Household materials to bring:
Chemicals, electronics, tv's, computers, phones, small appliances, light bulbs, paints, cleaners and solvents. Blue bags will be given in exchange for drop-offs while supplies last.
If you have a gas lawnmower, bring it in and exchange it for a $100 rebate toward a new electric or manual mower. Recycle old gas cans for new environmentally friendly gas cans.
The fine print (why you should do this, basically):
This is an opportunity for Chicagoans to reduce the amount of material that would otherwise go directly into the waste stream, reuse items that can be refurbished and recycle the components that can be retrieved.More than 3.2 million tons of electronic waste ends up in landfills each year. Donating or recycling outdated electronics encourages the management of potentially hazardous components and supports the safe recovery and reuse of valuable materials.
Recycling or donating these items for re-use also helps reduce the pollution and energy use tied to the production of new electronics. Finally, it can put a computer, TV, or cell phone in the hands of Chicagoans who may need it.
Thank you so much for posting this. I've been trying to figure out how to get rid of my old pc, and every place seems to want to charge me about $30 to do the right thing. Now the city will take it AND give me free blue bags? excellent.
i agree with jamie. thank you for posting! i've been trying to 'help' my husband get rid of some of the electronics/computer stuff in the apt that we don't use or need! i may not be able to be a minimalist, but i sure don't want to be a pack-rat.
Glad to help...this day is just the start. According to what I've read, there will be a permanent center for this type of recycling opening this summer. I'll do an update post once that happens...
please do the update...i couldn't get a certain someone to clean out enough of his stuff in time...now i have to wait til the next one.