New Jersey, Parrsippany. Under the new state law, electronics manufacturers who don't recycle their products would be subject to fines between $500 and $1,000 per offense.
Scott County's electronic demanufacturing facility hopes holiday digital TV
purchases will translate to analog TVs being recycled.
To encourage
e-waste recycling, Scott County residents can drop off electronic waste at no
charge from now until Feb. 27 at Waste Commission of Scott County, 1048 E. 59th
St., Davenport.
In 2007, more than 15,000 pounds of e-waste -- anything
with a circuit board or cathode ray tube -- was recycled between Thanksgiving
and Jan. 4, said Erin Robinson, communications coordinator. Officials anticipate
even more as many residents replace analog TVs to coincide with broadcasters'
switch to digital broadcasting.
However, all e-waste is accepted.
Computers, monitors, videocassette recorders, DVD players, stereos, cell phones,
cameras, printers and scanners are included.
When the waste commission
opened its e-waste facility in 2005, 560,000 pounds of materials were recycled.
In 2007, the amount of material recycled jumped to 1.1 million pounds. Recycling
e-waste saves space at the Scott County landfill and prevents toxic materials
from entering it.