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CMS Bureau of Property Management State Surplus Property Recycling & Scrap Electronics Chip Gass, I-Cycle Coordinator on behalf of Curtis A. Howard, Administrator.

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Presentation on theme: "CMS Bureau of Property Management State Surplus Property Recycling & Scrap Electronics Chip Gass, I-Cycle Coordinator on behalf of Curtis A. Howard, Administrator."— Presentation transcript:

1 CMS Bureau of Property Management State Surplus Property Recycling & Scrap Electronics Chip Gass, I-Cycle Coordinator on behalf of Curtis A. Howard, Administrator Digital Dump: Toxic Trade The High Tech Trashing of our World

2 Digital Dump: Where we came in… In October 2005, the Basel Action Network, an environmental watchdog group, contacted CMS State Surplus about discarded electronics found in Lagos Nigeria, Africa CMS was notified of the release of a news breaking photo-documentary Blistering report documented evidence of computers owned by the State of Illinois being found burning in a roadside ditch 12 State agency assets belonging to seven (7) agencies, among these: IDOT, DNR, IDES, ISP, DHS, and others

3 Turning the Tide on Toxic Technology CMS State Surplus took the initiative to mitigate the social and environmental impact of the “digital dump” and formulated a comprehensive plan to ensure the environmentally-friendly disposal of the state’s discarded electronics Key Objectives: Compliance with P.A. 93-0306 removal of sensitive information from hard drives Environmentally responsible disposal of obsolete IT technology

4 Turning the Tide on Toxic Technology In 2006, 14 companies across the nation responded to the state’s solicitation to identify a qualified vendor to provide “one- stop-shopping” to meet identified objectives Outcome: Creation of a master contract to provide the following services: Collection and Transportation Data collecting device wiped Data preservation, if required Certification of erasure Diagnosis Repair Redeploy Certification of recycling

5 Turning the Tide on Toxic Technology Result: By policy of the Director, effective July 1, 2007, CMS State Surplus Property no longer accepts scrap computers, printers, fax machines, copiers, etc., at its central warehouse. CMS concludes evaluation of master contract RFP and posts award September 2006 Director of CMS executes final contract for data wiping and recycling January 2007 Director of CMS notifies agencies, boards, commissions and universities July 1, 2007 Governor Announces Executive Order #12 requiring Electronics Recycling October 2006 CMS State Surplus Property is first division to begin recycling April 2007

6 Turning the Tide on Toxic Technology ELECTRONIC EQUIPMENT ACCEPTED UNDER MASTER AGREEMENT LAPTOPS DESKTOPS SERVERS MONITORS (CRT & LCD) PDA’S (Palm/Blackberry) PRINTERS DIGITAL CAMERAS MID-RANGE/MAIN FRAMES KEYBOARDS, MICE, CABLES FAX MACHINES TAPE DRIVES MEDIA PROJECTORS PHONE SYSTEMS PHONES INCL. CELL HUBS/SWITCHES/ROUTERS STORAGE DEVICES SCANNERS – Bar code TVs COPIERS VCRs

7 Turning the Tide on Toxic Technology ELECTRONIC EQUIPMENT NOT ACCEPTED UNDER MASTER AGREEMENT ELECTRONIC MEDICAL EQUIPMENT TESTING EQUIPMENT MAIL ROOM EQUIPMENT AND…ANY NON-ELECTRONIC EQUIPMENT OR ANYTHING NOT LISTED PREVIOUSLY!

8 Turning the Tide on Toxic Technology The state’s recycling vendor, Sipi Metals, Inc., in Chicago is one of only two vendors that have signed BAN’s “Pledge of True Stewardship,” attesting to responsible recycling Examples of sorting process

9 Turning the Tide on Toxic Technology Examples of Sipi Metal’s shredding process Examples of Sipi Metal’s sampling process

10 Turning the Tide on Toxic Technology Examples of Sipi Metal’s melting process for reuse

11 Turning the Tide on Toxic Technology Net Effect since April 1, 2007: After decades of selling the state’s obsolete electronic scrap to unscrupulous bidders at public auction, CMS has positioned itself to ensure compliance with environmentally sound recycling practices. No. of Assets Recycled Tons of Recycled Content 6,13767 Tons 67 Tons of plastics, metals, glass, etc., were kept from Illinois landfills since April, 2007

12 I-CYCLE: Program Expansion I-Cycle is governed by the 1986 Solid Waste Management Act This year, CMS proposed to the Lt. Governor’s Green Council the retooling of the I-Cycle program to take advantage of the Executive Order consolidating state-owned and leased facilities. CMS Proposed: Updating and amending the 20-yr-old governing legislation Issuing a statewide Request for Information (RFI) for a public/private partnership of state government’s recycling activities Creation of a new division to consolidation the various programs: recycling, green buildings:LEEDs, fleet, and procurement duties and responsibilities under one division within CMS Property Management/Facilities

13 I-CYCLE: New Program Initiatives August 13, 2007 Illinois General Assembly passed P.A. 95-0104 amending the Government Buildings Energy Cost Reduction Act of 1991 to provide for the installation of Energy Star labeled lighting. In November, CMS issued a solicitation to provide the State of Illinois and interested local governmental management, pick up and transportation, processing of fluorescent, high intensity discharge, neon and incandescent lamps; PCB and non-PCB lamp ballasts. Includes 614 state-owned and leased facilities 14.2 million sq. ft. of building space. (excludes entities not consolidated: Illinois universities, toll highway, mental health and correctional facilities)

14 I-CYCLE: Emerging Issues The State Records Commission is considering adopting into their rules and regulations a new system for destroying documents that deal with sensitive and confidential matters, e.g., social security numbers. High security straight-cut paper shredders will become obsolete such the one used by Illinois Department of Revenue, at the Willard Ice Building in Springfield. This shredder is the largest producing approximately 85 ton of shredded content monthly. The trend for shredding has impacted I-Cycle in recent years resulting in a decline in mixed paper content historically found in the I-Cycle containers. Agencies, for security reasons are outsourcing shredding, therefore reducing the volume of paper typically found in mixed content.

15 Q & A follows this panel’s presentation Next up: Green Buildings


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