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PSI Sustaining Partners

PSI Sustaining Partners. Giles W. and Elise G. Mead Foundation. Hotz Environmental. As You Sow. Thank You to Our Project Sponsors!. PSI Mattress Stewardship Initiative. PSI National Mattress Stewardship Meeting. Hartford, CT April 11, 2011. Issue/Strategy Discussions.

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PSI Sustaining Partners

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  1. PSI Sustaining Partners Giles W. and Elise G. Mead Foundation Hotz Environmental As You Sow

  2. Thank You to Our Project Sponsors! PSI Mattress Stewardship Initiative

  3. PSI National Mattress Stewardship Meeting Hartford, CT April 11, 2011

  4. Issue/Strategy Discussions • Background technical information • Clarify issues and strategies • Additional strategies • Prioritize strategies • Workgroups at end of day - top 2 strategies

  5. Issue # 1 – Lack of Sustainable Financing Managing used mattresses and box springs represents a significant cost to local governments and institutions. Speakers: • Peter Egan, Connecticut Resources Recovery Authority • Marilynn Cruz-Aponte, City of Hartford, CT • Nicole Poepping, Clean Water Action, RI

  6. Issue #1: Potential Strategies • Develop and introduce legislation that includes an Advanced Recycling Fee (ARF). • Develop and introduce Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) legislation.

  7. Advanced Recycling Fee (ARF) • Separate charge placed on a new product and paid by a consumer at retail to cover the cost of the product’s eventual end-of-life management. • Associated with government managed fund, and little or no manufacturer involvement. • State legislatures often seize ARF funds for other purposes. • Need for additional government staff to manage the fund collection, grant distribution, contractor services, and other operational functions. • Associated with visible fees at retail. • State governments have placed a visible ARF on tires, motor oil, lead acid batteries, electronics (CA only)

  8. Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) • Cost Internalization -- Manufacturers internalize end-of-life management costs into the cost of doing business so that they are invisible to the consumer, even though the costs may be passed on to the consumer. • Manufacturers have direct management ability to increase efficiency, improve service, and cut costs • Laws in U.S. (electronics, thermostats, batteries, paint, fluorescent lamps, etc.) • Most common voluntary industry programs in the U.S. • Call2Recycle (operated by the Rechargeable Battery Recycling Corp.) • Thermostat Recycling Corporation

  9. State Extended Producer Responsibility Laws

  10. Issue # 2 – Lack of Standardized Definitions Lack of standardized definition of what constitutes mattress and box spring “recycling” and a lack of consumer awareness about recycling options. Speaker: • Sherill Baldwin, Connecticut Department of Environmental Protection

  11. Issue #2 – Potential Strategies • Develop a standard definition for recycling that governments and all those in the mattress industry can agree on. 2) Develop a statewide or national education campaign.

  12. Issue #3 – Lack of Data Lack of data on how many mattresses are being recovered, and how many of those are being recycled Speakers: • Stefanie Wnuck, Product Stewardship Institute • Katie Dagon, Connecticut Department of Environmental Protection

  13. What Data Do We Have? • 40 million new mattresses and box springs are sold every year. • Mattress disposal costs can range from $5 to $30 per mattress.

  14. What Data are Missing? Only a small percentage of mattresses and box springs are recycled. How many mattresses and box springs are… • Recycled each year? • Sold by renovators each year? • Disposed of by municipalities each year? Incinerated? Landfilled? • Disposed of by institutions each year? • Donated to charities each year? Without the data it is difficult promote mattress recycling!

  15. Why are Data Missing? • Difficult to Track What Happens to Discarded Mattresses • Mattresses that are no longer needed are discarded by consumers in several ways: • Given away to someone • Taken away by retailer upon delivery of a new unit • Put out on the curb for municipal pick-up • Taken to transfer station or landfill • Dumped illegally

  16. What is the Retailer Role in Managing Used Mattresses? In-Home Replacement • Retailers manage used mattresses taken away upon delivery in several ways: • Provide them to private entities that pick them up (either for a cost or for free) • Hire a contractor to haul them away • Donate them to charities for reuse • Dispose of them in a landfill or incinerator • According to ISPA, about 50% of the time when a new mattress is delivered by a retailer a used mattress is taken away. What happens to all of these used mattresses?

  17. Issue #3 – Questions to Consider • What are the data gaps? • What level priority is it to fill those data gaps? • How do we obtain the missing data?

  18. Issue #3 – Potential Strategies • Create a database for local governments and institutions to track the management of mattresses. • Require retailers to report on their methods of discarding mattresses.

  19. Issue #4 – Lack of Refurbishment Standards Lack of recognized standards that prevent fraudulent refurbishment operations and prevent bed bug contamination, and a lack of consumer education about risks associated with unsafe refurbishment. Speakers: • Dr. Gale Ridge, Connecticut Agricultural Experiment Station • Joan Jordan, Connecticut Department of Consumer Protection

  20. Issue #4 – Potential Strategies • Develop nationally recognized standards for mattress refurbishment (e.g., Code of Conduct). • Require that all refurbished mattresses must be sterilized to prevent the spread of bed bugs. • Ensure effective enforcement. • Require retailers to provide information to consumers upon purchase of a refurbished mattress.

  21. Next Steps • What 2 top strategies should we focus on for workgroups prior to stakeholder conference calls? • Which stakeholders are missing?

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