Sunday, May 24, 2015

Solution to electronics recycling crisis making headway in Springfield | The Herald-News

 

By LAUREN LEONE–CROSS - lleonecross@shawmedia.com

JOLIET — The effects of the state's electronics recycling crisis played out last weekend during Will County's Recyclepalooza event, where attendance was "overwhelming."

  • More than half of the 1,000 people surveyed at the event said they were there to drop off electronics, said Marta Keane, recycling program specialist and green business relations coordinator for the county's Resource Recovery & Energy Division.

    Most electronic devices — televisions and computers included — have been banned from Illinois landfills since 2012, so there is nowhere for them to go without these programs, Keane said. But last week's event was so overwhelming that county officials had to turn people away.

    "Never in our history have we had to turn people away," Keane said. "We had to close it down at 2 p.m. The last car was serviced after 5 p.m. The last [contractors'] truck pulled away at 9 p.m."

    The good news is that new legislation making its way through Springfield is aimed at saving underfunded electronics recycling programs statewide, Keane said.

    Short-term fix

    A key change to House Bill 1455 addresses a major issue faced by electronics manufacturers: The expensive process of shipping cathode ray tube glass — a toxic material used in old TVs and monitors — overseas or out of state.

    The bill also adjusts the funding formula used by the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency to determine how much manufacturers pay into these programs. If nothing is done, the steep cost of recycling could shift to consumers or local governments.

    Local and state officials and the Illinois Manufacturers Association are onboard with these changes, said Mark Denzler, vice president and chief operating officer for IMA.

    Solving the CRT glass issue

    Complicating matters is CRT glass, which is heavy and difficult to recycle.

    Most manufacturers ship CRT glass overseas or out of state due to the lack of certified CRT recycling facilities in the U.S., Keane said. The latest proposal provides manufacturers the cheaper option of sending the leaded material to Peoria Disposal Company, where it would be stored at a landfill until it could be properly recycled.

    “While we don't favor landfilling the material, we see this a crisis,” Keane said. “This is not a final fix. This is a Band-Aid fix.”

    The move is estimated to save costs to manufacturers. The stored material would also count toward recycling goals.

    The Illinois House and Senate passed resolutions earlier this month supporting the move, noting "stockpiles of abandoned CRT glass have been discovered at several former electronic waste processing facilities across the U.S."….

  • Read more by going to Page 2 on the following:  Solution to electronics recycling crisis making headway in Springfield | The Herald-News

    Jim Nowlan: The looming public unions strike in Illinois - The Daily Journal: Local Columnists

     

    From my distant vantage point, I foresee as inevitable a first-ever strike in July by state of Illinois public employee unions.

    There is just no way to bridge a chasm wide as the Grand Canyon between feisty GOP Gov. Bruce Rauner, who is probably spoiling for a strike, and the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees, which is the lead union in negotiations with the state that are on-going to replace a contract that expires July 1.

    I think Rauner wants to make a national name for himself as the governor who toppled the unions from their comfortable perches. He cannot do so in the union-friendly Democratic legislature so he will seek to break the backs of the unions via the collective bargaining process.

    If successful, he would indeed become a national political figure.

    Rauner already has gone to the federal court for a judgment in support of his efforts to stop public employee unions from exacting dues from workers who don't join the unions.

    The governor's role model in all this is undoubtedly President Ronald Reagan, who in 1981 momentously faced down the Professional Air Traffic Controllers Organization by replacing controllers who had struck illegally.

    Reagan's action subsequently hobbled unions across both the public and private sectors. They haven't been the same since.

    In Illinois, public employee unions, who represent about 95 percent of the state's 62,000 employees, have grown fat and sassy under sweetheart contracts negotiated during the past decade with Democratic governors who craved their votes and dollars.

    During this period, pay for unionized workers went up more than 50 percent while that for non-union supervisory employees actually went down as a result of a pay freeze combined with required unpaid furlough days.

    No wonder that thousands of supervisory employees migrated to union membership so they could earn as much as those they supervised.

    The unions also have used contract rules to tie state agency executives in knots. For example, agency executives find it almost impossible to recruit talent from outside union ranks.

    Union rules allow state employees to claim any open position on the basis of seniority. If the claimant is not qualified for the position, the state will provide training assistance for the employee.

    One non-union manager I know tried to promote a deserving employee to a better job — but because of required union postings of job openings and seniority, the wrong person got the job. This is not unusual.

    Rauner is itching to take back control, humble the unions and make a name for himself. How will he do it?

    I am guessing, in negotiations, Rauner's people will seek cuts in pay, the right to privatize state work, elimination of seniority, increased health-care premiums, and prohibitions on union membership for management employees.

    All of this, of course, is the equivalent of waving bright red capes in front of the bulls.

    Gov. Jim Thompson signed a collective bargaining law for state employees in 1983, which allows all but "essential" employees such as prison guards to strike. There has never been a major strike against the state of Illinois.

    I talked with old friend Michael LeRoy, a professor of labor relations at the University of Illinois in Urbana-Champaign and author of a book about collective bargaining.

    "Union leaders usually counsel their members against strikes," says LeRoy, "but there is often enormous pressure from the rank-and-file members to go out (on strike)."

    LeRoy sees AFSCME and the Service Employees International Union (SEIU), another major state of Illinois union, as "hard bargainers" in behalf of their members.

    Though not an expert on labor negotiations, I predict the governor's final contract offer this summer will be unacceptable, even insulting, to AFSCME.

    This will set the stage for an "impasse" (in which further bargaining would be futile), a legal term in collective bargaining, along with that of "good faith bargaining." These terms of art typically end up being interpreted by the courts as applied to conflict situations such as this will certainly be.

    Rauner then will seek to implement his final offer, and in response AFSCME will go out on strike.

    This will mean war, and as such it will be bitter. Hold onto your hats.

    Jim Nowlan is a former Illinois legislator and aide to three unindicted governors, and he is the lead author of “Illinois Politics: A Citizen’s Guide” (University of Illinois Press, 2010, and co-author of "Fixing Illinois, University of Illinois Press, 2014). He can be contacted at jnowlan3@gmail.com.

    Jim Nowlan: The looming public unions strike in Illinois - The Daily Journal: Local Columnists