E-scrap collection in South Carolina is set to undergo some major modifications. | Jon Bilous/Shutterstock[/caption]
South Carolina's e-scrap program will be seeing significant changes in the coming year after the governor signed House Bill 4775 into law.
The bill eliminates weight targets for electronics collection and instead sets up easier access to drop-off sites, reforming the state's current extended producer responsibility (EPR) program for electronics to more closely resemble that of Illinois.
South Carolina is now the second state, after Illinois, to move to a "clearinghouse-style" program that focuses on a convenience metric for drop-off sites and requires manufacturers to pay to recycle all electronics returned.
HB 4775 first passed the state House of Representatives and Senate in April and May, respectively, but then spent a month in conference committee after the House rejected a Senate attempt to link an unrelated bill on plastic pellets to it.
The amended bill without the add-on passed the House with a vote of 109-0 and the Senate with a vote of 42-0 on June 15. Republican Gov. Henry McMaster signed it June 17.
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E-scrap collection in South Carolina is set to undergo some major modifications. | Jon Bilous/Shutterstock[/caption]
South Carolina's e-scrap program will be seeing significant changes in the coming year after the governor signed House Bill 4775 into law.
The bill eliminates weight targets for electronics collection and instead sets up easier access to drop-off sites, reforming the state's current extended producer responsibility (EPR) program for electronics to more closely resemble that of Illinois.
South Carolina is now the second state, after Illinois, to move to a "clearinghouse-style" program that focuses on a convenience metric for drop-off sites and requires manufacturers to pay to recycle all electronics returned.
HB 4775 first passed the state House of Representatives and Senate in April and May, respectively, but then spent a month in conference committee after the House rejected a Senate attempt to link an unrelated bill on plastic pellets to it.
The amended bill without the add-on passed the House with a vote of 109-0 and the Senate with a vote of 42-0 on June 15. Republican Gov. Henry McMaster signed it June 17.
E-scrap collection in South Carolina is set to undergo some major modifications. | Jon Bilous/Shutterstock[/caption]
South Carolina's e-scrap program will be seeing significant changes in the coming year after the governor signed House Bill 4775 into law.
The bill eliminates weight targets for electronics collection and instead sets up easier access to drop-off sites, reforming the state's current extended producer responsibility (EPR) program for electronics to more closely resemble that of Illinois.
South Carolina is now the second state, after Illinois, to move to a "clearinghouse-style" program that focuses on a convenience metric for drop-off sites and requires manufacturers to pay to recycle all electronics returned.
HB 4775 first passed the state House of Representatives and Senate in April and May, respectively, but then spent a month in conference committee after the House rejected a Senate attempt to link an unrelated bill on plastic pellets to it.
The amended bill without the add-on passed the House with a vote of 109-0 and the Senate with a vote of 42-0 on June 15. Republican Gov. Henry McMaster signed it June 17.
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