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It's against state law to throw old electronics in the normal trash so there used to be a special e-trash that would take that trash but now that has been canceled do to low prices for recycling. Currently there is no easy way to get rid of your old electronics. Maybe Best Buy or some other place "may" take it? People are just going to toss this stuff where ever with no regards to the mess it will make.
We need solutions to e-cycling problems
The company that was taking York County’s old electronics suddenly said it could no longer take the material.Here’s hoping you had a great Christmas!
Maybe you got a new smart HDTV with the curved screen. Maybe a new gaming system – and new laptops and tablets for the whole fam.Have fun!But now what are you going to do with all your obsolete tech-ware that’s, like, a whole six months old?Don’t toss it in the trash. That would be illegal in Pennsylvania, according to Act 108.OK, so that calls for a trip over to the York County Solid Waste Authority’s e-cycling drop-off site, right? Wrong.
Just in time for the post-Christmas old tech purge, the authority has suspended its drop-off program.But don’t call the authority a Scrooge or a Grinch. The suspension isn’t YCSWA’s fault.The issue is that ECOvanta, the Philadelphia-based recycling company that was taking York County’s old electronics, suddenly said it could no longer take the material, said YCSWA spokeswoman Ellen O’Connor.It’s a problem of supply and demand.
There’s too much recycled material, and the price of the material is so low it doesn’t make economic sense to process it all.But that doesn’t change the law.You can’t put computer monitors, old laptops and desktops, keyboards, mice and a plethora of other “covered devices” out for the trash – and your waste hauler can’t pick it up if you do.So, what are you supposed to do?
Well, you might be able to get Best Buy to take it. Call and check first. Some other local companies also take in e-cycling.But barring that, stick it in the basement until YCSWA secures a new e-cycler, which Ms. O’Connor said the agency is trying to do.YCSWA is also urging residents to contact lawmakers and ask for changes in the law.Ms. O’Connor offered a few suggestions:
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I suspect that many of the no longer wanted electronics will end up hidden in trash bags and placed at the curb for pick-up with people's regular trash I see this done in my neighborhood with yard wastes even though Penn Waste provided every homeowner with large containers and conducts special pick-up days for these containers. I thought it interesting that the YCSWA did not provide an alternative before shutting down its service.
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I agree with you that recycling stuff like this is important for many reasons. Would you be willing to subsidize YCSWA's operation? We do not have this problem in Lancaster.
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I think this does require a change in the law. However, one has to be suspicious of the fact that York has this problem, but surrounding communities do not. It appears that YCSWA and Ms. O'Connor may have been lax in performing their duties. They tied themselves to a single contractor to provide e-cycling services and, once they signed the contract, they didn't give it a second thought until this crisis arrived at their door. They have no secondary contractor, an incinerator that they can't use for this purpose due to current laws, and no other contingency at the moment. A classic case of reactive rather than proactive management.