As explained in a prior alert, Vermont’s first-in-the-nation household hazardous waste extended producer responsibility law required that a single stewardship organization register to represent all affected manufacturers and submit a single collection plan for approval by 25 July 2025. No stewardship organization satisfied that requirement. Accordingly, Vermont’s Agency of Natural Resources (the ANR) has announced that it will adopt and administer the first collection program for covered household hazardous products sold in the state.
In doing so, the ANR will charge each manufacturer the prorated costs of plan administration and oversight costs. It will also charge a hazardous-waste-reduction assessment of 10% of the plan’s total cost to be deposited in the Solid Waste Management Assistance Account of the Waste Management Assistance Fund. The fund will be used to provide grants to municipalities and small businesses to prevent pollution and reduce hazardous waste generation. While the ANR has not yet announced how it will allocate costs, the law specifically provides that the ANR may do so based on a manufacturer’s sales of covered household hazardous products nationally prorated to the population of Vermont.
Looking ahead, a manufacturer who sells in Vermont a covered household hazardous product, whether through brick-and-mortar locations or through online sales, must register with the ANR on or before 1 November 2025. After that, a manufacturer who has not registered cannot sell, offer for sale, or deliver to a retailer for subsequent sale a covered household hazardous product. Examples of covered products include fuel additives, cleaning products, glues, paint removers, spray paint, nail polish, nicotine vaping devices, and gas cylinders that contain flammable or toxic ingredients.