By rr_test_admin, 12 March, 2015
A year after beginning an operation to use treated CRT glass as alternative daily cover at a landfill in Illinois, Kuusakoski US says it is phasing out that approach in favor of a different strategy: storing CRT glass in a mineable cell.

Kuusakoski's decision comes after its alternative daily cover (ADC) operation in Peoria, Illinois was largely resisted by state electronics recycling programs

By rr_test_admin, 5 March, 2015

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E-Waste Systems has closed its Geneva, New York processing facility.

A significant backlog of CRTs and CRT glass is believed to be housed at the facility. The company is also being sued for failing to pay Geneva employees between mid-October and late January, according to an article in the Finger Lakes Times.

By rr_test_admin, 5 March, 2015

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A Spanish company has launched a pilot project to use leaded CRT glass in ceramic tiles, and the U.K. wants the electronics industry to collect more material for recycling in 2015.

E-scrap recycling is ramping up in Israel, following the implementation of an extended producer responsibility law in the country.

By rr_test_admin, 19 February, 2015

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A Spanish company supplying CRT glass to the European ceramics industry has been seeing glass tonnages from the U.S. steadily increase.

In an update sent to E-Scrap News, JJ Santos of Camacho Recycling says demand in the European ceramic tile industry for both panel and funnel glass is "increasing more and more."

Moreover, he expects Camacho will receive more than 67,000 tons of CRT glass from the U.S. in 2015. Glass tonnages, according to Santos, will also start arriving from Canada this month.

By rr_test_admin, 5 February, 2015
To meet growing demand, e-scrap recycling company Hugo Neu Recycling will close its facility in Mount Vernon, New York and open a larger, more advanced one in New Jersey, the company says.

"It certainly will meet the demands of our growing business,” Alan Ratner, the company's president, told E-Scrap News.

Hugo Neu Recycling provides various services for organizations. While Ratner said Hugo Neu's primary business is in collecting and recycling e-scrap, the company also provides data destruction and refurbishment services.

By rr_test_admin, 29 January, 2015

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The trustee appointed to handle the liquidation of Creative Recycling Systems told E-Scrap News the company's collapse came down to one thing: CRT glass. In an interview, Jerry McHale, trustee for the Florida-based processor currently ensnared in a multi-million dollar legal battle with Regions Bank, said Creative failed to devise a reasonable strategy to handle the significant loads of glass that came in company doors. "Going back in history, to me, it looks like the
By rr_test_admin, 22 January, 2015
Publicly traded E-Waste Systems has been ruled in default in a lawsuit alleging the firm did not pay workers at its former Ohio processing location.

According to court documents reviewed by E-Scrap News, a total of nine employees have joined the suit, which was originally filed on Nov. 25 and alleges E-Waste Systems (EWSI) failed to pay them "and others similarly situated" for hours worked, including overtime, between Oct. 17 and Nov. 18 of 2014. The employees were then promptly laid off without warning or pay, court documents charge.

By rr_test_admin, 9 January, 2015

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An industry executive with ties to the lone remaining glass-to-glass CRT recycling operation says the company, Videocon, will be continuing to manufacture CRT TVs and monitors for at least another three years.

If accurate, such a time frame would provide breathing room for U.S. companies needing to move collected glass downstream.

"The CRT market is likely to exist for three years, if not more," Albino Bessa, president of Videocon glass supplier Technologies Displays Americas, told E-Scrap News.

By rr_test_admin, 31 December, 2014

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Florida-based Creative Recycling Systems has moved to liquify its assets, court documents show. Creative, which filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy this September after being sued to the tune of $18.7 million, announced the decision on Dec. 16. A notice sent to potentially affected parties and obtained by E-Scrap News states an additional meeting will be held with creditors on Jan.