A legal dispute in California centers on the state's change in how it collects disposal and diversion rate data. | Esin Deniz/Shutterstock[/caption]
The Institute of Scrap Recycling Industries has won a court order temporarily shielding its scrap metal recycling members from having to relay their tonnage data to California regulators.
A Sacramento Superior Court judge on Tuesday, July 9 issued a temporary injunction blocking the California Department of Resources Recycling and Recovery (CalRecycle) from requiring ISRI members to register and provide data to the state.
The legal dispute centers on the state's change in how it collects disposal and diversion rate data. Previously, solid waste and recycling figures were reported to county governments, which then forwarded them to CalRecycle. Under a bill signed by then-Gov. Jerry Brown in fall 2015, companies will now report their data directly to the state.
CalRecycle implemented regulations to create the new reporting system, called the Recycling and Disposal Reporting System (RDRS). As part of the approved regulations, CalRecycle is now requiring ISRI's scrap metal recycling members, including companies that process scrap vehicles and appliances, to register and provide materials shipment data to the state. Essentially, CalRecycle says those companies meet the definition of "recyclers" required to register and report.
ISRI disagrees. On May 30, the West Coast chapter of ISRI filed the lawsuit in state court, arguing CalRecycle doesn't have the statutory authority to impose regulations on its scrap recycler members. On July 9, Judge David Brown approved ISRI's request for a temporary injunction blocking CalRecycle from imposing requirements on ISRI members while the case proceeds.
In court papers, CalRecycle said the data obtained by the new regulations will inform the department's understanding of material flows in the state's recycling infrastructure, improve total recycling and composting estimates, and help it track progress toward several state goals. California has a target of reducing landfill disposal by 75% from 1989 levels by the year 2020, for example.
"This information will allow CalRecycle to implement various improvements in areas such as increased responsiveness to changes in the recycling landscape, operational efficiencies, and the targeting of state resources to recycling infrastructure to foster a circular economy," the state wrote.
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A legal dispute in California centers on the state's change in how it collects disposal and diversion rate data. | Esin Deniz/Shutterstock[/caption]
The Institute of Scrap Recycling Industries has won a court order temporarily shielding its scrap metal recycling members from having to relay their tonnage data to California regulators.
A Sacramento Superior Court judge on Tuesday, July 9 issued a temporary injunction blocking the California Department of Resources Recycling and Recovery (CalRecycle) from requiring ISRI members to register and provide data to the state.
The legal dispute centers on the state's change in how it collects disposal and diversion rate data. Previously, solid waste and recycling figures were reported to county governments, which then forwarded them to CalRecycle. Under a bill signed by then-Gov. Jerry Brown in fall 2015, companies will now report their data directly to the state.
CalRecycle implemented regulations to create the new reporting system, called the Recycling and Disposal Reporting System (RDRS). As part of the approved regulations, CalRecycle is now requiring ISRI's scrap metal recycling members, including companies that process scrap vehicles and appliances, to register and provide materials shipment data to the state. Essentially, CalRecycle says those companies meet the definition of "recyclers" required to register and report.
ISRI disagrees. On May 30, the West Coast chapter of ISRI filed the lawsuit in state court, arguing CalRecycle doesn't have the statutory authority to impose regulations on its scrap recycler members. On July 9, Judge David Brown approved ISRI's request for a temporary injunction blocking CalRecycle from imposing requirements on ISRI members while the case proceeds.
In court papers, CalRecycle said the data obtained by the new regulations will inform the department's understanding of material flows in the state's recycling infrastructure, improve total recycling and composting estimates, and help it track progress toward several state goals. California has a target of reducing landfill disposal by 75% from 1989 levels by the year 2020, for example.
"This information will allow CalRecycle to implement various improvements in areas such as increased responsiveness to changes in the recycling landscape, operational efficiencies, and the targeting of state resources to recycling infrastructure to foster a circular economy," the state wrote.
A legal dispute in California centers on the state's change in how it collects disposal and diversion rate data. | Esin Deniz/Shutterstock[/caption]
The Institute of Scrap Recycling Industries has won a court order temporarily shielding its scrap metal recycling members from having to relay their tonnage data to California regulators.
A Sacramento Superior Court judge on Tuesday, July 9 issued a temporary injunction blocking the California Department of Resources Recycling and Recovery (CalRecycle) from requiring ISRI members to register and provide data to the state.
The legal dispute centers on the state's change in how it collects disposal and diversion rate data. Previously, solid waste and recycling figures were reported to county governments, which then forwarded them to CalRecycle. Under a bill signed by then-Gov. Jerry Brown in fall 2015, companies will now report their data directly to the state.
CalRecycle implemented regulations to create the new reporting system, called the Recycling and Disposal Reporting System (RDRS). As part of the approved regulations, CalRecycle is now requiring ISRI's scrap metal recycling members, including companies that process scrap vehicles and appliances, to register and provide materials shipment data to the state. Essentially, CalRecycle says those companies meet the definition of "recyclers" required to register and report.
ISRI disagrees. On May 30, the West Coast chapter of ISRI filed the lawsuit in state court, arguing CalRecycle doesn't have the statutory authority to impose regulations on its scrap recycler members. On July 9, Judge David Brown approved ISRI's request for a temporary injunction blocking CalRecycle from imposing requirements on ISRI members while the case proceeds.
In court papers, CalRecycle said the data obtained by the new regulations will inform the department's understanding of material flows in the state's recycling infrastructure, improve total recycling and composting estimates, and help it track progress toward several state goals. California has a target of reducing landfill disposal by 75% from 1989 levels by the year 2020, for example.
"This information will allow CalRecycle to implement various improvements in areas such as increased responsiveness to changes in the recycling landscape, operational efficiencies, and the targeting of state resources to recycling infrastructure to foster a circular economy," the state wrote.
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