Do you clean up broken fluorescents and CFLs the EPA-suggested way? You know, evacuate and air out the room for 15 minutes, use sticky tape and an index card, do NOT vacuum, etc.?
Admittedly I don't. In fact about 20 minutes ago I inadvertently broke a spiral CFL (a 13w GE helical for whatever it's worth) and left the room for maybe 5 mintes tops, then just scraped it up and tossed it in the trash. Still not as bad as the time I had a ballast fall onto an (albeit warm white and EOL with no vacuum so no huge loss) Westy F40T12 black-ender lamp. Now that probably had some mercury to worry about LOL.
I've had this happen many other times too.
Anyway do you guys clean it up the official way?