There's that "t" word again
of course bottom paint has some toxicity but I challenge anyone to show me ANY credible scientific evidence of any significant leaching or ground water pollution (as Terry describes)- EVER! ANYWHERE! Anyone who says what Terry has is just ignorant or has some other agenda. No offense, Terry - this is just not true even though a lot of people will perpetuate this myth.This residual dust is not water soluble and the amount involved is of no consequence even if it was.I was there when it was discovered that Boeing Plant II in Georgetown (Seattle) pumped literally millions of gallons of concentrated chromic, nitric, and sulfuric acids into a leaking (and ultimately nonexistant) concrete underground storage tank in the 1970s until 1982. They finally did an accounting of their waste products. In a search for the by then missing tank, they discovered that the foundation of the building was gone in places due to the corrosion.The soil there is sandy and it barely got noticed by the EPA or the state DOE (ecology - not energy). If anything would ever show up as a leaching problem, that would. To my knowledge, they were never even fined although they now have treatment wells to supposedly "fix" the problem. Just do not be stupid and make a lot of dust, breath it, or rinse it down a drain or into a waterway - just like any other paint or sanding process. Other than that, it is not a problem going into regular garbage. I use old carpet under my boat and just throw it away when I am done scraping, sanding, rinsing and painting.