Quantcast
Home manage Las Vegas Review-Journal
  Jobs Cars Homes Shopping Travel Weddings Golf Best of Las Vegas Photo   Search:

RECENT EDITIONS
Sat Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri

sponsored by
Business


TROUBLE WITH TVS

Once a new set arrives under the tree, what to do with the old one?

It's Christmas morning, and you just tore the wrapping paper off your new flat-screen television.

Everything's perfect, except for one thing: You need to unload your old clunker of a set.


Most Popular Stories
  • Fraud with Portent
  • Debt-ridden casino operators told to expect pressure
  • REAL ESTATE: Las Vegas home prices stabilize as threat of foreclosure flood wanes
  • GAMING COMPANY EARNINGS: Station drops $455.4 million
  • THE STRIP: License backed for Aria
  • GLOBAL GAMING EXPO: Recession over? Don't bet on it
  • THE STRIP: License approved for Aria
  • Union wants insiders to help pull Station from bankruptcy
  • Foreclosure wave continues
  • INSIDE GAMING: Missouri outburst hurts Lee, Pinnacle




  • But tossing that outmoded TV is tougher than you'd think. The garbagemen won't take it along with the rest of your trash, and few local charities accept older TVs. What's more, the Southern Nevada Health District, which licenses recyclers, says no Clark County recycling outfits are certified to break down or reuse televisions, though executives of a St. Louis company called EPC said they hope to open a TV-recycling site on Sunset Road sometime in the first quarter.

    The lack of options could become a problem in coming months, as the transition to digital broadcasting renders analog TVs obsolete unless the sets connect to cable, satellite or a converter box.

    Displaced analog TVs will join millions more already sitting in closets across America, said Barbara Kyle, national coordinator of the Electronics TakeBack Coalition in San Francisco. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency estimates that Americans had 99.1 million sets stored and unused for a year or more at the end of 2007. Kyle said she believes those are all analog TVs that people set aside with plans to find a taker at a later date. With the digital transition, though, most folks could begin eyeing those sets as outmoded albatrosses no one will want. Hence Kyle's concern that tens of millions of televisions laden with toxic waste could be headed for the nation's dumps in the next few months.

    "We think we're going to see a huge spike in the amount of televisions that end up in the trash," Kyle said. "People are already getting rid of their old TVs, and we expect that trend to increase after the (digital) transition."

    Local trash observers say they have yet to see increases in unloaded sets.

    Bob Coyle, area president of Clark County's waste manager, Republic Services of Southern Nevada, said his company hasn't seen gains in TV-dumping. Nor has in-home trash collector 1-800-GOT-JUNK noticed an uptick in local customers requesting that the business take away antiquated sets, said spokesman Travis Dudfield. And Steve Chartrand, president and chief executive officer of Goodwill of Southern Nevada, said the number of TVs donated to the nonprofit's area thrift stores has held steady.

    Coyle said Republic isn't bracing for a surge in trashed TVs. Given the soft economy, he suspects consumers who have stuck with analog sets will simply upgrade to satellite or cable, or buy a converter box -- all more affordable options than dropping several hundred dollars on a digital television.

    Research from the Consumer Electronics Association in Virginia shows Coyle may be right. The trade group found that 48 percent of analog-TV owners plan to buy a converter box, and 12 percent expect to sign up for cable. And unlike, say, car tires or batteries, consumers don't necessarily make a one-for-one trade when they finish with a timeworn television. They'll just as often send the dated set to a back bedroom or basement recreation room, where the TV becomes a video-game terminal or movie-viewing screen.

    Still, plenty of consumers might want to unload archaic sets. And that's where their options get thin locally.

    On top of searching in vain for area TV recyclers, consumers will have trouble finding a private trash scavenger collect old sets. Dudfield said 1-800-GOT-JUNK urges customers to hang onto their old-fashioned TVs until the city has an "environmentally responsible" recycling operation where the company can take old sets for reuse.

    And if it's left curb-side with the rest of the household's garbage, Republic will tag it and leave it on the spot, where it'll sit haunting the family like Aunt Myrtle's unwanted fruitcake.

    Republic won't toss TVs into their trucks because trash compactors will crush the sets. And with four to eight pounds of lead in every television, plus chemicals including cadmium, beryllium and brominated flame retardants, the dust that results from grinding up sets becomes an environmental threat.

    That's why Republic treats unwanted televisions as hazardous household waste, which means consumers wanting to trash them have to take them to one of two places: The company's Gowan Road recycling center or its Henderson transfer station. Customers can abandon their old sets at either site free. From there, Republic sends the sets to its Apex landfill about 20 miles north of Las Vegas. The dump is lined, Coyle said, to prevent waste from leaching into surrounding soil.

    Even if consumers feel it's safe to send their ancient TVs to the landfill, Kyle and officials at the Consumer Electronics Association want them to reconsider. Televisions contain pounds and pounds of valuable commodities, including glass, plastic, metal and even wood, all of which can be reused, thus sparing natural resources. With recycling programs proliferating nationally (see sidebar), locals could try hanging on to their sets until an operation launches here.

    Until then, what should Las Vegans do with sets they don't want to send to the area landfill? Locals' best bets for now are with philanthropies, retailers and electronics manufacturers.

    Charities that accept and reuse computers and computer monitors, such as the Blind Center of Nevada and the Clark County Public Education Foundation, won't accept outmoded TV sets, so stick instead with nonprofits looking for goods to resell in thrift stores.

    The Salvation Army takes sets younger than 10 years old. Army officials offer this simple rule: If a TV has the letters UHF on it, it's too obsolete to resell in their stores. But if the remote goes past 99 channels, the set will likely find a taker inside an army thrift store.

    Goodwill also takes any working TV for its thrift stores, Chartrand said.

    Don't bother dropping off nonworking sets at either charity, because the groups must pay a third party to haul away dead TVs.

    "Our general rule is that we ask people to donate what they would give a friend," Chartrand said. "Hopefully, they'll give to their friend something that's in good working condition."

    Passing off a broken TV to any charity can lead to unintended consequences, Kyle said. The companies that cart away busted sets sometimes sell those bum televisions to waste traders who export them to developing countries in Asia and Africa. Rather than going to sophisticated recycling plants with environmental controls, the TVs often end up in "primitive, informal" settings where poorly paid workers smash them open and breathe in lead dust, or burn them and inhale the resulting dioxins, Kyle said.

    "The way we're managing getting rid of our old TVs is poisoning people on the other side of the globe," she said.

    Manufacturers increasingly do offer take-back programs. Sony, Samsung, LG Electronics, Panasonic and Toshiba all run drop-off programs, but none operate locally yet. That could change: TV makers launch new locations constantly, and Sony says it wants to post drop-off sites within 20 miles of 90 percent of the U.S. population, said Parker Brugge, vice president of environmental affairs and industry sustainability for the Consumer Electronics Association. Best Buy is also testing a pilot program allowing consumers to drop off up to two electronics products, including TVs, every day at their stores, with no obligation to buy a new product. That program hasn't come to Nevada yet.

    Contact reporter Jennifer Robison at jrobison@reviewjournal.com or 702-380-4512.

    GETTING RID OF THAT OLD TELEVISION -- THE RIGHT WAY

    Local options are scarce for getting rid of your analog TV, but here are a few places that accept outmoded sets under certain conditions:

    • Best Buy. The electronics retailer will take your old TV for free when you buy a new product and have Best Buy or the company’s Geek Squad deliver it or install it at home.

    • Salvation Army. The Salvation Army will accept donated TVs as long as they’re less than a decade old, and as long as the remote tracks at least 99 channels. Sets also must work. They sell working televisions in their thrift stores, but they must pay to have a scavenger take away dud TVs.

    • Goodwill of Southern Nevada. This thrift-store operator and employment charity will accept any working TV for resale. Like the Salvation Army, it must shell out valuable charitable dollars to have bad sets removed.

    • Republic Services. Clark County’s contracted trash collector won’t pick up any TVs left curb-side. Instead, the company treats TVs as hazardous household waste. That means you have to take them to one of two places: The company’s recycling center at 333 W. Gowan Road, or its Henderson transfer station, at 560 Cape Horn Drive

    • Sony. The brand was the first TV company to start a nationwide recycling program for old sets. The company doesn’t have a drop-off site here, but it will pick up your old TV if you buy a new one and have it delivered. To qualify for Sony’s Green Glove delivery service, though, customers need to buy a 32-inch or bigger Bravia LCD television at the Sony Style store inside the Forum Shops at Caesars Palace or online at Sonystyle.com and choose premier, in-home delivery service. Sony deliverers will remove both your old TV and the new TV’s packaging. Company officials say they send both out for recycling.

    • LG Electronics. The television maker partnered with Waste Management’s recycling division in August to set up TV turn-in sites nationwide. For now, the only Nevada location is in Sparks, at Waste Management’s Lockwood Landfi But LG says it’s always adding locations. Consumers can recycle free of charge any LG, Zenith and Goldstar brands of TVs, monitors, video-casette recorders, digital-video disc players and other TV-related electronics. They can also pay a fee to recycle non-LG brands.

    • Samsung. Consumers can drop off Samsung TVs with participating partners. Only two Nevada locations so far accept Samsung TVs, and they’re both up north. Computer Corps in Carson City and Sims Recycling Solutions in Sparks accept Samsung products free, and non-Samsung goods for a fee. Wal-Mart struck a deal to include its former house brands Durabrand and Ilo in the free Samsung program.

    • Panasonic, Sharp and Toshiba. The three manufacturers have a joint-recycling program, but it’s not yet available in Nevada.

    • Freecycle.org. As the old saying goes, one man’s trash is another’s treasure, and at this Web site, you can advertise your junk to folks who might find value in it. They’ll often even take it off your hands for free. You have to join as a member to participate. Freecycle.org has Southern Nevada networks in Las Vegas, North Las Vegas, Henderson and Mesquite.
    Newsvine Digg Fark Technorati reddit StumbleUpon del.icio.us Slashdot Propeller Mixx Furl Twitter MySpace Facebook Google Bookmarks Yahoo! Bookmarks Windows Live Favorites Ask MyStuff myAOL Favorites

    Leave Your Comment 3 Reader Comments
    Terms & Conditions
    The following comments are provided by readers and are the sole responsiblity of the authors. The reviewjournal.com does not review comments before publication nor guarantee their accuracy. By publishing a comment here you agree to abide by the comment policy. If you see a comment that violates the policy, please notify the web editor.

    Some comments may not display immediately due to an automatic filter. These comments will be reviewed within 48 hours. Please do not submit a comment more than once.
    Current Word Count:

    Note: Comments made by reporters and editors of the Las Vegas Review-Journal are presented with a yellow background.

    da truth wrote on December 25, 2008 07:42 PM: Umm.......why don't we just find an office complex dumpster and throw it in?


    Pooly wrote on December 25, 2008 08:00 AM: Put it at the curb with a for sale sign. Guranteed gone (stolen) in minutes.


    Lee wrote on December 25, 2008 07:14 AM: I have replace four T.V.'s this year and it has been easy to get rid of the old ones that still work.

    I set them on the curb and they are gone in a matter of minutes.

    Someone always needs what you don't want and it is a simple way to provide it.