Overall Rating Gold - expired
Overall Score 72.62
Liaison Lisa Kilgore
Submission Date March 7, 2014
Executive Letter Download

STARS v1.2

Cornell University
OP-20: Electronic Waste Recycling Program

Status Score Responsible Party
Complete 1.00 / 1.00 Spring Buck
R5 Manager
Facilities Operations
"---" indicates that no data was submitted for this field

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Does the institution have a program in place to recycle, reuse, and/or refurbish all electronic waste generated by the institution and take measures to ensure that the electronic waste is recycled responsibly?:
Yes

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Does the institution have a program in place to recycle, reuse, and/or refurbish electronic waste generated by students and take measures to ensure that the electronic waste is recycled responsibly?:
Yes

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A brief description of steps taken to ensure that e-waste is recycled responsibly, workers’ basic safety is protected, and environmental standards are met:
Cornell University's solid waste and recycling operation, R5 Operations, collects electronic waste at all Cornell facilities. R5 Operations staff are professional, trained material handlers, and members of the Tompkins-Cortland Counties Building Trades Council, Maintenance Division Union. R5 Operations staff are provided the vehicles and tools to safely move electronic equipment. Electronics are stored in the R5 Operations facility while waiting for transport by vendor; this is a secure facility. The current electronic recycling vendor is Sunnking, Inc. which has Responsible Recycling (R2) Practices certification (http://www.epa.gov/osw/conserve/materials/ecycling/r2practices.htm), disassembles all products within the United States, is located locally in Brockport, NY, and has a 97% recycle rate. Sunnking, Inc. shreds all hard drives and provides Cornell with a certificate of destruction for each load of materials.

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A brief description of the electronic waste recycling program for institution-generated materials:
The electronic waste recycling program is a function of the University's solid waste and recycling operation, R5 Operations. Electronics are collected during routine daily recycling collection stops, are collected upon request, and are collected during building clean-outs. Any staff member at the University may request an item be collected for recycling. R5 Operations owns and operates a machine to degauss hard drives, as needed, prior to destruction. Cornell recycled 113.45 tons of electronic waste in 2012. Accepted electronics include, but is not limited to: Monitors, CPUs and hard drives, keyboards, circuit boards, cables, mice, printers, copiers, microwave ovens, televisions, cell phones, fax machines, power cords, extension cords, power strips, answering machines, fax machines, typewriters, pagers, cameras, VCR/DVD players, CD's, remote controls, and radios/stereos/tapes/records/8 track tape players.

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A brief description of the electronic waste recycling program for student-generated materials :
The electronic waste recycling program for students is multifaceted. Electronics are collected through Student and Academic Services in residence halls. Depending on the item and time of year electronics are collected and transferred to R5 Operations for recycling and destruction or are inventoried and sold through the annual "Dump and Run" program. Additionally, an electronics recycle bin for small electronics is available for student, staff, and faculty use at the centrally located Cornell Police Department facility. All materials collected from this recycle bin are collected and recycled through R5 Operations. Students also may donate personal computers to the student run Cornell Computer Reuse Association where computers are refurbished and donated. The website for this organization is https://orgsync.com/73285/chapter.

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The website URL where information about the e-waste recycling program is available:
Data source(s) and notes about the submission:
The new addition for this year is the electronic recycle collection bin in Barton Hall. Note this bin is a "mailbox" type bin which is secure, is located at the Cornell Police Department, and is under 24 hour video surveylance.

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