A county collection program servicing 223,000 single-family households is rolling out on-demand curbside electronics and battery collection accepting virtually all types of e-scrap. | Photo courtesy Montgomery County Department of Environment Protection[/caption]
By creatively utilizing existing collection infrastructure, a county government in Maryland is rolling out curbside electronics and battery collection for all electronics at no additional cost.
Like virtually every municipal recycling program in the country, unincorporated Montgomery County has seen a rise in fires in the waste stream in recent years, sometimes attributed to improperly discarded electronics and batteries. During a news conference last fall, a Montgomery County Fire and Rescue battalion chief said the county experienced 18 battery-related fires in the waste and recycling system throughout the year, ranging from a laptop or smartphone going into thermal runaway to an actual structure fire.
A few years ago, the county decided one way to tackle that rising problem was to make it easier to recycle electronics, said Alan Pultyniewicz, who leads recycling and refuse services for the Montgomery County Department of Environmental Protection's recycling and resource management division, in an interview with E-Scrap News.
The county this month announced that by the end of 2025 every unincorporated county resident will have access to the device collection program.
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A county collection program servicing 223,000 single-family households is rolling out on-demand curbside electronics and battery collection accepting virtually all types of e-scrap. | Photo courtesy Montgomery County Department of Environment Protection[/caption]
By creatively utilizing existing collection infrastructure, a county government in Maryland is rolling out curbside electronics and battery collection for all electronics at no additional cost.
Like virtually every municipal recycling program in the country, unincorporated Montgomery County has seen a rise in fires in the waste stream in recent years, sometimes attributed to improperly discarded electronics and batteries. During a news conference last fall, a Montgomery County Fire and Rescue battalion chief said the county experienced 18 battery-related fires in the waste and recycling system throughout the year, ranging from a laptop or smartphone going into thermal runaway to an actual structure fire.
A few years ago, the county decided one way to tackle that rising problem was to make it easier to recycle electronics, said Alan Pultyniewicz, who leads recycling and refuse services for the Montgomery County Department of Environmental Protection's recycling and resource management division, in an interview with E-Scrap News.
The county this month announced that by the end of 2025 every unincorporated county resident will have access to the device collection program.
A county collection program servicing 223,000 single-family households is rolling out on-demand curbside electronics and battery collection accepting virtually all types of e-scrap. | Photo courtesy Montgomery County Department of Environment Protection[/caption]
By creatively utilizing existing collection infrastructure, a county government in Maryland is rolling out curbside electronics and battery collection for all electronics at no additional cost.
Like virtually every municipal recycling program in the country, unincorporated Montgomery County has seen a rise in fires in the waste stream in recent years, sometimes attributed to improperly discarded electronics and batteries. During a news conference last fall, a Montgomery County Fire and Rescue battalion chief said the county experienced 18 battery-related fires in the waste and recycling system throughout the year, ranging from a laptop or smartphone going into thermal runaway to an actual structure fire.
A few years ago, the county decided one way to tackle that rising problem was to make it easier to recycle electronics, said Alan Pultyniewicz, who leads recycling and refuse services for the Montgomery County Department of Environmental Protection's recycling and resource management division, in an interview with E-Scrap News.
The county this month announced that by the end of 2025 every unincorporated county resident will have access to the device collection program.
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