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Avatar for MOV Call & Haul
MOV Call & Haul
4.9(
13
)
Waste, Junk, Building Materials and Debris - Remove and Haul

Serving Shawnee, OH and surrounding areas

Approved

In business since 2025

Free estimates

Small jobs welcome

"I needed 2 RVs removed from a property. After trying multiple different business, I found MOV Call and Haul and immediately they figured out a way to assist. Not only were the RVs removed, the property was completely cleared- above and beyond any expectation I had. The service was competitively priced and Mr. Alvarez was a complete professional. I would most highly recommend his services, especially if you need something done quickly and thoroughly."
Haul Patio Deck Away
Patio Deck Piled Up
Haul small debris
Yard Debris Haul
Haul Refrigerator

+1

Response time11 hrs
Response rate85%
13 neighbors recently requested a quote
Avatar for Yeti Hauling LLC
Yeti Hauling LLC
New to Angi
Waste, Junk, Building Materials and Debris - Remove and Haul

Serving Shawnee, OH and surrounding areas

Approved

Free estimates

Small jobs welcome

Credit card accepted

Yeti Hauling is a locally owned and family-operated junk removal and dumpster rental company serving Newark, Heath, Granville, and the surrounding Central Ohio area. We specialize in junk removal, garage cleanouts, estate cleanouts, furniture removal, property cleanups, and dumpster rentals. Our goal is simple: provide reliable service, fair pricing, and treat every customer’s property with care and respect. Whether you need a single item removed or a full property cleanout, we’re here to make the process easy and stress-free.

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Leaf Removal questions, answered by experts

According to the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), hazardous waste is generally classified into four main categories:

1. Characteristic Wastes: These exhibit at least one of four hazardous traits: ignitability (flammable, like gasoline), corrosivity (can rust or decompose materials, like car batteries), reactivity (unstable and can explode, like aerosol cans), or toxicity (harmful when ingested, like lead-based paint).

2. Listed Wastes: These are specific wastes from manufacturing and industrial processes that the EPA has officially designated as hazardous. They include byproducts from processes that use solvents, pesticides, and other chemicals.

3. Universal Wastes: These are commonly generated hazardous items that are subject to streamlined regulations. Examples include batteries, pesticides, mercury-containing equipment (e.g., bulbs), and some lamps.

4. Mixed Wastes: This category includes waste that contains both hazardous and radioactive components, making it subject to regulation by both the EPA and the Nuclear Regulatory Commission.

You can paint over lead paint, or “encapsulate” it with a special paint that includes an ingredient called an encapsulant. The EPA approves encapsulation as a lead paint removal method as long as the paint remains undisturbed. Standard types of paint without an “encapsulant” from the big box stores or hardware stores do not meet EPA standards for remediation of lead-based paint.

If lead is detected in a property, steps should include arranging for professional removal or containment, notifying all occupants, and implementing interim safety measures to reduce exposure.

Lead toxicity comes from inhaling lead or consuming it. Before the 1980s, when the government banned lead from consumer use, it could be found in paint, plumbing, pipes, ceramics, and even gasoline. Lead paint is toxic for the same reason lead itself is toxic, which is why lead poisoning from paint presents the same as lead poisoning from water or food sources, with a slight increase in respiratory symptoms vs. digestive symptoms. Lead paint is most dangerous when it’s old and peeling, cracking, or otherwise disturbed. This increases the concentration in the air and, therefore, in breathable air. 

While not all homes built before 1978 contain lead paint, enough do, so you’ll still want to test to be on the safe side. The federal government banned lead-based paint for homes in 1978, but your state may have banned lead before that time. Around 24% of homes built between 1960 and 1977 contained lead-based paint, while 87% of homes built before 1940 contained lead-based paint.

The Shawnee, OH homeowners’ guide to leaf removal services

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