DELL TEAMS UP WITH NYC DEPT. OF EDUCATION
The New York City Department of Education (DOE) has called on Dell to recycle 50,000 pieces of outdated computer equipment.
In its largest recycling project since launching Asset Recovery Services (ASR) in July 2003, Dell is removing computer equipment from nearly 900 schools and administrative locations in New York City for recycling or reuse. Dell will refurbish 1,000 of these computer systems for the city to use in the Dell TechKnow program.
The Dell TechKnow program partners with school districts, corporations and the community to provide "at-risk" or underserved middle school students with technology training.
"We chose Dell for its end-to-end recycling capability, its asset management and repair services, so we could focus on our implementation of newer technology to serve our schools, teachers and students," Charlie Niessner, chief information officer for the New York City DOE, says. The New York DOE is the nation’s largest school district, serving 1.1 million students.
Dell’s ARS is packing and removing the outdated systems and auditing them for refurbishing or recycling.
This arrangement is an extension of an earlier multi-year hardware and managed services agreement between Dell and the New York City DOE that consolidated 700 technology vendors to one, reducing costs and simplifying technology management.
More information about Dell ARS is available online at www.dell.com/assetrecovery, while more information about Dell TechKnow is available at www.dell.com/k12/techknow.
RAA USES MRF INFRASTRUCTURE FOR ELECTONICS
Recycle America Alliance LLC, a subsidiary of Houston-based Waste Management Inc., has initiated new electronics recycling collection services in Wisconsin, adding e-cycling services to five of its materials recovery facilities (MRFs).The Janesville, Milwaukee, Madison, Paper Valley and Superior MRFs will serve as collection depots (E-Depots) for electronics sourced from public and commercial customers and will accept computers, computer monitors, televisions and computer peripherals. The MRFs will also accept consumer electronics, such as stereos, VCRs and cell phones.
RAA has similar operations in Minnesota, Iowa and Illinois.
"We are excited to expand our recycling service offering for Wisconsin businesses and residents," says Jeffrey Fielkow, RAA’s Upper Midwest director of operations.
RAA processes electronics collected at more than 85 recycling or disposal facilities nationwide and has three electronics processing facilities in Phoenix, Houston and Minneapolis. The company also has service contracts with Compucycle in Houston; ElectroniCycle in Gardner, Mass.; E-Recycling of California in Paramount; ReCellular Inc. of Detroit; Quicksilver Recycling Services in Tampa; and Sims Recycling Solutions in Hayward, Calif.
CITIRAYA INC. OPENS TEXAS PLANT
Citiraya Inc. celebrated the grand opening of its Round Rock, Texas, electronics recycling plant in November 2004 with a ceremony that included Round Rock Mayor Nyle Maxwell, International Association of Electronics Recycling President Peter Muscanelli, Citiraya – Singapore CEO Manfred Hamad and Charles Dromgoole of the Round Rock Chamber of Commerce.
The 32,000 square foot Austin-area plant is the first of three centers slated for the United States, Ian Bain, Citiraya business development manager, says. He reports that the plant is capable of processing 1,500 tons per month using one shift. "We segregate, demanufacture, pre-process and shred in the Austin facility."
Citiraya sources electronic scrap from OEMs, OCMs and MNCs nationally and globally, Bain says. The company also receives consumer e-scrap from various recyclers and pre-processors nationwide.
"We offer optimum precious metal returns to our clients and comply with WEEE and RoHS Directives," Bain says. "We have completed stage one of our ISO 14001 accreditation and are on track to be fully ISO accredited by Dec. 20, 2004."
Citiraya is headquartered in Singapore and has 14 collection and pre-processing centers worldwide.
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