(quoting someone else first; Gerald Koch, I think)
>Such metals are not going to escape into the environment. <
From my time spent doing drinking water, waste water, and sewage analysis, I can tell you that statement is not correct. Sewage treatment plants can treat for hexavalent Chromium, but only if they know that some is coming ahead of time and have the chemicals ready.
A fair point, but only relevant to the serious nasties like Cr6 that can't be routinely treated out, right? From the perspective of the septic tank, as long as the metals turn into something insoluble and have settling time, they're going to end up in the pumping truck rather than the leach field.
Of *course* anything that will mess up a sewage treatment plant (or get through the treatment and become an uncontained pollutant) needs not to go in a septic tank, because the tank contents will eventually go through treatment. But if we're talking about "standard" b&w processing---developer, stop, fixer---then I'm pretty sure the only substance at issue for this discussion is silver. (Selenium becomes relevant for people who tone with it, but I have no idea how it behaves in a wastewater plant---personally, if I used it, I'd take the results to hazmat.)
Ammonium and potassium dichromates are a flavour of hexavalent chromium, if I'm not mistaken, which makes this discussion relevant for people who do cyanotypes. I'm not sure what happens to the chromium in the course of the process, though---does it end up in the rinse water, or stay in the paper, or something more complex than either?
-NT