States Debate Recycled Electronic Junk
California, Maine and Maryland are taking diverse paths to dealing with the digital-age toxic waste posed by mountains of junked electronic equipment. But there is debate about whether a state-by-state approach is the best solution.
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No Consensus on Recycled Electronic Junk
By Eric Kelderman
California, Maine and Maryland are taking diverse paths to dealing
with the digital-age toxic waste posed by mountains of junked
electronic equipment. But there is debate about whether a
state-by-state approach is the best solution.
While legislatures in more than half the states have considered
bills to deal with e-waste-- from computer and television screens
to video game systems and cell phones the three states have stepped
out with laws to encourage recycling of the devices.
But their laws give varying responsibilities to manufacturers,
retailers and state and local government. For now, there is no
consensus on the best approach, and both the consumer electronics
industry and environmentalists worry that a costly or ineffective
patchwork of regulations will emerge as more states tackle the
deluge of obsolete digital gadgets.
Already, lawmakers in the Northeast and Midwest are studying
regional solutions to coordinate their recycling efforts, hoping to
make the process both more cost-effective for business and more
convenient for consumers.
Computers and television screens can contain several hazardous
materials, such as lead, mercury and fire-retardant plastics. The
Environmental Protection Agency estimates that 1 percent to 4
percent of solid waste is electronic equipment, but the amount is
increasing at three times the rate of the other types of garbage.
Several states already ban televisions and computer screens from
their landfills.
In July, Maryland started charging manufacturers a flat $5,000
annual fee to help counties collect and recycle computer screens.
The Maryland Department of the Environment estimates the program
will collect $500,000 to $750,000 a year to be divided among the
state's 24 counties and Baltimore. After the first year, companies
can reduce their fee to $500 if they offer to take back their
computer screens for recycling.
The measure passed both houses of the Democratic-controlled General
Assembly with only one opposing vote and was signed into law by
Republican Gov. Robert Ehrlich. In addition, the initiative got
wide support from a variety of business and environmental groups,
said Del. Dan K. Morhaim (D), one of the bill's sponsors.
But critics of the Maryland program say that the fee is too small
to mount an effective recycling program and doesn't encourage
manufacturers to make environmentally friendly computers.
"If I'm Sony, I'll pay you $5,000 just to get away from me," said
New York state Sen. Carl L. Marcellino (R), co-chairman of the
Legislature's Environmental Conservation Committee.
Kara Reeve, spokeswoman for the nonprofit Clean Water Action, said
the Maryland law puts the onus on counties to recycle and will cost
taxpayers if too little money is collected. And the pilot program,
which expires in 2010, does not cover televisions, which also
contain lead and other toxic materials.
Reeve's group supports Maine's 2004 law, which takes effect in
January and requires manufacturers to take back their own computer
monitors and electronic components sold in the state.
"We definitely favor the Maine approach, because it makes
manufacturers responsible for their own products," Reeve said. At
the same time, it gives companies an incentive to make their
devices with fewer toxic materials and design them to be easily
recycled, she said.
Similar bills are under consideration in Massachusetts and Rhode
Island, Reeve said.
Some manufacturers, such as Hewlett-Packard, already have launched
their own programs to collect and recycle their products, said
Parker Brugge, environmental counsel for the Consumer Electronics
Association. But many computer and television makers are concerned
about extra costs to recycle so-called "orphaned" products from
companies that have gone out of business, Brugge said. This may
become an especially big problem for television companies, because
people may keep their TVs up to 15 years, he said.
California, which passed the first "e-cycling" law in 2003, charges
consumers a fee of $6 to $10 for each new computer or television to
pay for electronic recycling efforts in the state. The money goes
to a state fund that pays recyclers for their efforts -- if they
can certify that the products were purchased in the state.
"There are strenuous reporting requirements for recyclers," Brugge
explained.
Marc Pearl, executive director of the Consumer Electronics
Retailers Coalition, said store owners are opposed to the
California approach because the extra fee may cause more people to
buy their computers and televisions online.
Marcellino, the New York legislator, said a uniform approach to the
problem would be more effective and business-friendly. "Different
measures drive manufacturers crazy," he said.
But finding common ground isn't easy, said Marcellino, who also is
co-chairman of a committee of state officials struggling to write a
model bill that lawmakers can copy across a 10-state region.
A draft of that proposed bill, which could change in coming weeks,
would charge manufacturers a quarterly fee for every electronic
device sold in the state, based on numbers reported by
retailers.
Environmental officials from Illinois, Iowa, Michigan, Minnesota,
Minnesota, Ohio and Wisconsin also are working on a similar draft
proposal, said Lucy Doroshko, a recycling specialist with the
Michigan Department of Environmental Quality.
Source: Stateline.org.
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© 2008 Penton Media Inc.
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