Buy some plastic five gallon construction buckets with lids, some 80 grit sandpaper and the blackest plastic spray paint you can find, and take an afternoon to lightly sand the buckets and lids exteriors.
Once sanded, paint the buckets completely black, as deeply as you are able to achieve.
Keep one for developers, one for stop baths/acids and a third for fixers.
Toners are used in smaller amounts so use a gallon milk jug, also painted black, for this material.
You can leave the lids of the buckets loose, just take a small drill and punch a pair of holes 180° apart and use cotters or cut rods, metal or wood or plastic to hold the lids in place, sitting on top of the bucket, no gaps, but
loose enough for vapor/moisture to escape.
Secure the containers, so they won't blow away/ tilt over, to the area you want it, tar driveways are great, but brick, stone, or cast stone works well, too.
Lastly, take a hot glue and on any perceived low spot on top of each lid, glue a soft, all cotton rag, old tee shirts are good, wide and long enough to go over the sides of the lidded buckets, to wick away rain/sprinkler water that the lids would otherwise hold, preventing mosquitos.
Punch a hole into the milk jug for evaporated moisture.
Do no use terry cloth, as I believe blood suckers can lay hatchlings in it, like they can on vegetation.
The point is, you can safely evaporate water away from the chemistry, leaving a dry or greatly reduced water content over a long period of time, desposing of the waste safely.
Toss some baking soda in the acid bucket, time to time, and an oil free steel wool into the fixer to plate out, to the bucket's side over a long period of use.