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Vermont Bans E-Waste From Landfills

DAVE GRAM   01/ 4/11 03:57 PM ET   AP

Electronic Waste

MONTPELIER, Vt. — Get a new flat-screen TV for Christmas and wondering what to do with the old console? Finally replacing that turntable with an MP3 player? Just upgrading your Mac? Whatever it is, you'd better check your state's books before taking out the trash.

In Vermont, a ban on electronic waste in landfills took effect New Year's Day, and New York, Pennsylvania and South Carolina are soon to follow suit with their own laws encouraging recycling of "e-waste" and banning landfill dumping.

"I think it's a good idea," said Kevin Wilkinson, a Montpelier resident and self-described "geek wannabe" with a lot of old computer hardware sitting around his house. "There's a lot of heavy metals in the circuit boards and whatnot. It's good to keep that stuff out of the landfills."

The Environmental Protection Agency estimated in 2007 that the U.S. generates about 2 million tons a year of e-waste, which can contain lead, mercury, cadmium and other potentially harmful chemicals. If those toxins leach from landfills into the environment, risks to human health can include cancer and nervous system damage, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The EPA estimates that in 2008, 13.6 percent of e-waste generated was recovered. Scott Cassel, executive director of the Boston-based Product Stewardship Institute, which promotes such recycling, said it's believed the percentage has grown significantly since then, as more states have passed and implemented laws.

"The laws are working really well," he said. "States with laws have higher recycling rates than those without laws."

To date, 27 states have passed recycling programs, landfill bans or both, according to the National Center for Electronics Recycling, which works with state agencies implementing the laws.

In states without recycling laws, consumers like Wilkinson are left to safely dispose of old equipment on their own, generally by paying a few dollars per item at a computer store or by going to big-box retailers that sponsor programs to take old items.

States' laws vary in strictness. Vermont's, which took effect Saturday, bans the disposal of e-waste in landfills and requires that it be separated from household trash.

It takes effect in two stages: A long list of electronic devices was banned from landfills as of Jan. 1, and a much shorter list will be covered by a recycling program free to consumers and paid for by manufacturers to be set up by July 1.

Most states ask electronics makers to pay for recycling programs – both to make sure they are run properly and to remove the temptation for consumers to avoid added costs by dumping illegally.

As new state laws have been passed, they've covered a longer list of electronics over time, generally starting out with computer monitors and televisions and later extending to accessories. A Maryland law passed in 2005 explicitly said it did not cover peripherals like a mouse, printer or keyboard; Vermont's law covers them.

"The Vermont law is taking advantage of lessons learned in other states," said Cassel. His group began a decade ago to promote laws requiring electronics makers to help pay to recycle their own products.

For businesses, knowing they'll be responsible for taking care of their products at the end of their useful lives means "now they have an incentive to have these products contain fewer hazardous materials and be recycled more easily," said Clare Inness, marketing coordinator for Vermont's Chittenden Solid Waste District.

Walter Alcorn of the Consumer Electronics Association said industry supports recycling. The main worry for manufacturers is a lack of uniformity among state laws, he said.

"There is quite a patchwork of varying state mandates on this issue," said Alcorn, the association's vice president for environmental affairs. "It makes compliance a challenge. It drains efficiency from the overall system."

Environmentalists have noted in recent years that much of the U.S. waste ends up being shipped overseas, where it is often dismantled in ways potentially harmful to workers and the environment.

Robin Ingenthron, CEO of Good Point Recycling in Middlebury, said that circuit boards usually go to smelters in Europe, where metals are extracted, and that cathode ray tube glass often goes to developing countries like Mexico or Malaysia, where older-style computer monitors are still sought.

Wilkinson, who usually paid $5 to $10 per item to recycle old equipment at a local computer shop, said he wasn't likely to get rid of his piled-up gear all at once.

"I'm a pack rat. I have a hard time throwing stuff away," he said. After learning that the free computer recycling program doesn't begin until July, he added: "Oh, good, now I have a perfect excuse."

___

Online:

National Center for Electronics Recycling: http://www.electronicsrecycling.org

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MONTPELIER, Vt. — Get a new flat-screen TV for Christmas and wondering what to do with the old console? Finally replacing that turntable with an MP3 player? Just upgrading your Mac? Whatever it ...
MONTPELIER, Vt. — Get a new flat-screen TV for Christmas and wondering what to do with the old console? Finally replacing that turntable with an MP3 player? Just upgrading your Mac? Whatever it ...
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This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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11:38 AM on 01/07/2011
If the city REALY wanted to redirect this E-Waste to where it needs to go. They would provide a E-Waste recycle cart to collect it like they do for paper, plastic glass and compost. I would bet E-Waste recycling would increase 80% with an E-Waste recycling cart.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
realitytrumpsbull
two 'alves of coconut!
12:44 AM on 01/07/2011
I think this could be easily solved with one of those commercial-sized e-dumpsters provided wherever they let you put the stuff normally for the landfill.  Then they can cube it all up, and go feed it to the volcano in Hawai'i, or whatever.
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08:31 AM on 01/05/2011
Most obsolete electronics is shipped out to 3rd World countries in Africa and Asia where metals are 're-claimed' using horrid methods such as heating over an open fire to catch the lead solders or stripping off the copper with acid baths. Far worse this work is often done by children or women in poor areas who are exposed to several thousand times the safe level of carcinogens for hours a day. Our idea of 'green recycling' in the USA and Europe is a total sham. All we are doing is shipping our hazardous waste elsewhere for others to be injured and killed by the same.
Genders
Love, Tolerance, Enlightenment
09:39 PM on 01/04/2011
It's a great idea. Ewaste is better ore for gold and rare earths than any natural ore. Plenty of companies have the tech to extract it for about half the price of the folks using natural ore.
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PoloniumMan
"It worked." J. Robert Oppenheimer
04:51 PM on 01/04/2011
Don't throw away that PC yet; install a flavor of Linux and get more use out of it.
Genders
Love, Tolerance, Enlightenment
09:38 PM on 01/04/2011
About 20 times more. Ubuntu is great.
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PoloniumMan
"It worked." J. Robert Oppenheimer
08:18 AM on 01/05/2011
I've got 10.10 installed on my Dell Dimension 4600 (bought in 2003) and it's more useful to me now than with XP. I have games for the kids installed plus running Geant4* simulations for my research.

* Small runs as a test prior to larger runs on school's cluster. http://geant4.cern.ch/
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
BlueKansas
Stop calling us 'ordinary Americans'!
04:24 PM on 01/04/2011
Some of you seem to be missing the point. Laws such as thisone are implemented when voluntary recycling doesn't work. I am all for any law that keeps e-waste out of landfills. Here in conservative Kansas, our county hasn't accepted it for the landfill for at least two years, though they do offer free recycling of much of it throughout the year. Large items like behemouth televisions incur a $50 dropoff cost. We actually put off buying a new television when we moved here four years ago, because at that time, our old one would have gone to the landfill.

The last time we had an e-cycling event around here, I spoke with the manager of the company who was taking the items. I was pleased to hear him describe his business as being part of a whole new and developing industry. And by the way, he was upfront about the fact that his company, Extreme Recycling, does not shuffle stuff overseas.

Another recycling law recently passed by our county deals with yard and garden waste. It will no longer be collected starting January 2012. No leaves, no grass clippings, no nothing. People are encouraged to compost, or hire a private waste hauler who will see that it's composted. So this isn't just a liberal Vermont thing. This is a matter of urgency to taxpayers in Kansas who do not want to foot the enormous bill for a new landfill in the next ten years.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
indy100
04:16 PM on 01/04/2011
We are gradually burying ourselves in our own toxic waste.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Lance Manling
04:11 PM on 01/04/2011
There is a big difference between a ban and encouraging recycling. I wonder what this wonderful idea is costing the taxpayer. I noticed the story missed those details.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
KarlaElisa
The atmosphere is Toxic
04:10 PM on 01/04/2011
Seems Vermont is kicking A and taking names lately. Their own food safety bill. A possible Single Health Care bill coming up, this ewaste issue. I'm impressed.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Freevo
If you want to see my micro send $5
04:05 PM on 01/04/2011
The solutions seem to be shipping this e-waste to other countries or having inmates sorted. There are concerns with each, including toxic contamination and inmates having access to personal information. There's the carbon impact to consider with shipping. E-waste needs to be handled but in a responsible manner. Models used in Germany seem to be most forward thinking.
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04:04 PM on 01/04/2011
"Environmentalists have noted in recent years that much of the U.S. waste ends up being shipped overseas, where it is often dismantled in ways potentially harmful to workers and the environment." But apparently that doesn't matter, as long as it doesn't go into landfills in the U.S.
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08:42 PM on 01/04/2011
sort gives nimby a whole new meaning--except, last time i looked, we were all on the same planet
04:00 PM on 01/04/2011
How about a plan to do something with it instead of a law that allows it to be dumped elsewhere?
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04:05 PM on 01/04/2011
I am guessing that the cost of actually recovering the heavy metals in an ecologically responsible manner and reusing them would be more than the initial cost of the item. So it's not likely to happen.
06:33 PM on 01/04/2011
We must also realize that there's a cost to letting others recover the metals as well as a cost to not recovering them at all.
02:59 AM on 01/06/2011
Best Buy stores will except almost every kind of electronics for recycle. For all practical purposes the service is free. There is a charge for CRTs and monitors but the this is refunded via a gift card for the same value.
12:59 PM on 01/06/2011
Yes but what do they do with it? Do they recycle it responsibly or send it to India?
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03:46 PM on 01/04/2011
E-waste? You mean like HP?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
indy100
04:17 PM on 01/04/2011
And you're here why then?
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07:18 PM on 01/04/2011
I'm a spy.
Shhhhh.
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Witchhunter
helping those in need of reality.
03:36 PM on 01/04/2011
VT, trying hard to become the other looney California.
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03:44 PM on 01/04/2011
Good!

Since your keen about electronic garbage dumped in your state, let me know where you live.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Freevo
If you want to see my micro send $5
03:55 PM on 01/04/2011
X2 and fanned.
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KarlaElisa
The atmosphere is Toxic
04:10 PM on 01/04/2011
X3!
03:24 PM on 01/04/2011
A passing mention of the upcoming CES, with hundreds of companies titillating us with thousands of disposable electronic products might be in order. 90% of those companies are only too happy to externalize costs to the environment, and I'd be willing to bet, based on my own experience at previous CES shows, that the only recycling in evidence is for water bottles on the trade show floor.
It's indeed insanely great, for them I suppose, that the consumer electronics manufacturers are the least green of all industrial entities.
We might view these cycles much as we do weight loss, or achieving better gas mileage: incrementally. Go ahead, hold on to that product just one more year; resist the marketing pressure to see it as 'obsolete' when said marketer says it is. Stop poisoning YOUR Earth.
Better yet, Resist the Device, look a friend in the eye, and start a conversation. Go Green.