Community Corner

What To Do With Your Old Electronics

Electronics can't be thrown away and, sometimes, can't be given away either.

If Santa upgraded your computer or TV this year, he's also leaving you with a decision about what to do with your old equipment.

The problem is this: Local garbage collections and recycling depots do not take electronics because of the mercury, lead and other contaminants in the equipment. This is called "e-waste," and it's piling up in basements and bedroom closets all over the country.

It requires special equipment to properly recycle computers and monitors. So, many municipalities sponsor events to collect old electronics to prevent them from being dumped at landfills, where it can leach poisons into the environment.

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, through the Department of Community and Economic Development, has several collections of electronics each year, usually in May, June and October. The dates for 2012 are not yet available.

The collections take place in the parking lot or in the parking lot of .

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It costs about $1 per CPU and about $18 for a television or old CRT monitor.

If you don't want to wait until May, Pennsylvania's Department of Environmental Protection also points to a local company, Com-Cycle, at 2330 Southwest 26th St. in Allentown, or its affiliate AERC at 2591 Mitchell Ave., also in Allentown.

The fees are $4 for computers and up to $22 for old CRT monitors depending on the size.

Send it Back

Another alternative is to check with the manufacturer. Many companies that sell or make cell phones and computers also have free or low-cost programs to take back your old stuff: AppleAT&T, Best Buy, DelleBayHewlett Packard, LG, Motorola, NECNokiaOffice Depot, Samsung, Sony, Sprint, Staples, T-Mobile, Toshiba and Verizon.

According to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's "Plug in to eCycling" program, only 15-20 percent of retired computers, TVs, cell phones and other electronic devices are being recycled. The rest are disposed of illegally or are piling up in people's homes.

So, one last alternative is to donate your computer.

Donate It

The EPA, however, recommends that you donate your equipment to a refurbisher first, so the hard drives are scrubbed and the equipment can be updated enough for use in schools or community organizations.

Here are some EPA-suggested programs that will help you safely donate your used electronics: EcoSquidEarth 911, My Green Electronics, Electronic Industries Alliance's Consumer Education InitiativeTechSoup and Rechargeable Battery Recycling Corporation (RBRC).

In the spirit of recycling, the article was updated we ran last year.


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