I already posted an article that mentions that the disposal of Ebola-exposed medical waste is very difficult or even impossible for US hospitals under current regulations...I have not seen any news since then that this problem has been remedied or clarified at the regulatory level.
Just a follow up to this question I raised. The US Deptartment of Transportation has
issued new regulatory guidelines on the transportation of Ebola-related materials. So Texas was issued a special permit and other states will follow, if necessary.
This is not the first epidemic the country has faced, though, and Ebola has been raging in Africa for months, so you would think this process would have already been ready to go as soon as the first confirmed case (Dr Kent Brantly, not Duncan) was flown back and hospitalized in the US.
On a side note: If you read the special packaging requirements for Ebola waste in the new regs and compare that to the scene of those guys simply power washing the sidewalk of Duncan's infected vomit, you can see a big disconnect there. Poor guys. They're probably low paid employees of a private contractor and may not even have health insurance of their own!