(1) A program must
provide collection services for covered electronic products of
all product types that are reasonably convenient and available to
all citizens of the state residing within its geographic
boundaries, including both rural and urban areas. Each program
must provide collection service in every county of the state. A
program may provide collection services jointly with another plan
or plans.
(a) For any city or town with a population of greater than
ten thousand, each program shall provide a minimum of one
collection site or alternate collection service described in
subsection (3) of this section or a combination of sites and
alternate service that together provide at least one collection
opportunity for all product types. A collection site for a
county may be the same as a collection site for a city or town in
the county.
(b) Collection sites may include electronics recyclers and
repair shops, recyclers of other commodities, reuse
organizations, charities, retailers, government recycling sites,
or other suitable locations.
(c) Collection sites must be staffed, open to the public at
a frequency adequate to meet the needs of the area being served,
and on an on-going basis.
(2) A program may limit the number of covered electronic
products or covered electronic products by product type accepted
per customer per day or per delivery at a collection site or
service. All covered entities may use a collection site as long
as the covered entities adhere to any restrictions established in
the plans.
(3) A program may provide collection services in forms
different than collection sites, such as curbside services, if
those alternate services provide equal or better convenience to
citizens and equal or increased recovery of unwanted covered
electronic products.
(4) For rural areas without commercial centers or areas with
widely dispersed population, a program may provide collection at
the nearest commercial centers or solid waste sites, collection
events, mail-back systems, or a combination of these options.
(5) For small businesses, small governments, charities, and
school districts that may have large quantities of covered
electronic products that cannot be handled at collection sites or
curbside services, a program may provide alternate services. At
a minimum, a program must provide for processing of these large
quantities of covered electronic products at no charge to the
small businesses, small governments, charities, and school
districts.
[2006 c 183 § 9.]