Mon, Jul 06, 2009
Dennis Davis carries a used computer that has been diagnosed as salvageable to a room where it will join nearly 80 waiting for operating system software at Desert Waste Not Warehouse, 2550 N. 14th Ave.
Kelly Presnell / Arizona Daily Star
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Business

Don't just trash your old machine; better to recyle

Saving old computers

Environment, low-income users stand to benefit
By Scott Simonson
arizona daily star
Tucson, Arizona | Published: 12.28.2005
Two local nonprofit agencies have a reminder for those who bought a new computer during the holidays: The community and Mother Earth both benefit when people don't put old computers in the trash barrel.
"When you recycle a computer, you can help the environment and less fortunate groups of people," said David Perrin, manager of a Chaparral Foundation Computer Hospital, 4585 E. Speedway, Suite 104, which operates a program to refurbish and recycle computers.
About 10 tons of discarded personal computers, unwanted printers and forsaken monitors arrived at Los Reales Landfill between July 1 and early October this year.
Local computer recycling programs want that mountain of junked computers to come to them, instead. The recycling programs say they give new homes to old computers, conserve landfill space, and help properly dispose of hazardous chemicals.
Recent beneficiaries of computer recycling include about 115 low-income students participating in a program involving the Tucson and Amphitheater school districts and Desert Waste Not Warehouse.
The students took home Windows-based PCs earlier this month after meeting school achievement standards, said Linda Leatherman, a director of the nonprofit Desert Waste Not Warehouse.
Funded by grants from Pima County and Waste Management Inc., the nonprofit group collects computers at its building at 2550 N. 14th Ave. It also helps recycle computers deposited at landfills, including Los Reales.
Amid the tons of trashed computers, there's gold — literally. Gold is found in some computer components, as are hazardous metals such as lead. The average computer monitor contains 6 pounds of lead, according to U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.
Local recyclers salvage useable components to build refurbished machines. And they help ensure that hazardous materials in computer parts receive special care.
Desert Waste Not supplies computers to nonprofit groups and families with low incomes, Leatherman said.
Computer Hospital's refurbished computers go to local nonprofit programs, Perrin said, including ones operated by Goodwill and Habitat for Humanity.
Both local recyclers said their unusable parts and machines are shipped to Gold Circuit Inc., a Chandler-based company that specializes in recycling and safely disposing of hazardous materials in computers.
The local recyclers also take care to protect donors' hard drives against theft of personal information.
Computer Hospital and Desert Waste Not routinely format — or erase — hard drives of the PCs they recycle, although donors may want to do their own formatting before donating..
Formatting offers better protection than just deleting files because it makes it much more difficult for anyone to recover data, said Noah Badyl, a network technician for Law2000 Inc., a Tucson firm that does forensic data recovery.
Since both the Computer Hospital and Desert Waste Not Warehouse are nonprofit organizations, computer donations to the groups are tax-deductible.
● Contact reporter Scott Simonson at 573-4176 or at simonson@azstarnet.com.