container holding hazardous waste must always be closed during storage, except when it is necessary to add or remove waste.
Waste Containers may NOT be filled completely to the top. Containers must only be filled to ¾ full and stored in the satellite accumulation area for CMC pick up.
CMC staff will determine & coordinate the regular collection of routine chemical waste and empty bottles from actively-generating labs. Collection schedule and frequency will be determined by CMC staff based on quantity/need and in coordination with the lab manager.
Under no circumstances can waste be dropped-off or left unattended outside any CMC entrance door, elevator access door, inside the CMC elevator, or on any floor of the CMC.