Pinellas County, Fla. officials said residents have disposed of more e-scrap through their regular garbage than the household hazardous waste program. | Mameraman/Shutterstock[/caption]
Two municipalities in Florida have sidestepped sending household e-scrap to their contracted processor for recycling and are instead hauling material to a waste-to-energy plant.
Pinellas County, which includes St. Petersburg, Clearwater and other cities, stopped sending the public's e-scrap to a contracted recycler as of October 2022, instead shipping the material it collects to a waste-to-energy plant owned by the county and operated by Covanta. More recently, the city of Clearwater discontinued its e-scrap collection days as of May 1.
Pinellas County and Clearwater said residents can place TVs, monitors, CPUs, laptops, tablets, cell phones and other electronics in their trash bins, although they emphasized that rechargeable batteries must be removed because of fire risks.
"Ultimately, we felt it was best for us to manage the e-waste in house via our Waste-to-Energy facility than send it to a third-party company," said Emily LeMay, program coordinator for recycling and outreach programs at Pinellas County.
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Pinellas County, Fla. officials said residents have disposed of more e-scrap through their regular garbage than the household hazardous waste program. | Mameraman/Shutterstock[/caption]
Two municipalities in Florida have sidestepped sending household e-scrap to their contracted processor for recycling and are instead hauling material to a waste-to-energy plant.
Pinellas County, which includes St. Petersburg, Clearwater and other cities, stopped sending the public's e-scrap to a contracted recycler as of October 2022, instead shipping the material it collects to a waste-to-energy plant owned by the county and operated by Covanta. More recently, the city of Clearwater discontinued its e-scrap collection days as of May 1.
Pinellas County and Clearwater said residents can place TVs, monitors, CPUs, laptops, tablets, cell phones and other electronics in their trash bins, although they emphasized that rechargeable batteries must be removed because of fire risks.
"Ultimately, we felt it was best for us to manage the e-waste in house via our Waste-to-Energy facility than send it to a third-party company," said Emily LeMay, program coordinator for recycling and outreach programs at Pinellas County.
Pinellas County, Fla. officials said residents have disposed of more e-scrap through their regular garbage than the household hazardous waste program. | Mameraman/Shutterstock[/caption]
Two municipalities in Florida have sidestepped sending household e-scrap to their contracted processor for recycling and are instead hauling material to a waste-to-energy plant.
Pinellas County, which includes St. Petersburg, Clearwater and other cities, stopped sending the public's e-scrap to a contracted recycler as of October 2022, instead shipping the material it collects to a waste-to-energy plant owned by the county and operated by Covanta. More recently, the city of Clearwater discontinued its e-scrap collection days as of May 1.
Pinellas County and Clearwater said residents can place TVs, monitors, CPUs, laptops, tablets, cell phones and other electronics in their trash bins, although they emphasized that rechargeable batteries must be removed because of fire risks.
"Ultimately, we felt it was best for us to manage the e-waste in house via our Waste-to-Energy facility than send it to a third-party company," said Emily LeMay, program coordinator for recycling and outreach programs at Pinellas County.
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