html5-img
1 / 15

Universal Waste Program

Universal Waste Program. Sharon Ricketts Williams, Recycling Coordinator. VA Illiana Health Care System Danville, IL 61832 Sharon.Williams3@med.va.gov. Universal Waste.

obelia
Download Presentation

Universal Waste Program

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Universal Waste Program

  2. Sharon Ricketts Williams, Recycling Coordinator VA Illiana Health Care System Danville, IL 61832 Sharon.Williams3@med.va.gov

  3. Universal Waste • is defined by the Illinois EPA as batteries, pesticides, thermostats & lamps at this time. Computers and/or electronics have not been added to the list. • VA Illiana Healthcare System remains ahead of the curve addressing recycling of these universal waste items.

  4. Computers • Many usable items that no longer have a function at VA Illiana Health Care System can find homes at other VA’s, State Facilities, or local veterans groups and schools. • Disbursing useful equipment to other entities provides disposition cost avoidance.

  5. VAIHCS has exceeded environmental compliance requirements by achieving 100% computer equipment recycling for five years.

  6. Cost Avoidance • Provided a 7-year, overall cost avoidance of $20,490 to $81,960 based upon NEPSI (National Electronics Product Stewardship Initiative) figures of $30 per system disposition and contracted vendor service charges (i.e. hard drive sanitization, de-installation and asset tracking) totaling $120 per system

  7. Our stewardship efforts are demonstrated through policy modification, streamlined de-installation and sanitization procedures, paperwork accountability, inter-service support and cooperation, using varied and innovative methodologies to prevent solid waste and toxic substances contamination to our earth. Our reward for our contribution is knowing a teacher’s ability to teach and our school children’s learning capabilities are enhanced.

  8. Disposition costs of various electronics items are avoided by utilizing computerized equipment scrap sales, an annual county sponsored electronic recycling event, and donation of usable computer equipment.

  9. The first associated recycling cost realized in five years totaled $27 for disposition of unusable monitors during FY’03. Deinstallation, sanitization and asset tracking are in-house services performed by employees during daily jobs. Transportation costs incurred for disposition are minimal, recycling event location is held two miles away.

  10. Batteries • All batteries are sent to centralized locations for pick up. Batteries are segregated, nicad from mercury, packed in plastic buckets and stored until vendor picks up. Certification of recycling is issued by the recycler processing batteries. Shop tool battery packs and large equipment batteries are exchanged/repacked during purchase.

  11. Fluorescent tubes Spent fluorescent tubes are taken to a designated area and inserted into empty new tube packaging. The packages are packed into boxes or containers awaiting pick up.

  12. BYOB (Be Your Own Broker) • Researching vendors for your recycling materials can take time but provides good payoff. • Remember, a cost avoidance can be worth more than earning $$ for your recyclable materials.

  13. Questions? Comments? Contact Sharon Williams at Sharon.Williams3@med.va.gov or phone 217.554.5667.

More Related