Totally Tubular

03.31.2008

The Bite:
imageDude, can your analog TV ride the digital wave? The national transition deadline (when all broadcast signals go digi) is next year, so make your move with one of two TV-land appropriate options: a spin-off (buy a converter box) or syndication (recycle it). Goose Island’s Household Recycling Center – a rippin’ rerun heaven for electronics - will safely put your tired tube to rest for free. The facility will remove and recycle salvageable components, and safely dispose of the rest. Old TVs can do serious damage to the environment, leaking 4 to 8 lb of lead, cadmium, mercury, and other dangerous chems into waterways and polluting groundwater. So recycling our old set will save on natural resources for that fancy plasma we’ve been eyeing. Gnarly.
Wanna Try: 
City of Chicago’s Household Chemicals and Computer Recycling Center, 1150 N. North Branch St. b/t Division St. and Chicago Ave., off of Halsted St. (City info line: 311). Open for drop-offs Tues., Thur., and the first Sat. of the month.
LIKE THIS TIP? TRY THIS: 

Cocktail Fact

The last big television transition - from B/W to color - took 22 years to catch on. Color TV debuted in 1950, but it wasn’t until 1972 that more than half of American television households had a color set.

Small Changes Add Up

If 10,000 Chicago Biters recycle their TVs instead of dumping them, we’ll save almost 500 times a surfer babe’s weight in toxic chems from ending up in landfills and contaminating groundwater.

Bookmark and Share
So recycling our old set will save on natural resources for that fancy plasma we’ve been eyeing games adventure games

Post new comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.
  • Web page addresses and e-mail addresses turn into links automatically.
  • Allowed HTML tags: <a> <em> <font> <strong> <cite> <code> <ul> <ol> <li> <dl> <dt> <dd> <p> <br> <img>

More information about formatting options

 

All editorial suggestions in this tip are the result of testing and a preference for the tip topic. No advertiser has paid to have its company referenced in the tip. For more information, please read our Editorial Policy.