ADANS - Medical Health News |
| Of old television sets, computers and any other electronics will not be considered refuse when the electronics of News-Scotland re-using the plan between in force in February. According to Catherine McCarthy, the director of communications for the panel News-Scotland (RRFB) of funds of re-establishment of resource, a programme of intendance of electronics will be applied in some two phases. The first phase includes the re-use of televisions, the computers and the relative accessories. “The province passed the legislation that, effective on February 1, 2008, these materials will be prohibited provision in the embankments,” said McCarthy. 26 deposits at least will be established through the province as drops in addition to points for old electronics. In the county of Colchester, one proposes a deposit for Truro. Materials gathered will be matched, dismounted and re-used in new products. While there will be no cost to drop in addition to electronics, the program will be placed by the obligatory environmental fees of handling (EHFs), on all the electronics bought at February 2008. Televisions, including the cathode ray tube (tube), projection postpones and the will with flat panel carry a EHF of $15 up to 18 inches or $45 for televisions 46 inches or larger. A portable computer will have of the $5 EHF and an office computer will be $10. The second phase of the electronics re-using, planned for 2009, will include recorders such as players of video tape recorder and DVD. The RRFB seeks public comments within outline before it subjected to the environment and the work of NS in August for final approval. An outline is available on their Web site, www.rrfb.com |