Sony's payment will help fund cleanup of the estimated 160 million pound stockpile at two Ohio facilities. | Courtesy of EnSafe.[/caption]
Sony Electronics agreed to pay $1.2 million to settle allegations that the company is liable for CRT materials abandoned by Closed Loop Refining and Recovery.
The San Diego-based OEM reached a legal agreement with Garrison Southfield Park and Olymbec USA, landlords that leased warehouses in Columbus, Ohio to Closed Loop.
Closed Loop failed in 2016, leaving an estimated 128 million pounds at Garrison Southfield Park's two adjacent facilities and about 30 million pounds at Olymbec USA's warehouse. Cleanup is underway.
In August 2020, the landlords sued nine electronics manufacturers - ASUS Computer International, Dell Technologies, Haier America, LG Electronics USA, Micro Center, Premio, Samsung Electronics America, Sony Electronics, Westinghouse Digital - and one stewardship group: Electronic Manufacturers Recycling Management Co. (MRM), which fulfills legally mandated collection and recycling programs in 20 states on behalf of manufacturers.
Sony is the first OEM to settle and agree to help fund the CRT cleanup. Two OEMs, Dell and Micro Center, have filed defenses and counterclaims against the landlords, and other manufacturers haven't yet responded in court.
When they were named in the lawsuit, the OEMs joined a long list of existing defendants in the federal district court case. In March 2019, Garrison Southfield Park and Olymbec USA filed a lawsuit against dozens of e-scrap companies that shipped CRTs to Closed Loop in Ohio.
Since then, 25 e-scrap defendants have reached settlements totaling over $3.1 million. Eleven other e-scrap companies continue to defend themselves in court, with some leveling their own claims against the landlords. Another seven companies have gone out of business or failed to appear in court.
[caption id="attachment_13999" align="aligncenter" width="850"]
Sony's payment will help fund cleanup of the estimated 160 million pound stockpile at two Ohio facilities. | Courtesy of EnSafe.[/caption]
Sony Electronics agreed to pay $1.2 million to settle allegations that the company is liable for CRT materials abandoned by Closed Loop Refining and Recovery.
The San Diego-based OEM reached a legal agreement with Garrison Southfield Park and Olymbec USA, landlords that leased warehouses in Columbus, Ohio to Closed Loop.
Closed Loop failed in 2016, leaving an estimated 128 million pounds at Garrison Southfield Park's two adjacent facilities and about 30 million pounds at Olymbec USA's warehouse. Cleanup is underway.
In August 2020, the landlords sued nine electronics manufacturers - ASUS Computer International, Dell Technologies, Haier America, LG Electronics USA, Micro Center, Premio, Samsung Electronics America, Sony Electronics, Westinghouse Digital - and one stewardship group: Electronic Manufacturers Recycling Management Co. (MRM), which fulfills legally mandated collection and recycling programs in 20 states on behalf of manufacturers.
Sony is the first OEM to settle and agree to help fund the CRT cleanup. Two OEMs, Dell and Micro Center, have filed defenses and counterclaims against the landlords, and other manufacturers haven't yet responded in court.
When they were named in the lawsuit, the OEMs joined a long list of existing defendants in the federal district court case. In March 2019, Garrison Southfield Park and Olymbec USA filed a lawsuit against dozens of e-scrap companies that shipped CRTs to Closed Loop in Ohio.
Since then, 25 e-scrap defendants have reached settlements totaling over $3.1 million. Eleven other e-scrap companies continue to defend themselves in court, with some leveling their own claims against the landlords. Another seven companies have gone out of business or failed to appear in court.
Sony's payment will help fund cleanup of the estimated 160 million pound stockpile at two Ohio facilities. | Courtesy of EnSafe.[/caption]
Sony Electronics agreed to pay $1.2 million to settle allegations that the company is liable for CRT materials abandoned by Closed Loop Refining and Recovery.
The San Diego-based OEM reached a legal agreement with Garrison Southfield Park and Olymbec USA, landlords that leased warehouses in Columbus, Ohio to Closed Loop.
Closed Loop failed in 2016, leaving an estimated 128 million pounds at Garrison Southfield Park's two adjacent facilities and about 30 million pounds at Olymbec USA's warehouse. Cleanup is underway.
In August 2020, the landlords sued nine electronics manufacturers - ASUS Computer International, Dell Technologies, Haier America, LG Electronics USA, Micro Center, Premio, Samsung Electronics America, Sony Electronics, Westinghouse Digital - and one stewardship group: Electronic Manufacturers Recycling Management Co. (MRM), which fulfills legally mandated collection and recycling programs in 20 states on behalf of manufacturers.
Sony is the first OEM to settle and agree to help fund the CRT cleanup. Two OEMs, Dell and Micro Center, have filed defenses and counterclaims against the landlords, and other manufacturers haven't yet responded in court.
When they were named in the lawsuit, the OEMs joined a long list of existing defendants in the federal district court case. In March 2019, Garrison Southfield Park and Olymbec USA filed a lawsuit against dozens of e-scrap companies that shipped CRTs to Closed Loop in Ohio.
Since then, 25 e-scrap defendants have reached settlements totaling over $3.1 million. Eleven other e-scrap companies continue to defend themselves in court, with some leveling their own claims against the landlords. Another seven companies have gone out of business or failed to appear in court.
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