A Better Way: Product Stewardship. To shift California’s product waste management system from one...

36
A Better Way: Product Stewardship

Transcript of A Better Way: Product Stewardship. To shift California’s product waste management system from one...

Page 1: A Better Way: Product Stewardship. To shift California’s product waste management system from one focused on government funded and ratepayer financed.

A Better Way Product Stewardship

To shift Californiarsquos product waste management system from one focused on government funded and ratepayer financed waste diversion to one that relies on producer responsibility in order to reduce public costs and drive improvements in product design that promote environmental sustainability

Mission

Bill Worrell

The High Cost of Compliance

Per Capita Waste Production

1900 - NYC 1960 - USA 2000 - USA

Mineral ProductsFoodYard

Source EPA

0

50

100

150

200

250

1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

Changing WasteM

illi

on

To

ns

pe

r Y

ear

TOTAL

Products

Mineral

FoodYard

Source EPA

Disposable and toxic

Products are disposable

by design

U-Waste Designed for Disposal

Sharps Prohibited Waste

Sharps ndash The next unfunded mandate

Multi MediaSolid Waste

Stormwater

Wastewater

Hazardous Waste

Multi Media

Public Health

Climate Change

bull Unfunded mandate

bull Responsibility without capability for local governments

bull Virtually unenforceable

bull Places responsibility on ratepayers and taxpayers

bull Amounts to subsidies for manufacturers

Ban Withouta Plan

Mil

lio

n T

on

s p

er

Yea

rGrowth in CA Total Waste

Source CIWMB

Now Waste is a Local Responsibility

ProducersTaxpayers amp Ratepayers

Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR)

Producers

Customer Service

AB 939 (1989)

1 Source Reduction

2 Recycling and Composting

3 Transformation and Landfill Disposal

Strategic Directive 5 February 2007

CIWMB will hellip ldquoSeek statutory authority to foster cradle-to-cradle producer responsibilityrdquo

ldquoDevelop relationships with stakeholders that result in producer-financed and producer-managed systemsrdquo

Applying the Producer Responsibility Framework

Board adopted the EPR Framework as a policy priority in September 2007 and approved refinements in January 2008

The Framework sets out broad guidance to be used in the development of EPR legislation

Overview of Roles Responsibilities

and Program Elements

Authority Needed to Implement EPR Framework

1Select amp add productsproduct categories

2 Require product stewardship plan3 Plan provisions

ndash Targets product designrecycling ratesndash Fee structuresndash Performance standardsndash Reporting

4 Transparency and Accountability5 Enforcement

EPR Framework ApproachRoles and Responsibilities

1 Producers

2 Retailers

3 Consumers

4 State Government

5 Local Government

6 Haulers

7 Recyclers

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

1 Producers

Key role design product stewardship

program and achieve defined outcomendash Flexibility to design program in the

most efficient mannerndash Prepare and implement planndash Demonstrate performance

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

2 Retailers

ndash Provide information from producers to customers

ndash Only sell ldquoregisteredrdquo productsndash Voluntary involvement in EOL collection

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

3 Consumers

ndash Participate in collection systemsndash Pay for EOL management

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

4 State Government

ndash Establish statutory requirements and regulations to achieve goals using guiding principles

ndash Approve plans developed by producersndash Make plans and performance

information publicndash Deliver oversight and enforcementndash Level playing field

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

5 Local Government

ndash Explore system effectiveness withndash stakeholdersndash May choose to participatendash Assist in information disseminationndash Obtain compensation from producers

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

6 Haulers 7 Collectors and Recyclers

ndash Provide safe collection and handling of products and materials with compensation

ndash Provide information to help producers enhance recovery

ndash Seek system improvements with other stakeholders

Framework EPR

Essential Elements

See ldquoExtended Producer Responsibility Framework ndash

Checklistrdquo

Amador City Chula Vista Cupertino Diamond Bar Dixon El Cerrito Elk Grove Fresno Indian Wells IsletonLa Verne Lemon Grove Los Altos Hills Morgan Hill 1048707Vernon

CPSC Participants ndash 28 Cities (92208)

MonroviaOakland Palo Alto Pasadena Rio Vista San Dimas San Joaquin San Jose Santa Cruz Santa Monica Sierra Madre Union City Vacaville Vernon

Alameda County Amador County ISWMButte CountyCentral Contra Costa County

SWMDel Norte SWMAHumboldt SWMALos Angeles County IWM

Task Force

CPSC Participants ndash 23 Counties (92208)

AlpineAmadorButteCalaverasColusaDel Norte CountyEl Dorado

GlennImperialInyoLassenMaderaMariposaModocMono

Rural Countiesrsquo Environmental Services Joint Powers Authority (ESJPA)

Marin County JPA Mariposa CountyMendocino County SWMANapa County Sacramento County San Bernardino County San Francisco CountySan Joaquin County

San Mateo CountySanta Barbara CountySanta Clara County Santa Cruz County Solano County Sonoma County WMATehama County Yolo County

NevadaPlumasSierraSiskiyouTehamaTrinityTuolumne

CPSC Participants ndash 15 Associations (92208)

bull Association of Bay Area Governments Bay Area Hazardous Waste Management Facility Allocation Committee bull Association of Bay Area Governments (ABAG) bull Bay Area Clean Water Agencies bull Bay Area Stormwater Management Agencies Association bull California Council of Directors of Environmental Health (CCDEH) bull California Stormwater Quality Association bull East Bay Municipal Utility District bull Los Angeles County Sanitation District bull Los Angeles County Solid Waste Task Force bull Mojave Desert and Mountain Recycling Authority bull Rural Countiesrsquo Environmental Services Joint Powers Authority (ESJPA) (Counties of Alpine Amador Butte Calaveras Colusa Del Norte El Dorado Glenn Imperial Inyo Lassen Madera Mariposa Modoc Mono Nevada Plumas Sierra Siskiyou Tehama Trinity Tuolumne) bull Sacramento Business Environmental Resource Center bull Sacramento County Regional Sanitation Districtbull Santa Clara Valley CLEAN South Bay

bull West Valley Clean Water (Campbell Los Gatos Monte Serena Saratoga)

CPSC Partners (92208)

bull Green Party Los Angles Countybull Long Beach Coalition for Safe Environmentbull Sierra Club ndash Solano Groupbull Gills Onions LLCbull Teleosis Institute ndash Green Pharmacy Programbull Keep California Beautifulbull Waste Management of Orange Countybull California Resource Connectionsbull Marin Sanitary Servicebull Allied Waste ndash Daily Citybull Reverse Logistics Associationbull CRampR Waste and Recycling Servicesbull Pacific Recycling Solutionsbull CA Sierra Club Natural Resources Committee amp Zero Waste Committeebull Total Recycling Associatesbull Many individual citizens have signed the pledge

California Product Stewardship Council Participating Cities amp Counties (9108)

Contact CPSCHeidi SanbornExecutive Director HeidiCalPSCorg916-485-7753

wwwCalPSCorg

Funded by a Grant from the California Integrated Waste Management Board Zero Waste mdash You Make It Happen

copy 2008 by the California Integrated Waste Management Board (CIWMB) All rights reserved

This publication or parts thereof may not be reproduced without permission from CIWMB

Developed with support from the Product Policy Institute

  • Slide 1
  • Mission
  • Bill Worrell
  • The High Cost of Compliance
  • Per Capita Waste Production
  • Changing Waste
  • Products are disposable
  • U-Waste Designed for Disposal
  • Sharps Prohibited Waste
  • Slide 10
  • Multi Media
  • Slide 12
  • Growth in CA Total Waste
  • Slide 14
  • Slide 15
  • Slide 16
  • Slide 17
  • Slide 18
  • Applying the Producer Responsibility Framework
  • Slide 20
  • Authority Needed to Implement EPR Framework
  • EPR Framework Approach Roles and Responsibilities
  • Roles and Responsibilities (continued)
  • Slide 24
  • Slide 25
  • Slide 26
  • Slide 27
  • Slide 28
  • Framework EPR
  • Essential Elements
  • CPSC Participants ndash 28 Cities (92208)
  • CPSC Participants ndash 23 Counties (92208)
  • CPSC Participants ndash 15 Associations (92208)
  • CPSC Partners (92208)
  • California Product Stewardship Council Participating Cities amp Counties (9108)
  • Contact CPSC
Page 2: A Better Way: Product Stewardship. To shift California’s product waste management system from one focused on government funded and ratepayer financed.

To shift Californiarsquos product waste management system from one focused on government funded and ratepayer financed waste diversion to one that relies on producer responsibility in order to reduce public costs and drive improvements in product design that promote environmental sustainability

Mission

Bill Worrell

The High Cost of Compliance

Per Capita Waste Production

1900 - NYC 1960 - USA 2000 - USA

Mineral ProductsFoodYard

Source EPA

0

50

100

150

200

250

1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

Changing WasteM

illi

on

To

ns

pe

r Y

ear

TOTAL

Products

Mineral

FoodYard

Source EPA

Disposable and toxic

Products are disposable

by design

U-Waste Designed for Disposal

Sharps Prohibited Waste

Sharps ndash The next unfunded mandate

Multi MediaSolid Waste

Stormwater

Wastewater

Hazardous Waste

Multi Media

Public Health

Climate Change

bull Unfunded mandate

bull Responsibility without capability for local governments

bull Virtually unenforceable

bull Places responsibility on ratepayers and taxpayers

bull Amounts to subsidies for manufacturers

Ban Withouta Plan

Mil

lio

n T

on

s p

er

Yea

rGrowth in CA Total Waste

Source CIWMB

Now Waste is a Local Responsibility

ProducersTaxpayers amp Ratepayers

Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR)

Producers

Customer Service

AB 939 (1989)

1 Source Reduction

2 Recycling and Composting

3 Transformation and Landfill Disposal

Strategic Directive 5 February 2007

CIWMB will hellip ldquoSeek statutory authority to foster cradle-to-cradle producer responsibilityrdquo

ldquoDevelop relationships with stakeholders that result in producer-financed and producer-managed systemsrdquo

Applying the Producer Responsibility Framework

Board adopted the EPR Framework as a policy priority in September 2007 and approved refinements in January 2008

The Framework sets out broad guidance to be used in the development of EPR legislation

Overview of Roles Responsibilities

and Program Elements

Authority Needed to Implement EPR Framework

1Select amp add productsproduct categories

2 Require product stewardship plan3 Plan provisions

ndash Targets product designrecycling ratesndash Fee structuresndash Performance standardsndash Reporting

4 Transparency and Accountability5 Enforcement

EPR Framework ApproachRoles and Responsibilities

1 Producers

2 Retailers

3 Consumers

4 State Government

5 Local Government

6 Haulers

7 Recyclers

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

1 Producers

Key role design product stewardship

program and achieve defined outcomendash Flexibility to design program in the

most efficient mannerndash Prepare and implement planndash Demonstrate performance

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

2 Retailers

ndash Provide information from producers to customers

ndash Only sell ldquoregisteredrdquo productsndash Voluntary involvement in EOL collection

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

3 Consumers

ndash Participate in collection systemsndash Pay for EOL management

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

4 State Government

ndash Establish statutory requirements and regulations to achieve goals using guiding principles

ndash Approve plans developed by producersndash Make plans and performance

information publicndash Deliver oversight and enforcementndash Level playing field

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

5 Local Government

ndash Explore system effectiveness withndash stakeholdersndash May choose to participatendash Assist in information disseminationndash Obtain compensation from producers

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

6 Haulers 7 Collectors and Recyclers

ndash Provide safe collection and handling of products and materials with compensation

ndash Provide information to help producers enhance recovery

ndash Seek system improvements with other stakeholders

Framework EPR

Essential Elements

See ldquoExtended Producer Responsibility Framework ndash

Checklistrdquo

Amador City Chula Vista Cupertino Diamond Bar Dixon El Cerrito Elk Grove Fresno Indian Wells IsletonLa Verne Lemon Grove Los Altos Hills Morgan Hill 1048707Vernon

CPSC Participants ndash 28 Cities (92208)

MonroviaOakland Palo Alto Pasadena Rio Vista San Dimas San Joaquin San Jose Santa Cruz Santa Monica Sierra Madre Union City Vacaville Vernon

Alameda County Amador County ISWMButte CountyCentral Contra Costa County

SWMDel Norte SWMAHumboldt SWMALos Angeles County IWM

Task Force

CPSC Participants ndash 23 Counties (92208)

AlpineAmadorButteCalaverasColusaDel Norte CountyEl Dorado

GlennImperialInyoLassenMaderaMariposaModocMono

Rural Countiesrsquo Environmental Services Joint Powers Authority (ESJPA)

Marin County JPA Mariposa CountyMendocino County SWMANapa County Sacramento County San Bernardino County San Francisco CountySan Joaquin County

San Mateo CountySanta Barbara CountySanta Clara County Santa Cruz County Solano County Sonoma County WMATehama County Yolo County

NevadaPlumasSierraSiskiyouTehamaTrinityTuolumne

CPSC Participants ndash 15 Associations (92208)

bull Association of Bay Area Governments Bay Area Hazardous Waste Management Facility Allocation Committee bull Association of Bay Area Governments (ABAG) bull Bay Area Clean Water Agencies bull Bay Area Stormwater Management Agencies Association bull California Council of Directors of Environmental Health (CCDEH) bull California Stormwater Quality Association bull East Bay Municipal Utility District bull Los Angeles County Sanitation District bull Los Angeles County Solid Waste Task Force bull Mojave Desert and Mountain Recycling Authority bull Rural Countiesrsquo Environmental Services Joint Powers Authority (ESJPA) (Counties of Alpine Amador Butte Calaveras Colusa Del Norte El Dorado Glenn Imperial Inyo Lassen Madera Mariposa Modoc Mono Nevada Plumas Sierra Siskiyou Tehama Trinity Tuolumne) bull Sacramento Business Environmental Resource Center bull Sacramento County Regional Sanitation Districtbull Santa Clara Valley CLEAN South Bay

bull West Valley Clean Water (Campbell Los Gatos Monte Serena Saratoga)

CPSC Partners (92208)

bull Green Party Los Angles Countybull Long Beach Coalition for Safe Environmentbull Sierra Club ndash Solano Groupbull Gills Onions LLCbull Teleosis Institute ndash Green Pharmacy Programbull Keep California Beautifulbull Waste Management of Orange Countybull California Resource Connectionsbull Marin Sanitary Servicebull Allied Waste ndash Daily Citybull Reverse Logistics Associationbull CRampR Waste and Recycling Servicesbull Pacific Recycling Solutionsbull CA Sierra Club Natural Resources Committee amp Zero Waste Committeebull Total Recycling Associatesbull Many individual citizens have signed the pledge

California Product Stewardship Council Participating Cities amp Counties (9108)

Contact CPSCHeidi SanbornExecutive Director HeidiCalPSCorg916-485-7753

wwwCalPSCorg

Funded by a Grant from the California Integrated Waste Management Board Zero Waste mdash You Make It Happen

copy 2008 by the California Integrated Waste Management Board (CIWMB) All rights reserved

This publication or parts thereof may not be reproduced without permission from CIWMB

Developed with support from the Product Policy Institute

  • Slide 1
  • Mission
  • Bill Worrell
  • The High Cost of Compliance
  • Per Capita Waste Production
  • Changing Waste
  • Products are disposable
  • U-Waste Designed for Disposal
  • Sharps Prohibited Waste
  • Slide 10
  • Multi Media
  • Slide 12
  • Growth in CA Total Waste
  • Slide 14
  • Slide 15
  • Slide 16
  • Slide 17
  • Slide 18
  • Applying the Producer Responsibility Framework
  • Slide 20
  • Authority Needed to Implement EPR Framework
  • EPR Framework Approach Roles and Responsibilities
  • Roles and Responsibilities (continued)
  • Slide 24
  • Slide 25
  • Slide 26
  • Slide 27
  • Slide 28
  • Framework EPR
  • Essential Elements
  • CPSC Participants ndash 28 Cities (92208)
  • CPSC Participants ndash 23 Counties (92208)
  • CPSC Participants ndash 15 Associations (92208)
  • CPSC Partners (92208)
  • California Product Stewardship Council Participating Cities amp Counties (9108)
  • Contact CPSC
Page 3: A Better Way: Product Stewardship. To shift California’s product waste management system from one focused on government funded and ratepayer financed.

Bill Worrell

The High Cost of Compliance

Per Capita Waste Production

1900 - NYC 1960 - USA 2000 - USA

Mineral ProductsFoodYard

Source EPA

0

50

100

150

200

250

1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

Changing WasteM

illi

on

To

ns

pe

r Y

ear

TOTAL

Products

Mineral

FoodYard

Source EPA

Disposable and toxic

Products are disposable

by design

U-Waste Designed for Disposal

Sharps Prohibited Waste

Sharps ndash The next unfunded mandate

Multi MediaSolid Waste

Stormwater

Wastewater

Hazardous Waste

Multi Media

Public Health

Climate Change

bull Unfunded mandate

bull Responsibility without capability for local governments

bull Virtually unenforceable

bull Places responsibility on ratepayers and taxpayers

bull Amounts to subsidies for manufacturers

Ban Withouta Plan

Mil

lio

n T

on

s p

er

Yea

rGrowth in CA Total Waste

Source CIWMB

Now Waste is a Local Responsibility

ProducersTaxpayers amp Ratepayers

Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR)

Producers

Customer Service

AB 939 (1989)

1 Source Reduction

2 Recycling and Composting

3 Transformation and Landfill Disposal

Strategic Directive 5 February 2007

CIWMB will hellip ldquoSeek statutory authority to foster cradle-to-cradle producer responsibilityrdquo

ldquoDevelop relationships with stakeholders that result in producer-financed and producer-managed systemsrdquo

Applying the Producer Responsibility Framework

Board adopted the EPR Framework as a policy priority in September 2007 and approved refinements in January 2008

The Framework sets out broad guidance to be used in the development of EPR legislation

Overview of Roles Responsibilities

and Program Elements

Authority Needed to Implement EPR Framework

1Select amp add productsproduct categories

2 Require product stewardship plan3 Plan provisions

ndash Targets product designrecycling ratesndash Fee structuresndash Performance standardsndash Reporting

4 Transparency and Accountability5 Enforcement

EPR Framework ApproachRoles and Responsibilities

1 Producers

2 Retailers

3 Consumers

4 State Government

5 Local Government

6 Haulers

7 Recyclers

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

1 Producers

Key role design product stewardship

program and achieve defined outcomendash Flexibility to design program in the

most efficient mannerndash Prepare and implement planndash Demonstrate performance

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

2 Retailers

ndash Provide information from producers to customers

ndash Only sell ldquoregisteredrdquo productsndash Voluntary involvement in EOL collection

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

3 Consumers

ndash Participate in collection systemsndash Pay for EOL management

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

4 State Government

ndash Establish statutory requirements and regulations to achieve goals using guiding principles

ndash Approve plans developed by producersndash Make plans and performance

information publicndash Deliver oversight and enforcementndash Level playing field

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

5 Local Government

ndash Explore system effectiveness withndash stakeholdersndash May choose to participatendash Assist in information disseminationndash Obtain compensation from producers

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

6 Haulers 7 Collectors and Recyclers

ndash Provide safe collection and handling of products and materials with compensation

ndash Provide information to help producers enhance recovery

ndash Seek system improvements with other stakeholders

Framework EPR

Essential Elements

See ldquoExtended Producer Responsibility Framework ndash

Checklistrdquo

Amador City Chula Vista Cupertino Diamond Bar Dixon El Cerrito Elk Grove Fresno Indian Wells IsletonLa Verne Lemon Grove Los Altos Hills Morgan Hill 1048707Vernon

CPSC Participants ndash 28 Cities (92208)

MonroviaOakland Palo Alto Pasadena Rio Vista San Dimas San Joaquin San Jose Santa Cruz Santa Monica Sierra Madre Union City Vacaville Vernon

Alameda County Amador County ISWMButte CountyCentral Contra Costa County

SWMDel Norte SWMAHumboldt SWMALos Angeles County IWM

Task Force

CPSC Participants ndash 23 Counties (92208)

AlpineAmadorButteCalaverasColusaDel Norte CountyEl Dorado

GlennImperialInyoLassenMaderaMariposaModocMono

Rural Countiesrsquo Environmental Services Joint Powers Authority (ESJPA)

Marin County JPA Mariposa CountyMendocino County SWMANapa County Sacramento County San Bernardino County San Francisco CountySan Joaquin County

San Mateo CountySanta Barbara CountySanta Clara County Santa Cruz County Solano County Sonoma County WMATehama County Yolo County

NevadaPlumasSierraSiskiyouTehamaTrinityTuolumne

CPSC Participants ndash 15 Associations (92208)

bull Association of Bay Area Governments Bay Area Hazardous Waste Management Facility Allocation Committee bull Association of Bay Area Governments (ABAG) bull Bay Area Clean Water Agencies bull Bay Area Stormwater Management Agencies Association bull California Council of Directors of Environmental Health (CCDEH) bull California Stormwater Quality Association bull East Bay Municipal Utility District bull Los Angeles County Sanitation District bull Los Angeles County Solid Waste Task Force bull Mojave Desert and Mountain Recycling Authority bull Rural Countiesrsquo Environmental Services Joint Powers Authority (ESJPA) (Counties of Alpine Amador Butte Calaveras Colusa Del Norte El Dorado Glenn Imperial Inyo Lassen Madera Mariposa Modoc Mono Nevada Plumas Sierra Siskiyou Tehama Trinity Tuolumne) bull Sacramento Business Environmental Resource Center bull Sacramento County Regional Sanitation Districtbull Santa Clara Valley CLEAN South Bay

bull West Valley Clean Water (Campbell Los Gatos Monte Serena Saratoga)

CPSC Partners (92208)

bull Green Party Los Angles Countybull Long Beach Coalition for Safe Environmentbull Sierra Club ndash Solano Groupbull Gills Onions LLCbull Teleosis Institute ndash Green Pharmacy Programbull Keep California Beautifulbull Waste Management of Orange Countybull California Resource Connectionsbull Marin Sanitary Servicebull Allied Waste ndash Daily Citybull Reverse Logistics Associationbull CRampR Waste and Recycling Servicesbull Pacific Recycling Solutionsbull CA Sierra Club Natural Resources Committee amp Zero Waste Committeebull Total Recycling Associatesbull Many individual citizens have signed the pledge

California Product Stewardship Council Participating Cities amp Counties (9108)

Contact CPSCHeidi SanbornExecutive Director HeidiCalPSCorg916-485-7753

wwwCalPSCorg

Funded by a Grant from the California Integrated Waste Management Board Zero Waste mdash You Make It Happen

copy 2008 by the California Integrated Waste Management Board (CIWMB) All rights reserved

This publication or parts thereof may not be reproduced without permission from CIWMB

Developed with support from the Product Policy Institute

  • Slide 1
  • Mission
  • Bill Worrell
  • The High Cost of Compliance
  • Per Capita Waste Production
  • Changing Waste
  • Products are disposable
  • U-Waste Designed for Disposal
  • Sharps Prohibited Waste
  • Slide 10
  • Multi Media
  • Slide 12
  • Growth in CA Total Waste
  • Slide 14
  • Slide 15
  • Slide 16
  • Slide 17
  • Slide 18
  • Applying the Producer Responsibility Framework
  • Slide 20
  • Authority Needed to Implement EPR Framework
  • EPR Framework Approach Roles and Responsibilities
  • Roles and Responsibilities (continued)
  • Slide 24
  • Slide 25
  • Slide 26
  • Slide 27
  • Slide 28
  • Framework EPR
  • Essential Elements
  • CPSC Participants ndash 28 Cities (92208)
  • CPSC Participants ndash 23 Counties (92208)
  • CPSC Participants ndash 15 Associations (92208)
  • CPSC Partners (92208)
  • California Product Stewardship Council Participating Cities amp Counties (9108)
  • Contact CPSC
Page 4: A Better Way: Product Stewardship. To shift California’s product waste management system from one focused on government funded and ratepayer financed.

The High Cost of Compliance

Per Capita Waste Production

1900 - NYC 1960 - USA 2000 - USA

Mineral ProductsFoodYard

Source EPA

0

50

100

150

200

250

1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

Changing WasteM

illi

on

To

ns

pe

r Y

ear

TOTAL

Products

Mineral

FoodYard

Source EPA

Disposable and toxic

Products are disposable

by design

U-Waste Designed for Disposal

Sharps Prohibited Waste

Sharps ndash The next unfunded mandate

Multi MediaSolid Waste

Stormwater

Wastewater

Hazardous Waste

Multi Media

Public Health

Climate Change

bull Unfunded mandate

bull Responsibility without capability for local governments

bull Virtually unenforceable

bull Places responsibility on ratepayers and taxpayers

bull Amounts to subsidies for manufacturers

Ban Withouta Plan

Mil

lio

n T

on

s p

er

Yea

rGrowth in CA Total Waste

Source CIWMB

Now Waste is a Local Responsibility

ProducersTaxpayers amp Ratepayers

Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR)

Producers

Customer Service

AB 939 (1989)

1 Source Reduction

2 Recycling and Composting

3 Transformation and Landfill Disposal

Strategic Directive 5 February 2007

CIWMB will hellip ldquoSeek statutory authority to foster cradle-to-cradle producer responsibilityrdquo

ldquoDevelop relationships with stakeholders that result in producer-financed and producer-managed systemsrdquo

Applying the Producer Responsibility Framework

Board adopted the EPR Framework as a policy priority in September 2007 and approved refinements in January 2008

The Framework sets out broad guidance to be used in the development of EPR legislation

Overview of Roles Responsibilities

and Program Elements

Authority Needed to Implement EPR Framework

1Select amp add productsproduct categories

2 Require product stewardship plan3 Plan provisions

ndash Targets product designrecycling ratesndash Fee structuresndash Performance standardsndash Reporting

4 Transparency and Accountability5 Enforcement

EPR Framework ApproachRoles and Responsibilities

1 Producers

2 Retailers

3 Consumers

4 State Government

5 Local Government

6 Haulers

7 Recyclers

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

1 Producers

Key role design product stewardship

program and achieve defined outcomendash Flexibility to design program in the

most efficient mannerndash Prepare and implement planndash Demonstrate performance

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

2 Retailers

ndash Provide information from producers to customers

ndash Only sell ldquoregisteredrdquo productsndash Voluntary involvement in EOL collection

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

3 Consumers

ndash Participate in collection systemsndash Pay for EOL management

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

4 State Government

ndash Establish statutory requirements and regulations to achieve goals using guiding principles

ndash Approve plans developed by producersndash Make plans and performance

information publicndash Deliver oversight and enforcementndash Level playing field

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

5 Local Government

ndash Explore system effectiveness withndash stakeholdersndash May choose to participatendash Assist in information disseminationndash Obtain compensation from producers

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

6 Haulers 7 Collectors and Recyclers

ndash Provide safe collection and handling of products and materials with compensation

ndash Provide information to help producers enhance recovery

ndash Seek system improvements with other stakeholders

Framework EPR

Essential Elements

See ldquoExtended Producer Responsibility Framework ndash

Checklistrdquo

Amador City Chula Vista Cupertino Diamond Bar Dixon El Cerrito Elk Grove Fresno Indian Wells IsletonLa Verne Lemon Grove Los Altos Hills Morgan Hill 1048707Vernon

CPSC Participants ndash 28 Cities (92208)

MonroviaOakland Palo Alto Pasadena Rio Vista San Dimas San Joaquin San Jose Santa Cruz Santa Monica Sierra Madre Union City Vacaville Vernon

Alameda County Amador County ISWMButte CountyCentral Contra Costa County

SWMDel Norte SWMAHumboldt SWMALos Angeles County IWM

Task Force

CPSC Participants ndash 23 Counties (92208)

AlpineAmadorButteCalaverasColusaDel Norte CountyEl Dorado

GlennImperialInyoLassenMaderaMariposaModocMono

Rural Countiesrsquo Environmental Services Joint Powers Authority (ESJPA)

Marin County JPA Mariposa CountyMendocino County SWMANapa County Sacramento County San Bernardino County San Francisco CountySan Joaquin County

San Mateo CountySanta Barbara CountySanta Clara County Santa Cruz County Solano County Sonoma County WMATehama County Yolo County

NevadaPlumasSierraSiskiyouTehamaTrinityTuolumne

CPSC Participants ndash 15 Associations (92208)

bull Association of Bay Area Governments Bay Area Hazardous Waste Management Facility Allocation Committee bull Association of Bay Area Governments (ABAG) bull Bay Area Clean Water Agencies bull Bay Area Stormwater Management Agencies Association bull California Council of Directors of Environmental Health (CCDEH) bull California Stormwater Quality Association bull East Bay Municipal Utility District bull Los Angeles County Sanitation District bull Los Angeles County Solid Waste Task Force bull Mojave Desert and Mountain Recycling Authority bull Rural Countiesrsquo Environmental Services Joint Powers Authority (ESJPA) (Counties of Alpine Amador Butte Calaveras Colusa Del Norte El Dorado Glenn Imperial Inyo Lassen Madera Mariposa Modoc Mono Nevada Plumas Sierra Siskiyou Tehama Trinity Tuolumne) bull Sacramento Business Environmental Resource Center bull Sacramento County Regional Sanitation Districtbull Santa Clara Valley CLEAN South Bay

bull West Valley Clean Water (Campbell Los Gatos Monte Serena Saratoga)

CPSC Partners (92208)

bull Green Party Los Angles Countybull Long Beach Coalition for Safe Environmentbull Sierra Club ndash Solano Groupbull Gills Onions LLCbull Teleosis Institute ndash Green Pharmacy Programbull Keep California Beautifulbull Waste Management of Orange Countybull California Resource Connectionsbull Marin Sanitary Servicebull Allied Waste ndash Daily Citybull Reverse Logistics Associationbull CRampR Waste and Recycling Servicesbull Pacific Recycling Solutionsbull CA Sierra Club Natural Resources Committee amp Zero Waste Committeebull Total Recycling Associatesbull Many individual citizens have signed the pledge

California Product Stewardship Council Participating Cities amp Counties (9108)

Contact CPSCHeidi SanbornExecutive Director HeidiCalPSCorg916-485-7753

wwwCalPSCorg

Funded by a Grant from the California Integrated Waste Management Board Zero Waste mdash You Make It Happen

copy 2008 by the California Integrated Waste Management Board (CIWMB) All rights reserved

This publication or parts thereof may not be reproduced without permission from CIWMB

Developed with support from the Product Policy Institute

  • Slide 1
  • Mission
  • Bill Worrell
  • The High Cost of Compliance
  • Per Capita Waste Production
  • Changing Waste
  • Products are disposable
  • U-Waste Designed for Disposal
  • Sharps Prohibited Waste
  • Slide 10
  • Multi Media
  • Slide 12
  • Growth in CA Total Waste
  • Slide 14
  • Slide 15
  • Slide 16
  • Slide 17
  • Slide 18
  • Applying the Producer Responsibility Framework
  • Slide 20
  • Authority Needed to Implement EPR Framework
  • EPR Framework Approach Roles and Responsibilities
  • Roles and Responsibilities (continued)
  • Slide 24
  • Slide 25
  • Slide 26
  • Slide 27
  • Slide 28
  • Framework EPR
  • Essential Elements
  • CPSC Participants ndash 28 Cities (92208)
  • CPSC Participants ndash 23 Counties (92208)
  • CPSC Participants ndash 15 Associations (92208)
  • CPSC Partners (92208)
  • California Product Stewardship Council Participating Cities amp Counties (9108)
  • Contact CPSC
Page 5: A Better Way: Product Stewardship. To shift California’s product waste management system from one focused on government funded and ratepayer financed.

Per Capita Waste Production

1900 - NYC 1960 - USA 2000 - USA

Mineral ProductsFoodYard

Source EPA

0

50

100

150

200

250

1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

Changing WasteM

illi

on

To

ns

pe

r Y

ear

TOTAL

Products

Mineral

FoodYard

Source EPA

Disposable and toxic

Products are disposable

by design

U-Waste Designed for Disposal

Sharps Prohibited Waste

Sharps ndash The next unfunded mandate

Multi MediaSolid Waste

Stormwater

Wastewater

Hazardous Waste

Multi Media

Public Health

Climate Change

bull Unfunded mandate

bull Responsibility without capability for local governments

bull Virtually unenforceable

bull Places responsibility on ratepayers and taxpayers

bull Amounts to subsidies for manufacturers

Ban Withouta Plan

Mil

lio

n T

on

s p

er

Yea

rGrowth in CA Total Waste

Source CIWMB

Now Waste is a Local Responsibility

ProducersTaxpayers amp Ratepayers

Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR)

Producers

Customer Service

AB 939 (1989)

1 Source Reduction

2 Recycling and Composting

3 Transformation and Landfill Disposal

Strategic Directive 5 February 2007

CIWMB will hellip ldquoSeek statutory authority to foster cradle-to-cradle producer responsibilityrdquo

ldquoDevelop relationships with stakeholders that result in producer-financed and producer-managed systemsrdquo

Applying the Producer Responsibility Framework

Board adopted the EPR Framework as a policy priority in September 2007 and approved refinements in January 2008

The Framework sets out broad guidance to be used in the development of EPR legislation

Overview of Roles Responsibilities

and Program Elements

Authority Needed to Implement EPR Framework

1Select amp add productsproduct categories

2 Require product stewardship plan3 Plan provisions

ndash Targets product designrecycling ratesndash Fee structuresndash Performance standardsndash Reporting

4 Transparency and Accountability5 Enforcement

EPR Framework ApproachRoles and Responsibilities

1 Producers

2 Retailers

3 Consumers

4 State Government

5 Local Government

6 Haulers

7 Recyclers

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

1 Producers

Key role design product stewardship

program and achieve defined outcomendash Flexibility to design program in the

most efficient mannerndash Prepare and implement planndash Demonstrate performance

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

2 Retailers

ndash Provide information from producers to customers

ndash Only sell ldquoregisteredrdquo productsndash Voluntary involvement in EOL collection

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

3 Consumers

ndash Participate in collection systemsndash Pay for EOL management

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

4 State Government

ndash Establish statutory requirements and regulations to achieve goals using guiding principles

ndash Approve plans developed by producersndash Make plans and performance

information publicndash Deliver oversight and enforcementndash Level playing field

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

5 Local Government

ndash Explore system effectiveness withndash stakeholdersndash May choose to participatendash Assist in information disseminationndash Obtain compensation from producers

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

6 Haulers 7 Collectors and Recyclers

ndash Provide safe collection and handling of products and materials with compensation

ndash Provide information to help producers enhance recovery

ndash Seek system improvements with other stakeholders

Framework EPR

Essential Elements

See ldquoExtended Producer Responsibility Framework ndash

Checklistrdquo

Amador City Chula Vista Cupertino Diamond Bar Dixon El Cerrito Elk Grove Fresno Indian Wells IsletonLa Verne Lemon Grove Los Altos Hills Morgan Hill 1048707Vernon

CPSC Participants ndash 28 Cities (92208)

MonroviaOakland Palo Alto Pasadena Rio Vista San Dimas San Joaquin San Jose Santa Cruz Santa Monica Sierra Madre Union City Vacaville Vernon

Alameda County Amador County ISWMButte CountyCentral Contra Costa County

SWMDel Norte SWMAHumboldt SWMALos Angeles County IWM

Task Force

CPSC Participants ndash 23 Counties (92208)

AlpineAmadorButteCalaverasColusaDel Norte CountyEl Dorado

GlennImperialInyoLassenMaderaMariposaModocMono

Rural Countiesrsquo Environmental Services Joint Powers Authority (ESJPA)

Marin County JPA Mariposa CountyMendocino County SWMANapa County Sacramento County San Bernardino County San Francisco CountySan Joaquin County

San Mateo CountySanta Barbara CountySanta Clara County Santa Cruz County Solano County Sonoma County WMATehama County Yolo County

NevadaPlumasSierraSiskiyouTehamaTrinityTuolumne

CPSC Participants ndash 15 Associations (92208)

bull Association of Bay Area Governments Bay Area Hazardous Waste Management Facility Allocation Committee bull Association of Bay Area Governments (ABAG) bull Bay Area Clean Water Agencies bull Bay Area Stormwater Management Agencies Association bull California Council of Directors of Environmental Health (CCDEH) bull California Stormwater Quality Association bull East Bay Municipal Utility District bull Los Angeles County Sanitation District bull Los Angeles County Solid Waste Task Force bull Mojave Desert and Mountain Recycling Authority bull Rural Countiesrsquo Environmental Services Joint Powers Authority (ESJPA) (Counties of Alpine Amador Butte Calaveras Colusa Del Norte El Dorado Glenn Imperial Inyo Lassen Madera Mariposa Modoc Mono Nevada Plumas Sierra Siskiyou Tehama Trinity Tuolumne) bull Sacramento Business Environmental Resource Center bull Sacramento County Regional Sanitation Districtbull Santa Clara Valley CLEAN South Bay

bull West Valley Clean Water (Campbell Los Gatos Monte Serena Saratoga)

CPSC Partners (92208)

bull Green Party Los Angles Countybull Long Beach Coalition for Safe Environmentbull Sierra Club ndash Solano Groupbull Gills Onions LLCbull Teleosis Institute ndash Green Pharmacy Programbull Keep California Beautifulbull Waste Management of Orange Countybull California Resource Connectionsbull Marin Sanitary Servicebull Allied Waste ndash Daily Citybull Reverse Logistics Associationbull CRampR Waste and Recycling Servicesbull Pacific Recycling Solutionsbull CA Sierra Club Natural Resources Committee amp Zero Waste Committeebull Total Recycling Associatesbull Many individual citizens have signed the pledge

California Product Stewardship Council Participating Cities amp Counties (9108)

Contact CPSCHeidi SanbornExecutive Director HeidiCalPSCorg916-485-7753

wwwCalPSCorg

Funded by a Grant from the California Integrated Waste Management Board Zero Waste mdash You Make It Happen

copy 2008 by the California Integrated Waste Management Board (CIWMB) All rights reserved

This publication or parts thereof may not be reproduced without permission from CIWMB

Developed with support from the Product Policy Institute

  • Slide 1
  • Mission
  • Bill Worrell
  • The High Cost of Compliance
  • Per Capita Waste Production
  • Changing Waste
  • Products are disposable
  • U-Waste Designed for Disposal
  • Sharps Prohibited Waste
  • Slide 10
  • Multi Media
  • Slide 12
  • Growth in CA Total Waste
  • Slide 14
  • Slide 15
  • Slide 16
  • Slide 17
  • Slide 18
  • Applying the Producer Responsibility Framework
  • Slide 20
  • Authority Needed to Implement EPR Framework
  • EPR Framework Approach Roles and Responsibilities
  • Roles and Responsibilities (continued)
  • Slide 24
  • Slide 25
  • Slide 26
  • Slide 27
  • Slide 28
  • Framework EPR
  • Essential Elements
  • CPSC Participants ndash 28 Cities (92208)
  • CPSC Participants ndash 23 Counties (92208)
  • CPSC Participants ndash 15 Associations (92208)
  • CPSC Partners (92208)
  • California Product Stewardship Council Participating Cities amp Counties (9108)
  • Contact CPSC
Page 6: A Better Way: Product Stewardship. To shift California’s product waste management system from one focused on government funded and ratepayer financed.

0

50

100

150

200

250

1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

Changing WasteM

illi

on

To

ns

pe

r Y

ear

TOTAL

Products

Mineral

FoodYard

Source EPA

Disposable and toxic

Products are disposable

by design

U-Waste Designed for Disposal

Sharps Prohibited Waste

Sharps ndash The next unfunded mandate

Multi MediaSolid Waste

Stormwater

Wastewater

Hazardous Waste

Multi Media

Public Health

Climate Change

bull Unfunded mandate

bull Responsibility without capability for local governments

bull Virtually unenforceable

bull Places responsibility on ratepayers and taxpayers

bull Amounts to subsidies for manufacturers

Ban Withouta Plan

Mil

lio

n T

on

s p

er

Yea

rGrowth in CA Total Waste

Source CIWMB

Now Waste is a Local Responsibility

ProducersTaxpayers amp Ratepayers

Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR)

Producers

Customer Service

AB 939 (1989)

1 Source Reduction

2 Recycling and Composting

3 Transformation and Landfill Disposal

Strategic Directive 5 February 2007

CIWMB will hellip ldquoSeek statutory authority to foster cradle-to-cradle producer responsibilityrdquo

ldquoDevelop relationships with stakeholders that result in producer-financed and producer-managed systemsrdquo

Applying the Producer Responsibility Framework

Board adopted the EPR Framework as a policy priority in September 2007 and approved refinements in January 2008

The Framework sets out broad guidance to be used in the development of EPR legislation

Overview of Roles Responsibilities

and Program Elements

Authority Needed to Implement EPR Framework

1Select amp add productsproduct categories

2 Require product stewardship plan3 Plan provisions

ndash Targets product designrecycling ratesndash Fee structuresndash Performance standardsndash Reporting

4 Transparency and Accountability5 Enforcement

EPR Framework ApproachRoles and Responsibilities

1 Producers

2 Retailers

3 Consumers

4 State Government

5 Local Government

6 Haulers

7 Recyclers

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

1 Producers

Key role design product stewardship

program and achieve defined outcomendash Flexibility to design program in the

most efficient mannerndash Prepare and implement planndash Demonstrate performance

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

2 Retailers

ndash Provide information from producers to customers

ndash Only sell ldquoregisteredrdquo productsndash Voluntary involvement in EOL collection

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

3 Consumers

ndash Participate in collection systemsndash Pay for EOL management

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

4 State Government

ndash Establish statutory requirements and regulations to achieve goals using guiding principles

ndash Approve plans developed by producersndash Make plans and performance

information publicndash Deliver oversight and enforcementndash Level playing field

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

5 Local Government

ndash Explore system effectiveness withndash stakeholdersndash May choose to participatendash Assist in information disseminationndash Obtain compensation from producers

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

6 Haulers 7 Collectors and Recyclers

ndash Provide safe collection and handling of products and materials with compensation

ndash Provide information to help producers enhance recovery

ndash Seek system improvements with other stakeholders

Framework EPR

Essential Elements

See ldquoExtended Producer Responsibility Framework ndash

Checklistrdquo

Amador City Chula Vista Cupertino Diamond Bar Dixon El Cerrito Elk Grove Fresno Indian Wells IsletonLa Verne Lemon Grove Los Altos Hills Morgan Hill 1048707Vernon

CPSC Participants ndash 28 Cities (92208)

MonroviaOakland Palo Alto Pasadena Rio Vista San Dimas San Joaquin San Jose Santa Cruz Santa Monica Sierra Madre Union City Vacaville Vernon

Alameda County Amador County ISWMButte CountyCentral Contra Costa County

SWMDel Norte SWMAHumboldt SWMALos Angeles County IWM

Task Force

CPSC Participants ndash 23 Counties (92208)

AlpineAmadorButteCalaverasColusaDel Norte CountyEl Dorado

GlennImperialInyoLassenMaderaMariposaModocMono

Rural Countiesrsquo Environmental Services Joint Powers Authority (ESJPA)

Marin County JPA Mariposa CountyMendocino County SWMANapa County Sacramento County San Bernardino County San Francisco CountySan Joaquin County

San Mateo CountySanta Barbara CountySanta Clara County Santa Cruz County Solano County Sonoma County WMATehama County Yolo County

NevadaPlumasSierraSiskiyouTehamaTrinityTuolumne

CPSC Participants ndash 15 Associations (92208)

bull Association of Bay Area Governments Bay Area Hazardous Waste Management Facility Allocation Committee bull Association of Bay Area Governments (ABAG) bull Bay Area Clean Water Agencies bull Bay Area Stormwater Management Agencies Association bull California Council of Directors of Environmental Health (CCDEH) bull California Stormwater Quality Association bull East Bay Municipal Utility District bull Los Angeles County Sanitation District bull Los Angeles County Solid Waste Task Force bull Mojave Desert and Mountain Recycling Authority bull Rural Countiesrsquo Environmental Services Joint Powers Authority (ESJPA) (Counties of Alpine Amador Butte Calaveras Colusa Del Norte El Dorado Glenn Imperial Inyo Lassen Madera Mariposa Modoc Mono Nevada Plumas Sierra Siskiyou Tehama Trinity Tuolumne) bull Sacramento Business Environmental Resource Center bull Sacramento County Regional Sanitation Districtbull Santa Clara Valley CLEAN South Bay

bull West Valley Clean Water (Campbell Los Gatos Monte Serena Saratoga)

CPSC Partners (92208)

bull Green Party Los Angles Countybull Long Beach Coalition for Safe Environmentbull Sierra Club ndash Solano Groupbull Gills Onions LLCbull Teleosis Institute ndash Green Pharmacy Programbull Keep California Beautifulbull Waste Management of Orange Countybull California Resource Connectionsbull Marin Sanitary Servicebull Allied Waste ndash Daily Citybull Reverse Logistics Associationbull CRampR Waste and Recycling Servicesbull Pacific Recycling Solutionsbull CA Sierra Club Natural Resources Committee amp Zero Waste Committeebull Total Recycling Associatesbull Many individual citizens have signed the pledge

California Product Stewardship Council Participating Cities amp Counties (9108)

Contact CPSCHeidi SanbornExecutive Director HeidiCalPSCorg916-485-7753

wwwCalPSCorg

Funded by a Grant from the California Integrated Waste Management Board Zero Waste mdash You Make It Happen

copy 2008 by the California Integrated Waste Management Board (CIWMB) All rights reserved

This publication or parts thereof may not be reproduced without permission from CIWMB

Developed with support from the Product Policy Institute

  • Slide 1
  • Mission
  • Bill Worrell
  • The High Cost of Compliance
  • Per Capita Waste Production
  • Changing Waste
  • Products are disposable
  • U-Waste Designed for Disposal
  • Sharps Prohibited Waste
  • Slide 10
  • Multi Media
  • Slide 12
  • Growth in CA Total Waste
  • Slide 14
  • Slide 15
  • Slide 16
  • Slide 17
  • Slide 18
  • Applying the Producer Responsibility Framework
  • Slide 20
  • Authority Needed to Implement EPR Framework
  • EPR Framework Approach Roles and Responsibilities
  • Roles and Responsibilities (continued)
  • Slide 24
  • Slide 25
  • Slide 26
  • Slide 27
  • Slide 28
  • Framework EPR
  • Essential Elements
  • CPSC Participants ndash 28 Cities (92208)
  • CPSC Participants ndash 23 Counties (92208)
  • CPSC Participants ndash 15 Associations (92208)
  • CPSC Partners (92208)
  • California Product Stewardship Council Participating Cities amp Counties (9108)
  • Contact CPSC
Page 7: A Better Way: Product Stewardship. To shift California’s product waste management system from one focused on government funded and ratepayer financed.

Disposable and toxic

Products are disposable

by design

U-Waste Designed for Disposal

Sharps Prohibited Waste

Sharps ndash The next unfunded mandate

Multi MediaSolid Waste

Stormwater

Wastewater

Hazardous Waste

Multi Media

Public Health

Climate Change

bull Unfunded mandate

bull Responsibility without capability for local governments

bull Virtually unenforceable

bull Places responsibility on ratepayers and taxpayers

bull Amounts to subsidies for manufacturers

Ban Withouta Plan

Mil

lio

n T

on

s p

er

Yea

rGrowth in CA Total Waste

Source CIWMB

Now Waste is a Local Responsibility

ProducersTaxpayers amp Ratepayers

Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR)

Producers

Customer Service

AB 939 (1989)

1 Source Reduction

2 Recycling and Composting

3 Transformation and Landfill Disposal

Strategic Directive 5 February 2007

CIWMB will hellip ldquoSeek statutory authority to foster cradle-to-cradle producer responsibilityrdquo

ldquoDevelop relationships with stakeholders that result in producer-financed and producer-managed systemsrdquo

Applying the Producer Responsibility Framework

Board adopted the EPR Framework as a policy priority in September 2007 and approved refinements in January 2008

The Framework sets out broad guidance to be used in the development of EPR legislation

Overview of Roles Responsibilities

and Program Elements

Authority Needed to Implement EPR Framework

1Select amp add productsproduct categories

2 Require product stewardship plan3 Plan provisions

ndash Targets product designrecycling ratesndash Fee structuresndash Performance standardsndash Reporting

4 Transparency and Accountability5 Enforcement

EPR Framework ApproachRoles and Responsibilities

1 Producers

2 Retailers

3 Consumers

4 State Government

5 Local Government

6 Haulers

7 Recyclers

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

1 Producers

Key role design product stewardship

program and achieve defined outcomendash Flexibility to design program in the

most efficient mannerndash Prepare and implement planndash Demonstrate performance

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

2 Retailers

ndash Provide information from producers to customers

ndash Only sell ldquoregisteredrdquo productsndash Voluntary involvement in EOL collection

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

3 Consumers

ndash Participate in collection systemsndash Pay for EOL management

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

4 State Government

ndash Establish statutory requirements and regulations to achieve goals using guiding principles

ndash Approve plans developed by producersndash Make plans and performance

information publicndash Deliver oversight and enforcementndash Level playing field

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

5 Local Government

ndash Explore system effectiveness withndash stakeholdersndash May choose to participatendash Assist in information disseminationndash Obtain compensation from producers

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

6 Haulers 7 Collectors and Recyclers

ndash Provide safe collection and handling of products and materials with compensation

ndash Provide information to help producers enhance recovery

ndash Seek system improvements with other stakeholders

Framework EPR

Essential Elements

See ldquoExtended Producer Responsibility Framework ndash

Checklistrdquo

Amador City Chula Vista Cupertino Diamond Bar Dixon El Cerrito Elk Grove Fresno Indian Wells IsletonLa Verne Lemon Grove Los Altos Hills Morgan Hill 1048707Vernon

CPSC Participants ndash 28 Cities (92208)

MonroviaOakland Palo Alto Pasadena Rio Vista San Dimas San Joaquin San Jose Santa Cruz Santa Monica Sierra Madre Union City Vacaville Vernon

Alameda County Amador County ISWMButte CountyCentral Contra Costa County

SWMDel Norte SWMAHumboldt SWMALos Angeles County IWM

Task Force

CPSC Participants ndash 23 Counties (92208)

AlpineAmadorButteCalaverasColusaDel Norte CountyEl Dorado

GlennImperialInyoLassenMaderaMariposaModocMono

Rural Countiesrsquo Environmental Services Joint Powers Authority (ESJPA)

Marin County JPA Mariposa CountyMendocino County SWMANapa County Sacramento County San Bernardino County San Francisco CountySan Joaquin County

San Mateo CountySanta Barbara CountySanta Clara County Santa Cruz County Solano County Sonoma County WMATehama County Yolo County

NevadaPlumasSierraSiskiyouTehamaTrinityTuolumne

CPSC Participants ndash 15 Associations (92208)

bull Association of Bay Area Governments Bay Area Hazardous Waste Management Facility Allocation Committee bull Association of Bay Area Governments (ABAG) bull Bay Area Clean Water Agencies bull Bay Area Stormwater Management Agencies Association bull California Council of Directors of Environmental Health (CCDEH) bull California Stormwater Quality Association bull East Bay Municipal Utility District bull Los Angeles County Sanitation District bull Los Angeles County Solid Waste Task Force bull Mojave Desert and Mountain Recycling Authority bull Rural Countiesrsquo Environmental Services Joint Powers Authority (ESJPA) (Counties of Alpine Amador Butte Calaveras Colusa Del Norte El Dorado Glenn Imperial Inyo Lassen Madera Mariposa Modoc Mono Nevada Plumas Sierra Siskiyou Tehama Trinity Tuolumne) bull Sacramento Business Environmental Resource Center bull Sacramento County Regional Sanitation Districtbull Santa Clara Valley CLEAN South Bay

bull West Valley Clean Water (Campbell Los Gatos Monte Serena Saratoga)

CPSC Partners (92208)

bull Green Party Los Angles Countybull Long Beach Coalition for Safe Environmentbull Sierra Club ndash Solano Groupbull Gills Onions LLCbull Teleosis Institute ndash Green Pharmacy Programbull Keep California Beautifulbull Waste Management of Orange Countybull California Resource Connectionsbull Marin Sanitary Servicebull Allied Waste ndash Daily Citybull Reverse Logistics Associationbull CRampR Waste and Recycling Servicesbull Pacific Recycling Solutionsbull CA Sierra Club Natural Resources Committee amp Zero Waste Committeebull Total Recycling Associatesbull Many individual citizens have signed the pledge

California Product Stewardship Council Participating Cities amp Counties (9108)

Contact CPSCHeidi SanbornExecutive Director HeidiCalPSCorg916-485-7753

wwwCalPSCorg

Funded by a Grant from the California Integrated Waste Management Board Zero Waste mdash You Make It Happen

copy 2008 by the California Integrated Waste Management Board (CIWMB) All rights reserved

This publication or parts thereof may not be reproduced without permission from CIWMB

Developed with support from the Product Policy Institute

  • Slide 1
  • Mission
  • Bill Worrell
  • The High Cost of Compliance
  • Per Capita Waste Production
  • Changing Waste
  • Products are disposable
  • U-Waste Designed for Disposal
  • Sharps Prohibited Waste
  • Slide 10
  • Multi Media
  • Slide 12
  • Growth in CA Total Waste
  • Slide 14
  • Slide 15
  • Slide 16
  • Slide 17
  • Slide 18
  • Applying the Producer Responsibility Framework
  • Slide 20
  • Authority Needed to Implement EPR Framework
  • EPR Framework Approach Roles and Responsibilities
  • Roles and Responsibilities (continued)
  • Slide 24
  • Slide 25
  • Slide 26
  • Slide 27
  • Slide 28
  • Framework EPR
  • Essential Elements
  • CPSC Participants ndash 28 Cities (92208)
  • CPSC Participants ndash 23 Counties (92208)
  • CPSC Participants ndash 15 Associations (92208)
  • CPSC Partners (92208)
  • California Product Stewardship Council Participating Cities amp Counties (9108)
  • Contact CPSC
Page 8: A Better Way: Product Stewardship. To shift California’s product waste management system from one focused on government funded and ratepayer financed.

U-Waste Designed for Disposal

Sharps Prohibited Waste

Sharps ndash The next unfunded mandate

Multi MediaSolid Waste

Stormwater

Wastewater

Hazardous Waste

Multi Media

Public Health

Climate Change

bull Unfunded mandate

bull Responsibility without capability for local governments

bull Virtually unenforceable

bull Places responsibility on ratepayers and taxpayers

bull Amounts to subsidies for manufacturers

Ban Withouta Plan

Mil

lio

n T

on

s p

er

Yea

rGrowth in CA Total Waste

Source CIWMB

Now Waste is a Local Responsibility

ProducersTaxpayers amp Ratepayers

Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR)

Producers

Customer Service

AB 939 (1989)

1 Source Reduction

2 Recycling and Composting

3 Transformation and Landfill Disposal

Strategic Directive 5 February 2007

CIWMB will hellip ldquoSeek statutory authority to foster cradle-to-cradle producer responsibilityrdquo

ldquoDevelop relationships with stakeholders that result in producer-financed and producer-managed systemsrdquo

Applying the Producer Responsibility Framework

Board adopted the EPR Framework as a policy priority in September 2007 and approved refinements in January 2008

The Framework sets out broad guidance to be used in the development of EPR legislation

Overview of Roles Responsibilities

and Program Elements

Authority Needed to Implement EPR Framework

1Select amp add productsproduct categories

2 Require product stewardship plan3 Plan provisions

ndash Targets product designrecycling ratesndash Fee structuresndash Performance standardsndash Reporting

4 Transparency and Accountability5 Enforcement

EPR Framework ApproachRoles and Responsibilities

1 Producers

2 Retailers

3 Consumers

4 State Government

5 Local Government

6 Haulers

7 Recyclers

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

1 Producers

Key role design product stewardship

program and achieve defined outcomendash Flexibility to design program in the

most efficient mannerndash Prepare and implement planndash Demonstrate performance

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

2 Retailers

ndash Provide information from producers to customers

ndash Only sell ldquoregisteredrdquo productsndash Voluntary involvement in EOL collection

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

3 Consumers

ndash Participate in collection systemsndash Pay for EOL management

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

4 State Government

ndash Establish statutory requirements and regulations to achieve goals using guiding principles

ndash Approve plans developed by producersndash Make plans and performance

information publicndash Deliver oversight and enforcementndash Level playing field

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

5 Local Government

ndash Explore system effectiveness withndash stakeholdersndash May choose to participatendash Assist in information disseminationndash Obtain compensation from producers

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

6 Haulers 7 Collectors and Recyclers

ndash Provide safe collection and handling of products and materials with compensation

ndash Provide information to help producers enhance recovery

ndash Seek system improvements with other stakeholders

Framework EPR

Essential Elements

See ldquoExtended Producer Responsibility Framework ndash

Checklistrdquo

Amador City Chula Vista Cupertino Diamond Bar Dixon El Cerrito Elk Grove Fresno Indian Wells IsletonLa Verne Lemon Grove Los Altos Hills Morgan Hill 1048707Vernon

CPSC Participants ndash 28 Cities (92208)

MonroviaOakland Palo Alto Pasadena Rio Vista San Dimas San Joaquin San Jose Santa Cruz Santa Monica Sierra Madre Union City Vacaville Vernon

Alameda County Amador County ISWMButte CountyCentral Contra Costa County

SWMDel Norte SWMAHumboldt SWMALos Angeles County IWM

Task Force

CPSC Participants ndash 23 Counties (92208)

AlpineAmadorButteCalaverasColusaDel Norte CountyEl Dorado

GlennImperialInyoLassenMaderaMariposaModocMono

Rural Countiesrsquo Environmental Services Joint Powers Authority (ESJPA)

Marin County JPA Mariposa CountyMendocino County SWMANapa County Sacramento County San Bernardino County San Francisco CountySan Joaquin County

San Mateo CountySanta Barbara CountySanta Clara County Santa Cruz County Solano County Sonoma County WMATehama County Yolo County

NevadaPlumasSierraSiskiyouTehamaTrinityTuolumne

CPSC Participants ndash 15 Associations (92208)

bull Association of Bay Area Governments Bay Area Hazardous Waste Management Facility Allocation Committee bull Association of Bay Area Governments (ABAG) bull Bay Area Clean Water Agencies bull Bay Area Stormwater Management Agencies Association bull California Council of Directors of Environmental Health (CCDEH) bull California Stormwater Quality Association bull East Bay Municipal Utility District bull Los Angeles County Sanitation District bull Los Angeles County Solid Waste Task Force bull Mojave Desert and Mountain Recycling Authority bull Rural Countiesrsquo Environmental Services Joint Powers Authority (ESJPA) (Counties of Alpine Amador Butte Calaveras Colusa Del Norte El Dorado Glenn Imperial Inyo Lassen Madera Mariposa Modoc Mono Nevada Plumas Sierra Siskiyou Tehama Trinity Tuolumne) bull Sacramento Business Environmental Resource Center bull Sacramento County Regional Sanitation Districtbull Santa Clara Valley CLEAN South Bay

bull West Valley Clean Water (Campbell Los Gatos Monte Serena Saratoga)

CPSC Partners (92208)

bull Green Party Los Angles Countybull Long Beach Coalition for Safe Environmentbull Sierra Club ndash Solano Groupbull Gills Onions LLCbull Teleosis Institute ndash Green Pharmacy Programbull Keep California Beautifulbull Waste Management of Orange Countybull California Resource Connectionsbull Marin Sanitary Servicebull Allied Waste ndash Daily Citybull Reverse Logistics Associationbull CRampR Waste and Recycling Servicesbull Pacific Recycling Solutionsbull CA Sierra Club Natural Resources Committee amp Zero Waste Committeebull Total Recycling Associatesbull Many individual citizens have signed the pledge

California Product Stewardship Council Participating Cities amp Counties (9108)

Contact CPSCHeidi SanbornExecutive Director HeidiCalPSCorg916-485-7753

wwwCalPSCorg

Funded by a Grant from the California Integrated Waste Management Board Zero Waste mdash You Make It Happen

copy 2008 by the California Integrated Waste Management Board (CIWMB) All rights reserved

This publication or parts thereof may not be reproduced without permission from CIWMB

Developed with support from the Product Policy Institute

  • Slide 1
  • Mission
  • Bill Worrell
  • The High Cost of Compliance
  • Per Capita Waste Production
  • Changing Waste
  • Products are disposable
  • U-Waste Designed for Disposal
  • Sharps Prohibited Waste
  • Slide 10
  • Multi Media
  • Slide 12
  • Growth in CA Total Waste
  • Slide 14
  • Slide 15
  • Slide 16
  • Slide 17
  • Slide 18
  • Applying the Producer Responsibility Framework
  • Slide 20
  • Authority Needed to Implement EPR Framework
  • EPR Framework Approach Roles and Responsibilities
  • Roles and Responsibilities (continued)
  • Slide 24
  • Slide 25
  • Slide 26
  • Slide 27
  • Slide 28
  • Framework EPR
  • Essential Elements
  • CPSC Participants ndash 28 Cities (92208)
  • CPSC Participants ndash 23 Counties (92208)
  • CPSC Participants ndash 15 Associations (92208)
  • CPSC Partners (92208)
  • California Product Stewardship Council Participating Cities amp Counties (9108)
  • Contact CPSC
Page 9: A Better Way: Product Stewardship. To shift California’s product waste management system from one focused on government funded and ratepayer financed.

Sharps Prohibited Waste

Sharps ndash The next unfunded mandate

Multi MediaSolid Waste

Stormwater

Wastewater

Hazardous Waste

Multi Media

Public Health

Climate Change

bull Unfunded mandate

bull Responsibility without capability for local governments

bull Virtually unenforceable

bull Places responsibility on ratepayers and taxpayers

bull Amounts to subsidies for manufacturers

Ban Withouta Plan

Mil

lio

n T

on

s p

er

Yea

rGrowth in CA Total Waste

Source CIWMB

Now Waste is a Local Responsibility

ProducersTaxpayers amp Ratepayers

Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR)

Producers

Customer Service

AB 939 (1989)

1 Source Reduction

2 Recycling and Composting

3 Transformation and Landfill Disposal

Strategic Directive 5 February 2007

CIWMB will hellip ldquoSeek statutory authority to foster cradle-to-cradle producer responsibilityrdquo

ldquoDevelop relationships with stakeholders that result in producer-financed and producer-managed systemsrdquo

Applying the Producer Responsibility Framework

Board adopted the EPR Framework as a policy priority in September 2007 and approved refinements in January 2008

The Framework sets out broad guidance to be used in the development of EPR legislation

Overview of Roles Responsibilities

and Program Elements

Authority Needed to Implement EPR Framework

1Select amp add productsproduct categories

2 Require product stewardship plan3 Plan provisions

ndash Targets product designrecycling ratesndash Fee structuresndash Performance standardsndash Reporting

4 Transparency and Accountability5 Enforcement

EPR Framework ApproachRoles and Responsibilities

1 Producers

2 Retailers

3 Consumers

4 State Government

5 Local Government

6 Haulers

7 Recyclers

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

1 Producers

Key role design product stewardship

program and achieve defined outcomendash Flexibility to design program in the

most efficient mannerndash Prepare and implement planndash Demonstrate performance

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

2 Retailers

ndash Provide information from producers to customers

ndash Only sell ldquoregisteredrdquo productsndash Voluntary involvement in EOL collection

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

3 Consumers

ndash Participate in collection systemsndash Pay for EOL management

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

4 State Government

ndash Establish statutory requirements and regulations to achieve goals using guiding principles

ndash Approve plans developed by producersndash Make plans and performance

information publicndash Deliver oversight and enforcementndash Level playing field

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

5 Local Government

ndash Explore system effectiveness withndash stakeholdersndash May choose to participatendash Assist in information disseminationndash Obtain compensation from producers

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

6 Haulers 7 Collectors and Recyclers

ndash Provide safe collection and handling of products and materials with compensation

ndash Provide information to help producers enhance recovery

ndash Seek system improvements with other stakeholders

Framework EPR

Essential Elements

See ldquoExtended Producer Responsibility Framework ndash

Checklistrdquo

Amador City Chula Vista Cupertino Diamond Bar Dixon El Cerrito Elk Grove Fresno Indian Wells IsletonLa Verne Lemon Grove Los Altos Hills Morgan Hill 1048707Vernon

CPSC Participants ndash 28 Cities (92208)

MonroviaOakland Palo Alto Pasadena Rio Vista San Dimas San Joaquin San Jose Santa Cruz Santa Monica Sierra Madre Union City Vacaville Vernon

Alameda County Amador County ISWMButte CountyCentral Contra Costa County

SWMDel Norte SWMAHumboldt SWMALos Angeles County IWM

Task Force

CPSC Participants ndash 23 Counties (92208)

AlpineAmadorButteCalaverasColusaDel Norte CountyEl Dorado

GlennImperialInyoLassenMaderaMariposaModocMono

Rural Countiesrsquo Environmental Services Joint Powers Authority (ESJPA)

Marin County JPA Mariposa CountyMendocino County SWMANapa County Sacramento County San Bernardino County San Francisco CountySan Joaquin County

San Mateo CountySanta Barbara CountySanta Clara County Santa Cruz County Solano County Sonoma County WMATehama County Yolo County

NevadaPlumasSierraSiskiyouTehamaTrinityTuolumne

CPSC Participants ndash 15 Associations (92208)

bull Association of Bay Area Governments Bay Area Hazardous Waste Management Facility Allocation Committee bull Association of Bay Area Governments (ABAG) bull Bay Area Clean Water Agencies bull Bay Area Stormwater Management Agencies Association bull California Council of Directors of Environmental Health (CCDEH) bull California Stormwater Quality Association bull East Bay Municipal Utility District bull Los Angeles County Sanitation District bull Los Angeles County Solid Waste Task Force bull Mojave Desert and Mountain Recycling Authority bull Rural Countiesrsquo Environmental Services Joint Powers Authority (ESJPA) (Counties of Alpine Amador Butte Calaveras Colusa Del Norte El Dorado Glenn Imperial Inyo Lassen Madera Mariposa Modoc Mono Nevada Plumas Sierra Siskiyou Tehama Trinity Tuolumne) bull Sacramento Business Environmental Resource Center bull Sacramento County Regional Sanitation Districtbull Santa Clara Valley CLEAN South Bay

bull West Valley Clean Water (Campbell Los Gatos Monte Serena Saratoga)

CPSC Partners (92208)

bull Green Party Los Angles Countybull Long Beach Coalition for Safe Environmentbull Sierra Club ndash Solano Groupbull Gills Onions LLCbull Teleosis Institute ndash Green Pharmacy Programbull Keep California Beautifulbull Waste Management of Orange Countybull California Resource Connectionsbull Marin Sanitary Servicebull Allied Waste ndash Daily Citybull Reverse Logistics Associationbull CRampR Waste and Recycling Servicesbull Pacific Recycling Solutionsbull CA Sierra Club Natural Resources Committee amp Zero Waste Committeebull Total Recycling Associatesbull Many individual citizens have signed the pledge

California Product Stewardship Council Participating Cities amp Counties (9108)

Contact CPSCHeidi SanbornExecutive Director HeidiCalPSCorg916-485-7753

wwwCalPSCorg

Funded by a Grant from the California Integrated Waste Management Board Zero Waste mdash You Make It Happen

copy 2008 by the California Integrated Waste Management Board (CIWMB) All rights reserved

This publication or parts thereof may not be reproduced without permission from CIWMB

Developed with support from the Product Policy Institute

  • Slide 1
  • Mission
  • Bill Worrell
  • The High Cost of Compliance
  • Per Capita Waste Production
  • Changing Waste
  • Products are disposable
  • U-Waste Designed for Disposal
  • Sharps Prohibited Waste
  • Slide 10
  • Multi Media
  • Slide 12
  • Growth in CA Total Waste
  • Slide 14
  • Slide 15
  • Slide 16
  • Slide 17
  • Slide 18
  • Applying the Producer Responsibility Framework
  • Slide 20
  • Authority Needed to Implement EPR Framework
  • EPR Framework Approach Roles and Responsibilities
  • Roles and Responsibilities (continued)
  • Slide 24
  • Slide 25
  • Slide 26
  • Slide 27
  • Slide 28
  • Framework EPR
  • Essential Elements
  • CPSC Participants ndash 28 Cities (92208)
  • CPSC Participants ndash 23 Counties (92208)
  • CPSC Participants ndash 15 Associations (92208)
  • CPSC Partners (92208)
  • California Product Stewardship Council Participating Cities amp Counties (9108)
  • Contact CPSC
Page 10: A Better Way: Product Stewardship. To shift California’s product waste management system from one focused on government funded and ratepayer financed.

Sharps ndash The next unfunded mandate

Multi MediaSolid Waste

Stormwater

Wastewater

Hazardous Waste

Multi Media

Public Health

Climate Change

bull Unfunded mandate

bull Responsibility without capability for local governments

bull Virtually unenforceable

bull Places responsibility on ratepayers and taxpayers

bull Amounts to subsidies for manufacturers

Ban Withouta Plan

Mil

lio

n T

on

s p

er

Yea

rGrowth in CA Total Waste

Source CIWMB

Now Waste is a Local Responsibility

ProducersTaxpayers amp Ratepayers

Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR)

Producers

Customer Service

AB 939 (1989)

1 Source Reduction

2 Recycling and Composting

3 Transformation and Landfill Disposal

Strategic Directive 5 February 2007

CIWMB will hellip ldquoSeek statutory authority to foster cradle-to-cradle producer responsibilityrdquo

ldquoDevelop relationships with stakeholders that result in producer-financed and producer-managed systemsrdquo

Applying the Producer Responsibility Framework

Board adopted the EPR Framework as a policy priority in September 2007 and approved refinements in January 2008

The Framework sets out broad guidance to be used in the development of EPR legislation

Overview of Roles Responsibilities

and Program Elements

Authority Needed to Implement EPR Framework

1Select amp add productsproduct categories

2 Require product stewardship plan3 Plan provisions

ndash Targets product designrecycling ratesndash Fee structuresndash Performance standardsndash Reporting

4 Transparency and Accountability5 Enforcement

EPR Framework ApproachRoles and Responsibilities

1 Producers

2 Retailers

3 Consumers

4 State Government

5 Local Government

6 Haulers

7 Recyclers

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

1 Producers

Key role design product stewardship

program and achieve defined outcomendash Flexibility to design program in the

most efficient mannerndash Prepare and implement planndash Demonstrate performance

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

2 Retailers

ndash Provide information from producers to customers

ndash Only sell ldquoregisteredrdquo productsndash Voluntary involvement in EOL collection

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

3 Consumers

ndash Participate in collection systemsndash Pay for EOL management

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

4 State Government

ndash Establish statutory requirements and regulations to achieve goals using guiding principles

ndash Approve plans developed by producersndash Make plans and performance

information publicndash Deliver oversight and enforcementndash Level playing field

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

5 Local Government

ndash Explore system effectiveness withndash stakeholdersndash May choose to participatendash Assist in information disseminationndash Obtain compensation from producers

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

6 Haulers 7 Collectors and Recyclers

ndash Provide safe collection and handling of products and materials with compensation

ndash Provide information to help producers enhance recovery

ndash Seek system improvements with other stakeholders

Framework EPR

Essential Elements

See ldquoExtended Producer Responsibility Framework ndash

Checklistrdquo

Amador City Chula Vista Cupertino Diamond Bar Dixon El Cerrito Elk Grove Fresno Indian Wells IsletonLa Verne Lemon Grove Los Altos Hills Morgan Hill 1048707Vernon

CPSC Participants ndash 28 Cities (92208)

MonroviaOakland Palo Alto Pasadena Rio Vista San Dimas San Joaquin San Jose Santa Cruz Santa Monica Sierra Madre Union City Vacaville Vernon

Alameda County Amador County ISWMButte CountyCentral Contra Costa County

SWMDel Norte SWMAHumboldt SWMALos Angeles County IWM

Task Force

CPSC Participants ndash 23 Counties (92208)

AlpineAmadorButteCalaverasColusaDel Norte CountyEl Dorado

GlennImperialInyoLassenMaderaMariposaModocMono

Rural Countiesrsquo Environmental Services Joint Powers Authority (ESJPA)

Marin County JPA Mariposa CountyMendocino County SWMANapa County Sacramento County San Bernardino County San Francisco CountySan Joaquin County

San Mateo CountySanta Barbara CountySanta Clara County Santa Cruz County Solano County Sonoma County WMATehama County Yolo County

NevadaPlumasSierraSiskiyouTehamaTrinityTuolumne

CPSC Participants ndash 15 Associations (92208)

bull Association of Bay Area Governments Bay Area Hazardous Waste Management Facility Allocation Committee bull Association of Bay Area Governments (ABAG) bull Bay Area Clean Water Agencies bull Bay Area Stormwater Management Agencies Association bull California Council of Directors of Environmental Health (CCDEH) bull California Stormwater Quality Association bull East Bay Municipal Utility District bull Los Angeles County Sanitation District bull Los Angeles County Solid Waste Task Force bull Mojave Desert and Mountain Recycling Authority bull Rural Countiesrsquo Environmental Services Joint Powers Authority (ESJPA) (Counties of Alpine Amador Butte Calaveras Colusa Del Norte El Dorado Glenn Imperial Inyo Lassen Madera Mariposa Modoc Mono Nevada Plumas Sierra Siskiyou Tehama Trinity Tuolumne) bull Sacramento Business Environmental Resource Center bull Sacramento County Regional Sanitation Districtbull Santa Clara Valley CLEAN South Bay

bull West Valley Clean Water (Campbell Los Gatos Monte Serena Saratoga)

CPSC Partners (92208)

bull Green Party Los Angles Countybull Long Beach Coalition for Safe Environmentbull Sierra Club ndash Solano Groupbull Gills Onions LLCbull Teleosis Institute ndash Green Pharmacy Programbull Keep California Beautifulbull Waste Management of Orange Countybull California Resource Connectionsbull Marin Sanitary Servicebull Allied Waste ndash Daily Citybull Reverse Logistics Associationbull CRampR Waste and Recycling Servicesbull Pacific Recycling Solutionsbull CA Sierra Club Natural Resources Committee amp Zero Waste Committeebull Total Recycling Associatesbull Many individual citizens have signed the pledge

California Product Stewardship Council Participating Cities amp Counties (9108)

Contact CPSCHeidi SanbornExecutive Director HeidiCalPSCorg916-485-7753

wwwCalPSCorg

Funded by a Grant from the California Integrated Waste Management Board Zero Waste mdash You Make It Happen

copy 2008 by the California Integrated Waste Management Board (CIWMB) All rights reserved

This publication or parts thereof may not be reproduced without permission from CIWMB

Developed with support from the Product Policy Institute

  • Slide 1
  • Mission
  • Bill Worrell
  • The High Cost of Compliance
  • Per Capita Waste Production
  • Changing Waste
  • Products are disposable
  • U-Waste Designed for Disposal
  • Sharps Prohibited Waste
  • Slide 10
  • Multi Media
  • Slide 12
  • Growth in CA Total Waste
  • Slide 14
  • Slide 15
  • Slide 16
  • Slide 17
  • Slide 18
  • Applying the Producer Responsibility Framework
  • Slide 20
  • Authority Needed to Implement EPR Framework
  • EPR Framework Approach Roles and Responsibilities
  • Roles and Responsibilities (continued)
  • Slide 24
  • Slide 25
  • Slide 26
  • Slide 27
  • Slide 28
  • Framework EPR
  • Essential Elements
  • CPSC Participants ndash 28 Cities (92208)
  • CPSC Participants ndash 23 Counties (92208)
  • CPSC Participants ndash 15 Associations (92208)
  • CPSC Partners (92208)
  • California Product Stewardship Council Participating Cities amp Counties (9108)
  • Contact CPSC
Page 11: A Better Way: Product Stewardship. To shift California’s product waste management system from one focused on government funded and ratepayer financed.

Multi MediaSolid Waste

Stormwater

Wastewater

Hazardous Waste

Multi Media

Public Health

Climate Change

bull Unfunded mandate

bull Responsibility without capability for local governments

bull Virtually unenforceable

bull Places responsibility on ratepayers and taxpayers

bull Amounts to subsidies for manufacturers

Ban Withouta Plan

Mil

lio

n T

on

s p

er

Yea

rGrowth in CA Total Waste

Source CIWMB

Now Waste is a Local Responsibility

ProducersTaxpayers amp Ratepayers

Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR)

Producers

Customer Service

AB 939 (1989)

1 Source Reduction

2 Recycling and Composting

3 Transformation and Landfill Disposal

Strategic Directive 5 February 2007

CIWMB will hellip ldquoSeek statutory authority to foster cradle-to-cradle producer responsibilityrdquo

ldquoDevelop relationships with stakeholders that result in producer-financed and producer-managed systemsrdquo

Applying the Producer Responsibility Framework

Board adopted the EPR Framework as a policy priority in September 2007 and approved refinements in January 2008

The Framework sets out broad guidance to be used in the development of EPR legislation

Overview of Roles Responsibilities

and Program Elements

Authority Needed to Implement EPR Framework

1Select amp add productsproduct categories

2 Require product stewardship plan3 Plan provisions

ndash Targets product designrecycling ratesndash Fee structuresndash Performance standardsndash Reporting

4 Transparency and Accountability5 Enforcement

EPR Framework ApproachRoles and Responsibilities

1 Producers

2 Retailers

3 Consumers

4 State Government

5 Local Government

6 Haulers

7 Recyclers

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

1 Producers

Key role design product stewardship

program and achieve defined outcomendash Flexibility to design program in the

most efficient mannerndash Prepare and implement planndash Demonstrate performance

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

2 Retailers

ndash Provide information from producers to customers

ndash Only sell ldquoregisteredrdquo productsndash Voluntary involvement in EOL collection

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

3 Consumers

ndash Participate in collection systemsndash Pay for EOL management

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

4 State Government

ndash Establish statutory requirements and regulations to achieve goals using guiding principles

ndash Approve plans developed by producersndash Make plans and performance

information publicndash Deliver oversight and enforcementndash Level playing field

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

5 Local Government

ndash Explore system effectiveness withndash stakeholdersndash May choose to participatendash Assist in information disseminationndash Obtain compensation from producers

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

6 Haulers 7 Collectors and Recyclers

ndash Provide safe collection and handling of products and materials with compensation

ndash Provide information to help producers enhance recovery

ndash Seek system improvements with other stakeholders

Framework EPR

Essential Elements

See ldquoExtended Producer Responsibility Framework ndash

Checklistrdquo

Amador City Chula Vista Cupertino Diamond Bar Dixon El Cerrito Elk Grove Fresno Indian Wells IsletonLa Verne Lemon Grove Los Altos Hills Morgan Hill 1048707Vernon

CPSC Participants ndash 28 Cities (92208)

MonroviaOakland Palo Alto Pasadena Rio Vista San Dimas San Joaquin San Jose Santa Cruz Santa Monica Sierra Madre Union City Vacaville Vernon

Alameda County Amador County ISWMButte CountyCentral Contra Costa County

SWMDel Norte SWMAHumboldt SWMALos Angeles County IWM

Task Force

CPSC Participants ndash 23 Counties (92208)

AlpineAmadorButteCalaverasColusaDel Norte CountyEl Dorado

GlennImperialInyoLassenMaderaMariposaModocMono

Rural Countiesrsquo Environmental Services Joint Powers Authority (ESJPA)

Marin County JPA Mariposa CountyMendocino County SWMANapa County Sacramento County San Bernardino County San Francisco CountySan Joaquin County

San Mateo CountySanta Barbara CountySanta Clara County Santa Cruz County Solano County Sonoma County WMATehama County Yolo County

NevadaPlumasSierraSiskiyouTehamaTrinityTuolumne

CPSC Participants ndash 15 Associations (92208)

bull Association of Bay Area Governments Bay Area Hazardous Waste Management Facility Allocation Committee bull Association of Bay Area Governments (ABAG) bull Bay Area Clean Water Agencies bull Bay Area Stormwater Management Agencies Association bull California Council of Directors of Environmental Health (CCDEH) bull California Stormwater Quality Association bull East Bay Municipal Utility District bull Los Angeles County Sanitation District bull Los Angeles County Solid Waste Task Force bull Mojave Desert and Mountain Recycling Authority bull Rural Countiesrsquo Environmental Services Joint Powers Authority (ESJPA) (Counties of Alpine Amador Butte Calaveras Colusa Del Norte El Dorado Glenn Imperial Inyo Lassen Madera Mariposa Modoc Mono Nevada Plumas Sierra Siskiyou Tehama Trinity Tuolumne) bull Sacramento Business Environmental Resource Center bull Sacramento County Regional Sanitation Districtbull Santa Clara Valley CLEAN South Bay

bull West Valley Clean Water (Campbell Los Gatos Monte Serena Saratoga)

CPSC Partners (92208)

bull Green Party Los Angles Countybull Long Beach Coalition for Safe Environmentbull Sierra Club ndash Solano Groupbull Gills Onions LLCbull Teleosis Institute ndash Green Pharmacy Programbull Keep California Beautifulbull Waste Management of Orange Countybull California Resource Connectionsbull Marin Sanitary Servicebull Allied Waste ndash Daily Citybull Reverse Logistics Associationbull CRampR Waste and Recycling Servicesbull Pacific Recycling Solutionsbull CA Sierra Club Natural Resources Committee amp Zero Waste Committeebull Total Recycling Associatesbull Many individual citizens have signed the pledge

California Product Stewardship Council Participating Cities amp Counties (9108)

Contact CPSCHeidi SanbornExecutive Director HeidiCalPSCorg916-485-7753

wwwCalPSCorg

Funded by a Grant from the California Integrated Waste Management Board Zero Waste mdash You Make It Happen

copy 2008 by the California Integrated Waste Management Board (CIWMB) All rights reserved

This publication or parts thereof may not be reproduced without permission from CIWMB

Developed with support from the Product Policy Institute

  • Slide 1
  • Mission
  • Bill Worrell
  • The High Cost of Compliance
  • Per Capita Waste Production
  • Changing Waste
  • Products are disposable
  • U-Waste Designed for Disposal
  • Sharps Prohibited Waste
  • Slide 10
  • Multi Media
  • Slide 12
  • Growth in CA Total Waste
  • Slide 14
  • Slide 15
  • Slide 16
  • Slide 17
  • Slide 18
  • Applying the Producer Responsibility Framework
  • Slide 20
  • Authority Needed to Implement EPR Framework
  • EPR Framework Approach Roles and Responsibilities
  • Roles and Responsibilities (continued)
  • Slide 24
  • Slide 25
  • Slide 26
  • Slide 27
  • Slide 28
  • Framework EPR
  • Essential Elements
  • CPSC Participants ndash 28 Cities (92208)
  • CPSC Participants ndash 23 Counties (92208)
  • CPSC Participants ndash 15 Associations (92208)
  • CPSC Partners (92208)
  • California Product Stewardship Council Participating Cities amp Counties (9108)
  • Contact CPSC
Page 12: A Better Way: Product Stewardship. To shift California’s product waste management system from one focused on government funded and ratepayer financed.

bull Unfunded mandate

bull Responsibility without capability for local governments

bull Virtually unenforceable

bull Places responsibility on ratepayers and taxpayers

bull Amounts to subsidies for manufacturers

Ban Withouta Plan

Mil

lio

n T

on

s p

er

Yea

rGrowth in CA Total Waste

Source CIWMB

Now Waste is a Local Responsibility

ProducersTaxpayers amp Ratepayers

Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR)

Producers

Customer Service

AB 939 (1989)

1 Source Reduction

2 Recycling and Composting

3 Transformation and Landfill Disposal

Strategic Directive 5 February 2007

CIWMB will hellip ldquoSeek statutory authority to foster cradle-to-cradle producer responsibilityrdquo

ldquoDevelop relationships with stakeholders that result in producer-financed and producer-managed systemsrdquo

Applying the Producer Responsibility Framework

Board adopted the EPR Framework as a policy priority in September 2007 and approved refinements in January 2008

The Framework sets out broad guidance to be used in the development of EPR legislation

Overview of Roles Responsibilities

and Program Elements

Authority Needed to Implement EPR Framework

1Select amp add productsproduct categories

2 Require product stewardship plan3 Plan provisions

ndash Targets product designrecycling ratesndash Fee structuresndash Performance standardsndash Reporting

4 Transparency and Accountability5 Enforcement

EPR Framework ApproachRoles and Responsibilities

1 Producers

2 Retailers

3 Consumers

4 State Government

5 Local Government

6 Haulers

7 Recyclers

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

1 Producers

Key role design product stewardship

program and achieve defined outcomendash Flexibility to design program in the

most efficient mannerndash Prepare and implement planndash Demonstrate performance

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

2 Retailers

ndash Provide information from producers to customers

ndash Only sell ldquoregisteredrdquo productsndash Voluntary involvement in EOL collection

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

3 Consumers

ndash Participate in collection systemsndash Pay for EOL management

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

4 State Government

ndash Establish statutory requirements and regulations to achieve goals using guiding principles

ndash Approve plans developed by producersndash Make plans and performance

information publicndash Deliver oversight and enforcementndash Level playing field

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

5 Local Government

ndash Explore system effectiveness withndash stakeholdersndash May choose to participatendash Assist in information disseminationndash Obtain compensation from producers

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

6 Haulers 7 Collectors and Recyclers

ndash Provide safe collection and handling of products and materials with compensation

ndash Provide information to help producers enhance recovery

ndash Seek system improvements with other stakeholders

Framework EPR

Essential Elements

See ldquoExtended Producer Responsibility Framework ndash

Checklistrdquo

Amador City Chula Vista Cupertino Diamond Bar Dixon El Cerrito Elk Grove Fresno Indian Wells IsletonLa Verne Lemon Grove Los Altos Hills Morgan Hill 1048707Vernon

CPSC Participants ndash 28 Cities (92208)

MonroviaOakland Palo Alto Pasadena Rio Vista San Dimas San Joaquin San Jose Santa Cruz Santa Monica Sierra Madre Union City Vacaville Vernon

Alameda County Amador County ISWMButte CountyCentral Contra Costa County

SWMDel Norte SWMAHumboldt SWMALos Angeles County IWM

Task Force

CPSC Participants ndash 23 Counties (92208)

AlpineAmadorButteCalaverasColusaDel Norte CountyEl Dorado

GlennImperialInyoLassenMaderaMariposaModocMono

Rural Countiesrsquo Environmental Services Joint Powers Authority (ESJPA)

Marin County JPA Mariposa CountyMendocino County SWMANapa County Sacramento County San Bernardino County San Francisco CountySan Joaquin County

San Mateo CountySanta Barbara CountySanta Clara County Santa Cruz County Solano County Sonoma County WMATehama County Yolo County

NevadaPlumasSierraSiskiyouTehamaTrinityTuolumne

CPSC Participants ndash 15 Associations (92208)

bull Association of Bay Area Governments Bay Area Hazardous Waste Management Facility Allocation Committee bull Association of Bay Area Governments (ABAG) bull Bay Area Clean Water Agencies bull Bay Area Stormwater Management Agencies Association bull California Council of Directors of Environmental Health (CCDEH) bull California Stormwater Quality Association bull East Bay Municipal Utility District bull Los Angeles County Sanitation District bull Los Angeles County Solid Waste Task Force bull Mojave Desert and Mountain Recycling Authority bull Rural Countiesrsquo Environmental Services Joint Powers Authority (ESJPA) (Counties of Alpine Amador Butte Calaveras Colusa Del Norte El Dorado Glenn Imperial Inyo Lassen Madera Mariposa Modoc Mono Nevada Plumas Sierra Siskiyou Tehama Trinity Tuolumne) bull Sacramento Business Environmental Resource Center bull Sacramento County Regional Sanitation Districtbull Santa Clara Valley CLEAN South Bay

bull West Valley Clean Water (Campbell Los Gatos Monte Serena Saratoga)

CPSC Partners (92208)

bull Green Party Los Angles Countybull Long Beach Coalition for Safe Environmentbull Sierra Club ndash Solano Groupbull Gills Onions LLCbull Teleosis Institute ndash Green Pharmacy Programbull Keep California Beautifulbull Waste Management of Orange Countybull California Resource Connectionsbull Marin Sanitary Servicebull Allied Waste ndash Daily Citybull Reverse Logistics Associationbull CRampR Waste and Recycling Servicesbull Pacific Recycling Solutionsbull CA Sierra Club Natural Resources Committee amp Zero Waste Committeebull Total Recycling Associatesbull Many individual citizens have signed the pledge

California Product Stewardship Council Participating Cities amp Counties (9108)

Contact CPSCHeidi SanbornExecutive Director HeidiCalPSCorg916-485-7753

wwwCalPSCorg

Funded by a Grant from the California Integrated Waste Management Board Zero Waste mdash You Make It Happen

copy 2008 by the California Integrated Waste Management Board (CIWMB) All rights reserved

This publication or parts thereof may not be reproduced without permission from CIWMB

Developed with support from the Product Policy Institute

  • Slide 1
  • Mission
  • Bill Worrell
  • The High Cost of Compliance
  • Per Capita Waste Production
  • Changing Waste
  • Products are disposable
  • U-Waste Designed for Disposal
  • Sharps Prohibited Waste
  • Slide 10
  • Multi Media
  • Slide 12
  • Growth in CA Total Waste
  • Slide 14
  • Slide 15
  • Slide 16
  • Slide 17
  • Slide 18
  • Applying the Producer Responsibility Framework
  • Slide 20
  • Authority Needed to Implement EPR Framework
  • EPR Framework Approach Roles and Responsibilities
  • Roles and Responsibilities (continued)
  • Slide 24
  • Slide 25
  • Slide 26
  • Slide 27
  • Slide 28
  • Framework EPR
  • Essential Elements
  • CPSC Participants ndash 28 Cities (92208)
  • CPSC Participants ndash 23 Counties (92208)
  • CPSC Participants ndash 15 Associations (92208)
  • CPSC Partners (92208)
  • California Product Stewardship Council Participating Cities amp Counties (9108)
  • Contact CPSC
Page 13: A Better Way: Product Stewardship. To shift California’s product waste management system from one focused on government funded and ratepayer financed.

Mil

lio

n T

on

s p

er

Yea

rGrowth in CA Total Waste

Source CIWMB

Now Waste is a Local Responsibility

ProducersTaxpayers amp Ratepayers

Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR)

Producers

Customer Service

AB 939 (1989)

1 Source Reduction

2 Recycling and Composting

3 Transformation and Landfill Disposal

Strategic Directive 5 February 2007

CIWMB will hellip ldquoSeek statutory authority to foster cradle-to-cradle producer responsibilityrdquo

ldquoDevelop relationships with stakeholders that result in producer-financed and producer-managed systemsrdquo

Applying the Producer Responsibility Framework

Board adopted the EPR Framework as a policy priority in September 2007 and approved refinements in January 2008

The Framework sets out broad guidance to be used in the development of EPR legislation

Overview of Roles Responsibilities

and Program Elements

Authority Needed to Implement EPR Framework

1Select amp add productsproduct categories

2 Require product stewardship plan3 Plan provisions

ndash Targets product designrecycling ratesndash Fee structuresndash Performance standardsndash Reporting

4 Transparency and Accountability5 Enforcement

EPR Framework ApproachRoles and Responsibilities

1 Producers

2 Retailers

3 Consumers

4 State Government

5 Local Government

6 Haulers

7 Recyclers

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

1 Producers

Key role design product stewardship

program and achieve defined outcomendash Flexibility to design program in the

most efficient mannerndash Prepare and implement planndash Demonstrate performance

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

2 Retailers

ndash Provide information from producers to customers

ndash Only sell ldquoregisteredrdquo productsndash Voluntary involvement in EOL collection

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

3 Consumers

ndash Participate in collection systemsndash Pay for EOL management

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

4 State Government

ndash Establish statutory requirements and regulations to achieve goals using guiding principles

ndash Approve plans developed by producersndash Make plans and performance

information publicndash Deliver oversight and enforcementndash Level playing field

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

5 Local Government

ndash Explore system effectiveness withndash stakeholdersndash May choose to participatendash Assist in information disseminationndash Obtain compensation from producers

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

6 Haulers 7 Collectors and Recyclers

ndash Provide safe collection and handling of products and materials with compensation

ndash Provide information to help producers enhance recovery

ndash Seek system improvements with other stakeholders

Framework EPR

Essential Elements

See ldquoExtended Producer Responsibility Framework ndash

Checklistrdquo

Amador City Chula Vista Cupertino Diamond Bar Dixon El Cerrito Elk Grove Fresno Indian Wells IsletonLa Verne Lemon Grove Los Altos Hills Morgan Hill 1048707Vernon

CPSC Participants ndash 28 Cities (92208)

MonroviaOakland Palo Alto Pasadena Rio Vista San Dimas San Joaquin San Jose Santa Cruz Santa Monica Sierra Madre Union City Vacaville Vernon

Alameda County Amador County ISWMButte CountyCentral Contra Costa County

SWMDel Norte SWMAHumboldt SWMALos Angeles County IWM

Task Force

CPSC Participants ndash 23 Counties (92208)

AlpineAmadorButteCalaverasColusaDel Norte CountyEl Dorado

GlennImperialInyoLassenMaderaMariposaModocMono

Rural Countiesrsquo Environmental Services Joint Powers Authority (ESJPA)

Marin County JPA Mariposa CountyMendocino County SWMANapa County Sacramento County San Bernardino County San Francisco CountySan Joaquin County

San Mateo CountySanta Barbara CountySanta Clara County Santa Cruz County Solano County Sonoma County WMATehama County Yolo County

NevadaPlumasSierraSiskiyouTehamaTrinityTuolumne

CPSC Participants ndash 15 Associations (92208)

bull Association of Bay Area Governments Bay Area Hazardous Waste Management Facility Allocation Committee bull Association of Bay Area Governments (ABAG) bull Bay Area Clean Water Agencies bull Bay Area Stormwater Management Agencies Association bull California Council of Directors of Environmental Health (CCDEH) bull California Stormwater Quality Association bull East Bay Municipal Utility District bull Los Angeles County Sanitation District bull Los Angeles County Solid Waste Task Force bull Mojave Desert and Mountain Recycling Authority bull Rural Countiesrsquo Environmental Services Joint Powers Authority (ESJPA) (Counties of Alpine Amador Butte Calaveras Colusa Del Norte El Dorado Glenn Imperial Inyo Lassen Madera Mariposa Modoc Mono Nevada Plumas Sierra Siskiyou Tehama Trinity Tuolumne) bull Sacramento Business Environmental Resource Center bull Sacramento County Regional Sanitation Districtbull Santa Clara Valley CLEAN South Bay

bull West Valley Clean Water (Campbell Los Gatos Monte Serena Saratoga)

CPSC Partners (92208)

bull Green Party Los Angles Countybull Long Beach Coalition for Safe Environmentbull Sierra Club ndash Solano Groupbull Gills Onions LLCbull Teleosis Institute ndash Green Pharmacy Programbull Keep California Beautifulbull Waste Management of Orange Countybull California Resource Connectionsbull Marin Sanitary Servicebull Allied Waste ndash Daily Citybull Reverse Logistics Associationbull CRampR Waste and Recycling Servicesbull Pacific Recycling Solutionsbull CA Sierra Club Natural Resources Committee amp Zero Waste Committeebull Total Recycling Associatesbull Many individual citizens have signed the pledge

California Product Stewardship Council Participating Cities amp Counties (9108)

Contact CPSCHeidi SanbornExecutive Director HeidiCalPSCorg916-485-7753

wwwCalPSCorg

Funded by a Grant from the California Integrated Waste Management Board Zero Waste mdash You Make It Happen

copy 2008 by the California Integrated Waste Management Board (CIWMB) All rights reserved

This publication or parts thereof may not be reproduced without permission from CIWMB

Developed with support from the Product Policy Institute

  • Slide 1
  • Mission
  • Bill Worrell
  • The High Cost of Compliance
  • Per Capita Waste Production
  • Changing Waste
  • Products are disposable
  • U-Waste Designed for Disposal
  • Sharps Prohibited Waste
  • Slide 10
  • Multi Media
  • Slide 12
  • Growth in CA Total Waste
  • Slide 14
  • Slide 15
  • Slide 16
  • Slide 17
  • Slide 18
  • Applying the Producer Responsibility Framework
  • Slide 20
  • Authority Needed to Implement EPR Framework
  • EPR Framework Approach Roles and Responsibilities
  • Roles and Responsibilities (continued)
  • Slide 24
  • Slide 25
  • Slide 26
  • Slide 27
  • Slide 28
  • Framework EPR
  • Essential Elements
  • CPSC Participants ndash 28 Cities (92208)
  • CPSC Participants ndash 23 Counties (92208)
  • CPSC Participants ndash 15 Associations (92208)
  • CPSC Partners (92208)
  • California Product Stewardship Council Participating Cities amp Counties (9108)
  • Contact CPSC
Page 14: A Better Way: Product Stewardship. To shift California’s product waste management system from one focused on government funded and ratepayer financed.

Now Waste is a Local Responsibility

ProducersTaxpayers amp Ratepayers

Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR)

Producers

Customer Service

AB 939 (1989)

1 Source Reduction

2 Recycling and Composting

3 Transformation and Landfill Disposal

Strategic Directive 5 February 2007

CIWMB will hellip ldquoSeek statutory authority to foster cradle-to-cradle producer responsibilityrdquo

ldquoDevelop relationships with stakeholders that result in producer-financed and producer-managed systemsrdquo

Applying the Producer Responsibility Framework

Board adopted the EPR Framework as a policy priority in September 2007 and approved refinements in January 2008

The Framework sets out broad guidance to be used in the development of EPR legislation

Overview of Roles Responsibilities

and Program Elements

Authority Needed to Implement EPR Framework

1Select amp add productsproduct categories

2 Require product stewardship plan3 Plan provisions

ndash Targets product designrecycling ratesndash Fee structuresndash Performance standardsndash Reporting

4 Transparency and Accountability5 Enforcement

EPR Framework ApproachRoles and Responsibilities

1 Producers

2 Retailers

3 Consumers

4 State Government

5 Local Government

6 Haulers

7 Recyclers

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

1 Producers

Key role design product stewardship

program and achieve defined outcomendash Flexibility to design program in the

most efficient mannerndash Prepare and implement planndash Demonstrate performance

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

2 Retailers

ndash Provide information from producers to customers

ndash Only sell ldquoregisteredrdquo productsndash Voluntary involvement in EOL collection

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

3 Consumers

ndash Participate in collection systemsndash Pay for EOL management

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

4 State Government

ndash Establish statutory requirements and regulations to achieve goals using guiding principles

ndash Approve plans developed by producersndash Make plans and performance

information publicndash Deliver oversight and enforcementndash Level playing field

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

5 Local Government

ndash Explore system effectiveness withndash stakeholdersndash May choose to participatendash Assist in information disseminationndash Obtain compensation from producers

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

6 Haulers 7 Collectors and Recyclers

ndash Provide safe collection and handling of products and materials with compensation

ndash Provide information to help producers enhance recovery

ndash Seek system improvements with other stakeholders

Framework EPR

Essential Elements

See ldquoExtended Producer Responsibility Framework ndash

Checklistrdquo

Amador City Chula Vista Cupertino Diamond Bar Dixon El Cerrito Elk Grove Fresno Indian Wells IsletonLa Verne Lemon Grove Los Altos Hills Morgan Hill 1048707Vernon

CPSC Participants ndash 28 Cities (92208)

MonroviaOakland Palo Alto Pasadena Rio Vista San Dimas San Joaquin San Jose Santa Cruz Santa Monica Sierra Madre Union City Vacaville Vernon

Alameda County Amador County ISWMButte CountyCentral Contra Costa County

SWMDel Norte SWMAHumboldt SWMALos Angeles County IWM

Task Force

CPSC Participants ndash 23 Counties (92208)

AlpineAmadorButteCalaverasColusaDel Norte CountyEl Dorado

GlennImperialInyoLassenMaderaMariposaModocMono

Rural Countiesrsquo Environmental Services Joint Powers Authority (ESJPA)

Marin County JPA Mariposa CountyMendocino County SWMANapa County Sacramento County San Bernardino County San Francisco CountySan Joaquin County

San Mateo CountySanta Barbara CountySanta Clara County Santa Cruz County Solano County Sonoma County WMATehama County Yolo County

NevadaPlumasSierraSiskiyouTehamaTrinityTuolumne

CPSC Participants ndash 15 Associations (92208)

bull Association of Bay Area Governments Bay Area Hazardous Waste Management Facility Allocation Committee bull Association of Bay Area Governments (ABAG) bull Bay Area Clean Water Agencies bull Bay Area Stormwater Management Agencies Association bull California Council of Directors of Environmental Health (CCDEH) bull California Stormwater Quality Association bull East Bay Municipal Utility District bull Los Angeles County Sanitation District bull Los Angeles County Solid Waste Task Force bull Mojave Desert and Mountain Recycling Authority bull Rural Countiesrsquo Environmental Services Joint Powers Authority (ESJPA) (Counties of Alpine Amador Butte Calaveras Colusa Del Norte El Dorado Glenn Imperial Inyo Lassen Madera Mariposa Modoc Mono Nevada Plumas Sierra Siskiyou Tehama Trinity Tuolumne) bull Sacramento Business Environmental Resource Center bull Sacramento County Regional Sanitation Districtbull Santa Clara Valley CLEAN South Bay

bull West Valley Clean Water (Campbell Los Gatos Monte Serena Saratoga)

CPSC Partners (92208)

bull Green Party Los Angles Countybull Long Beach Coalition for Safe Environmentbull Sierra Club ndash Solano Groupbull Gills Onions LLCbull Teleosis Institute ndash Green Pharmacy Programbull Keep California Beautifulbull Waste Management of Orange Countybull California Resource Connectionsbull Marin Sanitary Servicebull Allied Waste ndash Daily Citybull Reverse Logistics Associationbull CRampR Waste and Recycling Servicesbull Pacific Recycling Solutionsbull CA Sierra Club Natural Resources Committee amp Zero Waste Committeebull Total Recycling Associatesbull Many individual citizens have signed the pledge

California Product Stewardship Council Participating Cities amp Counties (9108)

Contact CPSCHeidi SanbornExecutive Director HeidiCalPSCorg916-485-7753

wwwCalPSCorg

Funded by a Grant from the California Integrated Waste Management Board Zero Waste mdash You Make It Happen

copy 2008 by the California Integrated Waste Management Board (CIWMB) All rights reserved

This publication or parts thereof may not be reproduced without permission from CIWMB

Developed with support from the Product Policy Institute

  • Slide 1
  • Mission
  • Bill Worrell
  • The High Cost of Compliance
  • Per Capita Waste Production
  • Changing Waste
  • Products are disposable
  • U-Waste Designed for Disposal
  • Sharps Prohibited Waste
  • Slide 10
  • Multi Media
  • Slide 12
  • Growth in CA Total Waste
  • Slide 14
  • Slide 15
  • Slide 16
  • Slide 17
  • Slide 18
  • Applying the Producer Responsibility Framework
  • Slide 20
  • Authority Needed to Implement EPR Framework
  • EPR Framework Approach Roles and Responsibilities
  • Roles and Responsibilities (continued)
  • Slide 24
  • Slide 25
  • Slide 26
  • Slide 27
  • Slide 28
  • Framework EPR
  • Essential Elements
  • CPSC Participants ndash 28 Cities (92208)
  • CPSC Participants ndash 23 Counties (92208)
  • CPSC Participants ndash 15 Associations (92208)
  • CPSC Partners (92208)
  • California Product Stewardship Council Participating Cities amp Counties (9108)
  • Contact CPSC
Page 15: A Better Way: Product Stewardship. To shift California’s product waste management system from one focused on government funded and ratepayer financed.

Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR)

Producers

Customer Service

AB 939 (1989)

1 Source Reduction

2 Recycling and Composting

3 Transformation and Landfill Disposal

Strategic Directive 5 February 2007

CIWMB will hellip ldquoSeek statutory authority to foster cradle-to-cradle producer responsibilityrdquo

ldquoDevelop relationships with stakeholders that result in producer-financed and producer-managed systemsrdquo

Applying the Producer Responsibility Framework

Board adopted the EPR Framework as a policy priority in September 2007 and approved refinements in January 2008

The Framework sets out broad guidance to be used in the development of EPR legislation

Overview of Roles Responsibilities

and Program Elements

Authority Needed to Implement EPR Framework

1Select amp add productsproduct categories

2 Require product stewardship plan3 Plan provisions

ndash Targets product designrecycling ratesndash Fee structuresndash Performance standardsndash Reporting

4 Transparency and Accountability5 Enforcement

EPR Framework ApproachRoles and Responsibilities

1 Producers

2 Retailers

3 Consumers

4 State Government

5 Local Government

6 Haulers

7 Recyclers

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

1 Producers

Key role design product stewardship

program and achieve defined outcomendash Flexibility to design program in the

most efficient mannerndash Prepare and implement planndash Demonstrate performance

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

2 Retailers

ndash Provide information from producers to customers

ndash Only sell ldquoregisteredrdquo productsndash Voluntary involvement in EOL collection

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

3 Consumers

ndash Participate in collection systemsndash Pay for EOL management

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

4 State Government

ndash Establish statutory requirements and regulations to achieve goals using guiding principles

ndash Approve plans developed by producersndash Make plans and performance

information publicndash Deliver oversight and enforcementndash Level playing field

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

5 Local Government

ndash Explore system effectiveness withndash stakeholdersndash May choose to participatendash Assist in information disseminationndash Obtain compensation from producers

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

6 Haulers 7 Collectors and Recyclers

ndash Provide safe collection and handling of products and materials with compensation

ndash Provide information to help producers enhance recovery

ndash Seek system improvements with other stakeholders

Framework EPR

Essential Elements

See ldquoExtended Producer Responsibility Framework ndash

Checklistrdquo

Amador City Chula Vista Cupertino Diamond Bar Dixon El Cerrito Elk Grove Fresno Indian Wells IsletonLa Verne Lemon Grove Los Altos Hills Morgan Hill 1048707Vernon

CPSC Participants ndash 28 Cities (92208)

MonroviaOakland Palo Alto Pasadena Rio Vista San Dimas San Joaquin San Jose Santa Cruz Santa Monica Sierra Madre Union City Vacaville Vernon

Alameda County Amador County ISWMButte CountyCentral Contra Costa County

SWMDel Norte SWMAHumboldt SWMALos Angeles County IWM

Task Force

CPSC Participants ndash 23 Counties (92208)

AlpineAmadorButteCalaverasColusaDel Norte CountyEl Dorado

GlennImperialInyoLassenMaderaMariposaModocMono

Rural Countiesrsquo Environmental Services Joint Powers Authority (ESJPA)

Marin County JPA Mariposa CountyMendocino County SWMANapa County Sacramento County San Bernardino County San Francisco CountySan Joaquin County

San Mateo CountySanta Barbara CountySanta Clara County Santa Cruz County Solano County Sonoma County WMATehama County Yolo County

NevadaPlumasSierraSiskiyouTehamaTrinityTuolumne

CPSC Participants ndash 15 Associations (92208)

bull Association of Bay Area Governments Bay Area Hazardous Waste Management Facility Allocation Committee bull Association of Bay Area Governments (ABAG) bull Bay Area Clean Water Agencies bull Bay Area Stormwater Management Agencies Association bull California Council of Directors of Environmental Health (CCDEH) bull California Stormwater Quality Association bull East Bay Municipal Utility District bull Los Angeles County Sanitation District bull Los Angeles County Solid Waste Task Force bull Mojave Desert and Mountain Recycling Authority bull Rural Countiesrsquo Environmental Services Joint Powers Authority (ESJPA) (Counties of Alpine Amador Butte Calaveras Colusa Del Norte El Dorado Glenn Imperial Inyo Lassen Madera Mariposa Modoc Mono Nevada Plumas Sierra Siskiyou Tehama Trinity Tuolumne) bull Sacramento Business Environmental Resource Center bull Sacramento County Regional Sanitation Districtbull Santa Clara Valley CLEAN South Bay

bull West Valley Clean Water (Campbell Los Gatos Monte Serena Saratoga)

CPSC Partners (92208)

bull Green Party Los Angles Countybull Long Beach Coalition for Safe Environmentbull Sierra Club ndash Solano Groupbull Gills Onions LLCbull Teleosis Institute ndash Green Pharmacy Programbull Keep California Beautifulbull Waste Management of Orange Countybull California Resource Connectionsbull Marin Sanitary Servicebull Allied Waste ndash Daily Citybull Reverse Logistics Associationbull CRampR Waste and Recycling Servicesbull Pacific Recycling Solutionsbull CA Sierra Club Natural Resources Committee amp Zero Waste Committeebull Total Recycling Associatesbull Many individual citizens have signed the pledge

California Product Stewardship Council Participating Cities amp Counties (9108)

Contact CPSCHeidi SanbornExecutive Director HeidiCalPSCorg916-485-7753

wwwCalPSCorg

Funded by a Grant from the California Integrated Waste Management Board Zero Waste mdash You Make It Happen

copy 2008 by the California Integrated Waste Management Board (CIWMB) All rights reserved

This publication or parts thereof may not be reproduced without permission from CIWMB

Developed with support from the Product Policy Institute

  • Slide 1
  • Mission
  • Bill Worrell
  • The High Cost of Compliance
  • Per Capita Waste Production
  • Changing Waste
  • Products are disposable
  • U-Waste Designed for Disposal
  • Sharps Prohibited Waste
  • Slide 10
  • Multi Media
  • Slide 12
  • Growth in CA Total Waste
  • Slide 14
  • Slide 15
  • Slide 16
  • Slide 17
  • Slide 18
  • Applying the Producer Responsibility Framework
  • Slide 20
  • Authority Needed to Implement EPR Framework
  • EPR Framework Approach Roles and Responsibilities
  • Roles and Responsibilities (continued)
  • Slide 24
  • Slide 25
  • Slide 26
  • Slide 27
  • Slide 28
  • Framework EPR
  • Essential Elements
  • CPSC Participants ndash 28 Cities (92208)
  • CPSC Participants ndash 23 Counties (92208)
  • CPSC Participants ndash 15 Associations (92208)
  • CPSC Partners (92208)
  • California Product Stewardship Council Participating Cities amp Counties (9108)
  • Contact CPSC
Page 16: A Better Way: Product Stewardship. To shift California’s product waste management system from one focused on government funded and ratepayer financed.

AB 939 (1989)

1 Source Reduction

2 Recycling and Composting

3 Transformation and Landfill Disposal

Strategic Directive 5 February 2007

CIWMB will hellip ldquoSeek statutory authority to foster cradle-to-cradle producer responsibilityrdquo

ldquoDevelop relationships with stakeholders that result in producer-financed and producer-managed systemsrdquo

Applying the Producer Responsibility Framework

Board adopted the EPR Framework as a policy priority in September 2007 and approved refinements in January 2008

The Framework sets out broad guidance to be used in the development of EPR legislation

Overview of Roles Responsibilities

and Program Elements

Authority Needed to Implement EPR Framework

1Select amp add productsproduct categories

2 Require product stewardship plan3 Plan provisions

ndash Targets product designrecycling ratesndash Fee structuresndash Performance standardsndash Reporting

4 Transparency and Accountability5 Enforcement

EPR Framework ApproachRoles and Responsibilities

1 Producers

2 Retailers

3 Consumers

4 State Government

5 Local Government

6 Haulers

7 Recyclers

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

1 Producers

Key role design product stewardship

program and achieve defined outcomendash Flexibility to design program in the

most efficient mannerndash Prepare and implement planndash Demonstrate performance

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

2 Retailers

ndash Provide information from producers to customers

ndash Only sell ldquoregisteredrdquo productsndash Voluntary involvement in EOL collection

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

3 Consumers

ndash Participate in collection systemsndash Pay for EOL management

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

4 State Government

ndash Establish statutory requirements and regulations to achieve goals using guiding principles

ndash Approve plans developed by producersndash Make plans and performance

information publicndash Deliver oversight and enforcementndash Level playing field

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

5 Local Government

ndash Explore system effectiveness withndash stakeholdersndash May choose to participatendash Assist in information disseminationndash Obtain compensation from producers

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

6 Haulers 7 Collectors and Recyclers

ndash Provide safe collection and handling of products and materials with compensation

ndash Provide information to help producers enhance recovery

ndash Seek system improvements with other stakeholders

Framework EPR

Essential Elements

See ldquoExtended Producer Responsibility Framework ndash

Checklistrdquo

Amador City Chula Vista Cupertino Diamond Bar Dixon El Cerrito Elk Grove Fresno Indian Wells IsletonLa Verne Lemon Grove Los Altos Hills Morgan Hill 1048707Vernon

CPSC Participants ndash 28 Cities (92208)

MonroviaOakland Palo Alto Pasadena Rio Vista San Dimas San Joaquin San Jose Santa Cruz Santa Monica Sierra Madre Union City Vacaville Vernon

Alameda County Amador County ISWMButte CountyCentral Contra Costa County

SWMDel Norte SWMAHumboldt SWMALos Angeles County IWM

Task Force

CPSC Participants ndash 23 Counties (92208)

AlpineAmadorButteCalaverasColusaDel Norte CountyEl Dorado

GlennImperialInyoLassenMaderaMariposaModocMono

Rural Countiesrsquo Environmental Services Joint Powers Authority (ESJPA)

Marin County JPA Mariposa CountyMendocino County SWMANapa County Sacramento County San Bernardino County San Francisco CountySan Joaquin County

San Mateo CountySanta Barbara CountySanta Clara County Santa Cruz County Solano County Sonoma County WMATehama County Yolo County

NevadaPlumasSierraSiskiyouTehamaTrinityTuolumne

CPSC Participants ndash 15 Associations (92208)

bull Association of Bay Area Governments Bay Area Hazardous Waste Management Facility Allocation Committee bull Association of Bay Area Governments (ABAG) bull Bay Area Clean Water Agencies bull Bay Area Stormwater Management Agencies Association bull California Council of Directors of Environmental Health (CCDEH) bull California Stormwater Quality Association bull East Bay Municipal Utility District bull Los Angeles County Sanitation District bull Los Angeles County Solid Waste Task Force bull Mojave Desert and Mountain Recycling Authority bull Rural Countiesrsquo Environmental Services Joint Powers Authority (ESJPA) (Counties of Alpine Amador Butte Calaveras Colusa Del Norte El Dorado Glenn Imperial Inyo Lassen Madera Mariposa Modoc Mono Nevada Plumas Sierra Siskiyou Tehama Trinity Tuolumne) bull Sacramento Business Environmental Resource Center bull Sacramento County Regional Sanitation Districtbull Santa Clara Valley CLEAN South Bay

bull West Valley Clean Water (Campbell Los Gatos Monte Serena Saratoga)

CPSC Partners (92208)

bull Green Party Los Angles Countybull Long Beach Coalition for Safe Environmentbull Sierra Club ndash Solano Groupbull Gills Onions LLCbull Teleosis Institute ndash Green Pharmacy Programbull Keep California Beautifulbull Waste Management of Orange Countybull California Resource Connectionsbull Marin Sanitary Servicebull Allied Waste ndash Daily Citybull Reverse Logistics Associationbull CRampR Waste and Recycling Servicesbull Pacific Recycling Solutionsbull CA Sierra Club Natural Resources Committee amp Zero Waste Committeebull Total Recycling Associatesbull Many individual citizens have signed the pledge

California Product Stewardship Council Participating Cities amp Counties (9108)

Contact CPSCHeidi SanbornExecutive Director HeidiCalPSCorg916-485-7753

wwwCalPSCorg

Funded by a Grant from the California Integrated Waste Management Board Zero Waste mdash You Make It Happen

copy 2008 by the California Integrated Waste Management Board (CIWMB) All rights reserved

This publication or parts thereof may not be reproduced without permission from CIWMB

Developed with support from the Product Policy Institute

  • Slide 1
  • Mission
  • Bill Worrell
  • The High Cost of Compliance
  • Per Capita Waste Production
  • Changing Waste
  • Products are disposable
  • U-Waste Designed for Disposal
  • Sharps Prohibited Waste
  • Slide 10
  • Multi Media
  • Slide 12
  • Growth in CA Total Waste
  • Slide 14
  • Slide 15
  • Slide 16
  • Slide 17
  • Slide 18
  • Applying the Producer Responsibility Framework
  • Slide 20
  • Authority Needed to Implement EPR Framework
  • EPR Framework Approach Roles and Responsibilities
  • Roles and Responsibilities (continued)
  • Slide 24
  • Slide 25
  • Slide 26
  • Slide 27
  • Slide 28
  • Framework EPR
  • Essential Elements
  • CPSC Participants ndash 28 Cities (92208)
  • CPSC Participants ndash 23 Counties (92208)
  • CPSC Participants ndash 15 Associations (92208)
  • CPSC Partners (92208)
  • California Product Stewardship Council Participating Cities amp Counties (9108)
  • Contact CPSC
Page 17: A Better Way: Product Stewardship. To shift California’s product waste management system from one focused on government funded and ratepayer financed.

Strategic Directive 5 February 2007

CIWMB will hellip ldquoSeek statutory authority to foster cradle-to-cradle producer responsibilityrdquo

ldquoDevelop relationships with stakeholders that result in producer-financed and producer-managed systemsrdquo

Applying the Producer Responsibility Framework

Board adopted the EPR Framework as a policy priority in September 2007 and approved refinements in January 2008

The Framework sets out broad guidance to be used in the development of EPR legislation

Overview of Roles Responsibilities

and Program Elements

Authority Needed to Implement EPR Framework

1Select amp add productsproduct categories

2 Require product stewardship plan3 Plan provisions

ndash Targets product designrecycling ratesndash Fee structuresndash Performance standardsndash Reporting

4 Transparency and Accountability5 Enforcement

EPR Framework ApproachRoles and Responsibilities

1 Producers

2 Retailers

3 Consumers

4 State Government

5 Local Government

6 Haulers

7 Recyclers

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

1 Producers

Key role design product stewardship

program and achieve defined outcomendash Flexibility to design program in the

most efficient mannerndash Prepare and implement planndash Demonstrate performance

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

2 Retailers

ndash Provide information from producers to customers

ndash Only sell ldquoregisteredrdquo productsndash Voluntary involvement in EOL collection

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

3 Consumers

ndash Participate in collection systemsndash Pay for EOL management

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

4 State Government

ndash Establish statutory requirements and regulations to achieve goals using guiding principles

ndash Approve plans developed by producersndash Make plans and performance

information publicndash Deliver oversight and enforcementndash Level playing field

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

5 Local Government

ndash Explore system effectiveness withndash stakeholdersndash May choose to participatendash Assist in information disseminationndash Obtain compensation from producers

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

6 Haulers 7 Collectors and Recyclers

ndash Provide safe collection and handling of products and materials with compensation

ndash Provide information to help producers enhance recovery

ndash Seek system improvements with other stakeholders

Framework EPR

Essential Elements

See ldquoExtended Producer Responsibility Framework ndash

Checklistrdquo

Amador City Chula Vista Cupertino Diamond Bar Dixon El Cerrito Elk Grove Fresno Indian Wells IsletonLa Verne Lemon Grove Los Altos Hills Morgan Hill 1048707Vernon

CPSC Participants ndash 28 Cities (92208)

MonroviaOakland Palo Alto Pasadena Rio Vista San Dimas San Joaquin San Jose Santa Cruz Santa Monica Sierra Madre Union City Vacaville Vernon

Alameda County Amador County ISWMButte CountyCentral Contra Costa County

SWMDel Norte SWMAHumboldt SWMALos Angeles County IWM

Task Force

CPSC Participants ndash 23 Counties (92208)

AlpineAmadorButteCalaverasColusaDel Norte CountyEl Dorado

GlennImperialInyoLassenMaderaMariposaModocMono

Rural Countiesrsquo Environmental Services Joint Powers Authority (ESJPA)

Marin County JPA Mariposa CountyMendocino County SWMANapa County Sacramento County San Bernardino County San Francisco CountySan Joaquin County

San Mateo CountySanta Barbara CountySanta Clara County Santa Cruz County Solano County Sonoma County WMATehama County Yolo County

NevadaPlumasSierraSiskiyouTehamaTrinityTuolumne

CPSC Participants ndash 15 Associations (92208)

bull Association of Bay Area Governments Bay Area Hazardous Waste Management Facility Allocation Committee bull Association of Bay Area Governments (ABAG) bull Bay Area Clean Water Agencies bull Bay Area Stormwater Management Agencies Association bull California Council of Directors of Environmental Health (CCDEH) bull California Stormwater Quality Association bull East Bay Municipal Utility District bull Los Angeles County Sanitation District bull Los Angeles County Solid Waste Task Force bull Mojave Desert and Mountain Recycling Authority bull Rural Countiesrsquo Environmental Services Joint Powers Authority (ESJPA) (Counties of Alpine Amador Butte Calaveras Colusa Del Norte El Dorado Glenn Imperial Inyo Lassen Madera Mariposa Modoc Mono Nevada Plumas Sierra Siskiyou Tehama Trinity Tuolumne) bull Sacramento Business Environmental Resource Center bull Sacramento County Regional Sanitation Districtbull Santa Clara Valley CLEAN South Bay

bull West Valley Clean Water (Campbell Los Gatos Monte Serena Saratoga)

CPSC Partners (92208)

bull Green Party Los Angles Countybull Long Beach Coalition for Safe Environmentbull Sierra Club ndash Solano Groupbull Gills Onions LLCbull Teleosis Institute ndash Green Pharmacy Programbull Keep California Beautifulbull Waste Management of Orange Countybull California Resource Connectionsbull Marin Sanitary Servicebull Allied Waste ndash Daily Citybull Reverse Logistics Associationbull CRampR Waste and Recycling Servicesbull Pacific Recycling Solutionsbull CA Sierra Club Natural Resources Committee amp Zero Waste Committeebull Total Recycling Associatesbull Many individual citizens have signed the pledge

California Product Stewardship Council Participating Cities amp Counties (9108)

Contact CPSCHeidi SanbornExecutive Director HeidiCalPSCorg916-485-7753

wwwCalPSCorg

Funded by a Grant from the California Integrated Waste Management Board Zero Waste mdash You Make It Happen

copy 2008 by the California Integrated Waste Management Board (CIWMB) All rights reserved

This publication or parts thereof may not be reproduced without permission from CIWMB

Developed with support from the Product Policy Institute

  • Slide 1
  • Mission
  • Bill Worrell
  • The High Cost of Compliance
  • Per Capita Waste Production
  • Changing Waste
  • Products are disposable
  • U-Waste Designed for Disposal
  • Sharps Prohibited Waste
  • Slide 10
  • Multi Media
  • Slide 12
  • Growth in CA Total Waste
  • Slide 14
  • Slide 15
  • Slide 16
  • Slide 17
  • Slide 18
  • Applying the Producer Responsibility Framework
  • Slide 20
  • Authority Needed to Implement EPR Framework
  • EPR Framework Approach Roles and Responsibilities
  • Roles and Responsibilities (continued)
  • Slide 24
  • Slide 25
  • Slide 26
  • Slide 27
  • Slide 28
  • Framework EPR
  • Essential Elements
  • CPSC Participants ndash 28 Cities (92208)
  • CPSC Participants ndash 23 Counties (92208)
  • CPSC Participants ndash 15 Associations (92208)
  • CPSC Partners (92208)
  • California Product Stewardship Council Participating Cities amp Counties (9108)
  • Contact CPSC
Page 18: A Better Way: Product Stewardship. To shift California’s product waste management system from one focused on government funded and ratepayer financed.

Applying the Producer Responsibility Framework

Board adopted the EPR Framework as a policy priority in September 2007 and approved refinements in January 2008

The Framework sets out broad guidance to be used in the development of EPR legislation

Overview of Roles Responsibilities

and Program Elements

Authority Needed to Implement EPR Framework

1Select amp add productsproduct categories

2 Require product stewardship plan3 Plan provisions

ndash Targets product designrecycling ratesndash Fee structuresndash Performance standardsndash Reporting

4 Transparency and Accountability5 Enforcement

EPR Framework ApproachRoles and Responsibilities

1 Producers

2 Retailers

3 Consumers

4 State Government

5 Local Government

6 Haulers

7 Recyclers

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

1 Producers

Key role design product stewardship

program and achieve defined outcomendash Flexibility to design program in the

most efficient mannerndash Prepare and implement planndash Demonstrate performance

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

2 Retailers

ndash Provide information from producers to customers

ndash Only sell ldquoregisteredrdquo productsndash Voluntary involvement in EOL collection

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

3 Consumers

ndash Participate in collection systemsndash Pay for EOL management

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

4 State Government

ndash Establish statutory requirements and regulations to achieve goals using guiding principles

ndash Approve plans developed by producersndash Make plans and performance

information publicndash Deliver oversight and enforcementndash Level playing field

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

5 Local Government

ndash Explore system effectiveness withndash stakeholdersndash May choose to participatendash Assist in information disseminationndash Obtain compensation from producers

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

6 Haulers 7 Collectors and Recyclers

ndash Provide safe collection and handling of products and materials with compensation

ndash Provide information to help producers enhance recovery

ndash Seek system improvements with other stakeholders

Framework EPR

Essential Elements

See ldquoExtended Producer Responsibility Framework ndash

Checklistrdquo

Amador City Chula Vista Cupertino Diamond Bar Dixon El Cerrito Elk Grove Fresno Indian Wells IsletonLa Verne Lemon Grove Los Altos Hills Morgan Hill 1048707Vernon

CPSC Participants ndash 28 Cities (92208)

MonroviaOakland Palo Alto Pasadena Rio Vista San Dimas San Joaquin San Jose Santa Cruz Santa Monica Sierra Madre Union City Vacaville Vernon

Alameda County Amador County ISWMButte CountyCentral Contra Costa County

SWMDel Norte SWMAHumboldt SWMALos Angeles County IWM

Task Force

CPSC Participants ndash 23 Counties (92208)

AlpineAmadorButteCalaverasColusaDel Norte CountyEl Dorado

GlennImperialInyoLassenMaderaMariposaModocMono

Rural Countiesrsquo Environmental Services Joint Powers Authority (ESJPA)

Marin County JPA Mariposa CountyMendocino County SWMANapa County Sacramento County San Bernardino County San Francisco CountySan Joaquin County

San Mateo CountySanta Barbara CountySanta Clara County Santa Cruz County Solano County Sonoma County WMATehama County Yolo County

NevadaPlumasSierraSiskiyouTehamaTrinityTuolumne

CPSC Participants ndash 15 Associations (92208)

bull Association of Bay Area Governments Bay Area Hazardous Waste Management Facility Allocation Committee bull Association of Bay Area Governments (ABAG) bull Bay Area Clean Water Agencies bull Bay Area Stormwater Management Agencies Association bull California Council of Directors of Environmental Health (CCDEH) bull California Stormwater Quality Association bull East Bay Municipal Utility District bull Los Angeles County Sanitation District bull Los Angeles County Solid Waste Task Force bull Mojave Desert and Mountain Recycling Authority bull Rural Countiesrsquo Environmental Services Joint Powers Authority (ESJPA) (Counties of Alpine Amador Butte Calaveras Colusa Del Norte El Dorado Glenn Imperial Inyo Lassen Madera Mariposa Modoc Mono Nevada Plumas Sierra Siskiyou Tehama Trinity Tuolumne) bull Sacramento Business Environmental Resource Center bull Sacramento County Regional Sanitation Districtbull Santa Clara Valley CLEAN South Bay

bull West Valley Clean Water (Campbell Los Gatos Monte Serena Saratoga)

CPSC Partners (92208)

bull Green Party Los Angles Countybull Long Beach Coalition for Safe Environmentbull Sierra Club ndash Solano Groupbull Gills Onions LLCbull Teleosis Institute ndash Green Pharmacy Programbull Keep California Beautifulbull Waste Management of Orange Countybull California Resource Connectionsbull Marin Sanitary Servicebull Allied Waste ndash Daily Citybull Reverse Logistics Associationbull CRampR Waste and Recycling Servicesbull Pacific Recycling Solutionsbull CA Sierra Club Natural Resources Committee amp Zero Waste Committeebull Total Recycling Associatesbull Many individual citizens have signed the pledge

California Product Stewardship Council Participating Cities amp Counties (9108)

Contact CPSCHeidi SanbornExecutive Director HeidiCalPSCorg916-485-7753

wwwCalPSCorg

Funded by a Grant from the California Integrated Waste Management Board Zero Waste mdash You Make It Happen

copy 2008 by the California Integrated Waste Management Board (CIWMB) All rights reserved

This publication or parts thereof may not be reproduced without permission from CIWMB

Developed with support from the Product Policy Institute

  • Slide 1
  • Mission
  • Bill Worrell
  • The High Cost of Compliance
  • Per Capita Waste Production
  • Changing Waste
  • Products are disposable
  • U-Waste Designed for Disposal
  • Sharps Prohibited Waste
  • Slide 10
  • Multi Media
  • Slide 12
  • Growth in CA Total Waste
  • Slide 14
  • Slide 15
  • Slide 16
  • Slide 17
  • Slide 18
  • Applying the Producer Responsibility Framework
  • Slide 20
  • Authority Needed to Implement EPR Framework
  • EPR Framework Approach Roles and Responsibilities
  • Roles and Responsibilities (continued)
  • Slide 24
  • Slide 25
  • Slide 26
  • Slide 27
  • Slide 28
  • Framework EPR
  • Essential Elements
  • CPSC Participants ndash 28 Cities (92208)
  • CPSC Participants ndash 23 Counties (92208)
  • CPSC Participants ndash 15 Associations (92208)
  • CPSC Partners (92208)
  • California Product Stewardship Council Participating Cities amp Counties (9108)
  • Contact CPSC
Page 19: A Better Way: Product Stewardship. To shift California’s product waste management system from one focused on government funded and ratepayer financed.

Overview of Roles Responsibilities

and Program Elements

Authority Needed to Implement EPR Framework

1Select amp add productsproduct categories

2 Require product stewardship plan3 Plan provisions

ndash Targets product designrecycling ratesndash Fee structuresndash Performance standardsndash Reporting

4 Transparency and Accountability5 Enforcement

EPR Framework ApproachRoles and Responsibilities

1 Producers

2 Retailers

3 Consumers

4 State Government

5 Local Government

6 Haulers

7 Recyclers

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

1 Producers

Key role design product stewardship

program and achieve defined outcomendash Flexibility to design program in the

most efficient mannerndash Prepare and implement planndash Demonstrate performance

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

2 Retailers

ndash Provide information from producers to customers

ndash Only sell ldquoregisteredrdquo productsndash Voluntary involvement in EOL collection

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

3 Consumers

ndash Participate in collection systemsndash Pay for EOL management

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

4 State Government

ndash Establish statutory requirements and regulations to achieve goals using guiding principles

ndash Approve plans developed by producersndash Make plans and performance

information publicndash Deliver oversight and enforcementndash Level playing field

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

5 Local Government

ndash Explore system effectiveness withndash stakeholdersndash May choose to participatendash Assist in information disseminationndash Obtain compensation from producers

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

6 Haulers 7 Collectors and Recyclers

ndash Provide safe collection and handling of products and materials with compensation

ndash Provide information to help producers enhance recovery

ndash Seek system improvements with other stakeholders

Framework EPR

Essential Elements

See ldquoExtended Producer Responsibility Framework ndash

Checklistrdquo

Amador City Chula Vista Cupertino Diamond Bar Dixon El Cerrito Elk Grove Fresno Indian Wells IsletonLa Verne Lemon Grove Los Altos Hills Morgan Hill 1048707Vernon

CPSC Participants ndash 28 Cities (92208)

MonroviaOakland Palo Alto Pasadena Rio Vista San Dimas San Joaquin San Jose Santa Cruz Santa Monica Sierra Madre Union City Vacaville Vernon

Alameda County Amador County ISWMButte CountyCentral Contra Costa County

SWMDel Norte SWMAHumboldt SWMALos Angeles County IWM

Task Force

CPSC Participants ndash 23 Counties (92208)

AlpineAmadorButteCalaverasColusaDel Norte CountyEl Dorado

GlennImperialInyoLassenMaderaMariposaModocMono

Rural Countiesrsquo Environmental Services Joint Powers Authority (ESJPA)

Marin County JPA Mariposa CountyMendocino County SWMANapa County Sacramento County San Bernardino County San Francisco CountySan Joaquin County

San Mateo CountySanta Barbara CountySanta Clara County Santa Cruz County Solano County Sonoma County WMATehama County Yolo County

NevadaPlumasSierraSiskiyouTehamaTrinityTuolumne

CPSC Participants ndash 15 Associations (92208)

bull Association of Bay Area Governments Bay Area Hazardous Waste Management Facility Allocation Committee bull Association of Bay Area Governments (ABAG) bull Bay Area Clean Water Agencies bull Bay Area Stormwater Management Agencies Association bull California Council of Directors of Environmental Health (CCDEH) bull California Stormwater Quality Association bull East Bay Municipal Utility District bull Los Angeles County Sanitation District bull Los Angeles County Solid Waste Task Force bull Mojave Desert and Mountain Recycling Authority bull Rural Countiesrsquo Environmental Services Joint Powers Authority (ESJPA) (Counties of Alpine Amador Butte Calaveras Colusa Del Norte El Dorado Glenn Imperial Inyo Lassen Madera Mariposa Modoc Mono Nevada Plumas Sierra Siskiyou Tehama Trinity Tuolumne) bull Sacramento Business Environmental Resource Center bull Sacramento County Regional Sanitation Districtbull Santa Clara Valley CLEAN South Bay

bull West Valley Clean Water (Campbell Los Gatos Monte Serena Saratoga)

CPSC Partners (92208)

bull Green Party Los Angles Countybull Long Beach Coalition for Safe Environmentbull Sierra Club ndash Solano Groupbull Gills Onions LLCbull Teleosis Institute ndash Green Pharmacy Programbull Keep California Beautifulbull Waste Management of Orange Countybull California Resource Connectionsbull Marin Sanitary Servicebull Allied Waste ndash Daily Citybull Reverse Logistics Associationbull CRampR Waste and Recycling Servicesbull Pacific Recycling Solutionsbull CA Sierra Club Natural Resources Committee amp Zero Waste Committeebull Total Recycling Associatesbull Many individual citizens have signed the pledge

California Product Stewardship Council Participating Cities amp Counties (9108)

Contact CPSCHeidi SanbornExecutive Director HeidiCalPSCorg916-485-7753

wwwCalPSCorg

Funded by a Grant from the California Integrated Waste Management Board Zero Waste mdash You Make It Happen

copy 2008 by the California Integrated Waste Management Board (CIWMB) All rights reserved

This publication or parts thereof may not be reproduced without permission from CIWMB

Developed with support from the Product Policy Institute

  • Slide 1
  • Mission
  • Bill Worrell
  • The High Cost of Compliance
  • Per Capita Waste Production
  • Changing Waste
  • Products are disposable
  • U-Waste Designed for Disposal
  • Sharps Prohibited Waste
  • Slide 10
  • Multi Media
  • Slide 12
  • Growth in CA Total Waste
  • Slide 14
  • Slide 15
  • Slide 16
  • Slide 17
  • Slide 18
  • Applying the Producer Responsibility Framework
  • Slide 20
  • Authority Needed to Implement EPR Framework
  • EPR Framework Approach Roles and Responsibilities
  • Roles and Responsibilities (continued)
  • Slide 24
  • Slide 25
  • Slide 26
  • Slide 27
  • Slide 28
  • Framework EPR
  • Essential Elements
  • CPSC Participants ndash 28 Cities (92208)
  • CPSC Participants ndash 23 Counties (92208)
  • CPSC Participants ndash 15 Associations (92208)
  • CPSC Partners (92208)
  • California Product Stewardship Council Participating Cities amp Counties (9108)
  • Contact CPSC
Page 20: A Better Way: Product Stewardship. To shift California’s product waste management system from one focused on government funded and ratepayer financed.

Authority Needed to Implement EPR Framework

1Select amp add productsproduct categories

2 Require product stewardship plan3 Plan provisions

ndash Targets product designrecycling ratesndash Fee structuresndash Performance standardsndash Reporting

4 Transparency and Accountability5 Enforcement

EPR Framework ApproachRoles and Responsibilities

1 Producers

2 Retailers

3 Consumers

4 State Government

5 Local Government

6 Haulers

7 Recyclers

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

1 Producers

Key role design product stewardship

program and achieve defined outcomendash Flexibility to design program in the

most efficient mannerndash Prepare and implement planndash Demonstrate performance

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

2 Retailers

ndash Provide information from producers to customers

ndash Only sell ldquoregisteredrdquo productsndash Voluntary involvement in EOL collection

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

3 Consumers

ndash Participate in collection systemsndash Pay for EOL management

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

4 State Government

ndash Establish statutory requirements and regulations to achieve goals using guiding principles

ndash Approve plans developed by producersndash Make plans and performance

information publicndash Deliver oversight and enforcementndash Level playing field

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

5 Local Government

ndash Explore system effectiveness withndash stakeholdersndash May choose to participatendash Assist in information disseminationndash Obtain compensation from producers

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

6 Haulers 7 Collectors and Recyclers

ndash Provide safe collection and handling of products and materials with compensation

ndash Provide information to help producers enhance recovery

ndash Seek system improvements with other stakeholders

Framework EPR

Essential Elements

See ldquoExtended Producer Responsibility Framework ndash

Checklistrdquo

Amador City Chula Vista Cupertino Diamond Bar Dixon El Cerrito Elk Grove Fresno Indian Wells IsletonLa Verne Lemon Grove Los Altos Hills Morgan Hill 1048707Vernon

CPSC Participants ndash 28 Cities (92208)

MonroviaOakland Palo Alto Pasadena Rio Vista San Dimas San Joaquin San Jose Santa Cruz Santa Monica Sierra Madre Union City Vacaville Vernon

Alameda County Amador County ISWMButte CountyCentral Contra Costa County

SWMDel Norte SWMAHumboldt SWMALos Angeles County IWM

Task Force

CPSC Participants ndash 23 Counties (92208)

AlpineAmadorButteCalaverasColusaDel Norte CountyEl Dorado

GlennImperialInyoLassenMaderaMariposaModocMono

Rural Countiesrsquo Environmental Services Joint Powers Authority (ESJPA)

Marin County JPA Mariposa CountyMendocino County SWMANapa County Sacramento County San Bernardino County San Francisco CountySan Joaquin County

San Mateo CountySanta Barbara CountySanta Clara County Santa Cruz County Solano County Sonoma County WMATehama County Yolo County

NevadaPlumasSierraSiskiyouTehamaTrinityTuolumne

CPSC Participants ndash 15 Associations (92208)

bull Association of Bay Area Governments Bay Area Hazardous Waste Management Facility Allocation Committee bull Association of Bay Area Governments (ABAG) bull Bay Area Clean Water Agencies bull Bay Area Stormwater Management Agencies Association bull California Council of Directors of Environmental Health (CCDEH) bull California Stormwater Quality Association bull East Bay Municipal Utility District bull Los Angeles County Sanitation District bull Los Angeles County Solid Waste Task Force bull Mojave Desert and Mountain Recycling Authority bull Rural Countiesrsquo Environmental Services Joint Powers Authority (ESJPA) (Counties of Alpine Amador Butte Calaveras Colusa Del Norte El Dorado Glenn Imperial Inyo Lassen Madera Mariposa Modoc Mono Nevada Plumas Sierra Siskiyou Tehama Trinity Tuolumne) bull Sacramento Business Environmental Resource Center bull Sacramento County Regional Sanitation Districtbull Santa Clara Valley CLEAN South Bay

bull West Valley Clean Water (Campbell Los Gatos Monte Serena Saratoga)

CPSC Partners (92208)

bull Green Party Los Angles Countybull Long Beach Coalition for Safe Environmentbull Sierra Club ndash Solano Groupbull Gills Onions LLCbull Teleosis Institute ndash Green Pharmacy Programbull Keep California Beautifulbull Waste Management of Orange Countybull California Resource Connectionsbull Marin Sanitary Servicebull Allied Waste ndash Daily Citybull Reverse Logistics Associationbull CRampR Waste and Recycling Servicesbull Pacific Recycling Solutionsbull CA Sierra Club Natural Resources Committee amp Zero Waste Committeebull Total Recycling Associatesbull Many individual citizens have signed the pledge

California Product Stewardship Council Participating Cities amp Counties (9108)

Contact CPSCHeidi SanbornExecutive Director HeidiCalPSCorg916-485-7753

wwwCalPSCorg

Funded by a Grant from the California Integrated Waste Management Board Zero Waste mdash You Make It Happen

copy 2008 by the California Integrated Waste Management Board (CIWMB) All rights reserved

This publication or parts thereof may not be reproduced without permission from CIWMB

Developed with support from the Product Policy Institute

  • Slide 1
  • Mission
  • Bill Worrell
  • The High Cost of Compliance
  • Per Capita Waste Production
  • Changing Waste
  • Products are disposable
  • U-Waste Designed for Disposal
  • Sharps Prohibited Waste
  • Slide 10
  • Multi Media
  • Slide 12
  • Growth in CA Total Waste
  • Slide 14
  • Slide 15
  • Slide 16
  • Slide 17
  • Slide 18
  • Applying the Producer Responsibility Framework
  • Slide 20
  • Authority Needed to Implement EPR Framework
  • EPR Framework Approach Roles and Responsibilities
  • Roles and Responsibilities (continued)
  • Slide 24
  • Slide 25
  • Slide 26
  • Slide 27
  • Slide 28
  • Framework EPR
  • Essential Elements
  • CPSC Participants ndash 28 Cities (92208)
  • CPSC Participants ndash 23 Counties (92208)
  • CPSC Participants ndash 15 Associations (92208)
  • CPSC Partners (92208)
  • California Product Stewardship Council Participating Cities amp Counties (9108)
  • Contact CPSC
Page 21: A Better Way: Product Stewardship. To shift California’s product waste management system from one focused on government funded and ratepayer financed.

EPR Framework ApproachRoles and Responsibilities

1 Producers

2 Retailers

3 Consumers

4 State Government

5 Local Government

6 Haulers

7 Recyclers

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

1 Producers

Key role design product stewardship

program and achieve defined outcomendash Flexibility to design program in the

most efficient mannerndash Prepare and implement planndash Demonstrate performance

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

2 Retailers

ndash Provide information from producers to customers

ndash Only sell ldquoregisteredrdquo productsndash Voluntary involvement in EOL collection

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

3 Consumers

ndash Participate in collection systemsndash Pay for EOL management

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

4 State Government

ndash Establish statutory requirements and regulations to achieve goals using guiding principles

ndash Approve plans developed by producersndash Make plans and performance

information publicndash Deliver oversight and enforcementndash Level playing field

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

5 Local Government

ndash Explore system effectiveness withndash stakeholdersndash May choose to participatendash Assist in information disseminationndash Obtain compensation from producers

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

6 Haulers 7 Collectors and Recyclers

ndash Provide safe collection and handling of products and materials with compensation

ndash Provide information to help producers enhance recovery

ndash Seek system improvements with other stakeholders

Framework EPR

Essential Elements

See ldquoExtended Producer Responsibility Framework ndash

Checklistrdquo

Amador City Chula Vista Cupertino Diamond Bar Dixon El Cerrito Elk Grove Fresno Indian Wells IsletonLa Verne Lemon Grove Los Altos Hills Morgan Hill 1048707Vernon

CPSC Participants ndash 28 Cities (92208)

MonroviaOakland Palo Alto Pasadena Rio Vista San Dimas San Joaquin San Jose Santa Cruz Santa Monica Sierra Madre Union City Vacaville Vernon

Alameda County Amador County ISWMButte CountyCentral Contra Costa County

SWMDel Norte SWMAHumboldt SWMALos Angeles County IWM

Task Force

CPSC Participants ndash 23 Counties (92208)

AlpineAmadorButteCalaverasColusaDel Norte CountyEl Dorado

GlennImperialInyoLassenMaderaMariposaModocMono

Rural Countiesrsquo Environmental Services Joint Powers Authority (ESJPA)

Marin County JPA Mariposa CountyMendocino County SWMANapa County Sacramento County San Bernardino County San Francisco CountySan Joaquin County

San Mateo CountySanta Barbara CountySanta Clara County Santa Cruz County Solano County Sonoma County WMATehama County Yolo County

NevadaPlumasSierraSiskiyouTehamaTrinityTuolumne

CPSC Participants ndash 15 Associations (92208)

bull Association of Bay Area Governments Bay Area Hazardous Waste Management Facility Allocation Committee bull Association of Bay Area Governments (ABAG) bull Bay Area Clean Water Agencies bull Bay Area Stormwater Management Agencies Association bull California Council of Directors of Environmental Health (CCDEH) bull California Stormwater Quality Association bull East Bay Municipal Utility District bull Los Angeles County Sanitation District bull Los Angeles County Solid Waste Task Force bull Mojave Desert and Mountain Recycling Authority bull Rural Countiesrsquo Environmental Services Joint Powers Authority (ESJPA) (Counties of Alpine Amador Butte Calaveras Colusa Del Norte El Dorado Glenn Imperial Inyo Lassen Madera Mariposa Modoc Mono Nevada Plumas Sierra Siskiyou Tehama Trinity Tuolumne) bull Sacramento Business Environmental Resource Center bull Sacramento County Regional Sanitation Districtbull Santa Clara Valley CLEAN South Bay

bull West Valley Clean Water (Campbell Los Gatos Monte Serena Saratoga)

CPSC Partners (92208)

bull Green Party Los Angles Countybull Long Beach Coalition for Safe Environmentbull Sierra Club ndash Solano Groupbull Gills Onions LLCbull Teleosis Institute ndash Green Pharmacy Programbull Keep California Beautifulbull Waste Management of Orange Countybull California Resource Connectionsbull Marin Sanitary Servicebull Allied Waste ndash Daily Citybull Reverse Logistics Associationbull CRampR Waste and Recycling Servicesbull Pacific Recycling Solutionsbull CA Sierra Club Natural Resources Committee amp Zero Waste Committeebull Total Recycling Associatesbull Many individual citizens have signed the pledge

California Product Stewardship Council Participating Cities amp Counties (9108)

Contact CPSCHeidi SanbornExecutive Director HeidiCalPSCorg916-485-7753

wwwCalPSCorg

Funded by a Grant from the California Integrated Waste Management Board Zero Waste mdash You Make It Happen

copy 2008 by the California Integrated Waste Management Board (CIWMB) All rights reserved

This publication or parts thereof may not be reproduced without permission from CIWMB

Developed with support from the Product Policy Institute

  • Slide 1
  • Mission
  • Bill Worrell
  • The High Cost of Compliance
  • Per Capita Waste Production
  • Changing Waste
  • Products are disposable
  • U-Waste Designed for Disposal
  • Sharps Prohibited Waste
  • Slide 10
  • Multi Media
  • Slide 12
  • Growth in CA Total Waste
  • Slide 14
  • Slide 15
  • Slide 16
  • Slide 17
  • Slide 18
  • Applying the Producer Responsibility Framework
  • Slide 20
  • Authority Needed to Implement EPR Framework
  • EPR Framework Approach Roles and Responsibilities
  • Roles and Responsibilities (continued)
  • Slide 24
  • Slide 25
  • Slide 26
  • Slide 27
  • Slide 28
  • Framework EPR
  • Essential Elements
  • CPSC Participants ndash 28 Cities (92208)
  • CPSC Participants ndash 23 Counties (92208)
  • CPSC Participants ndash 15 Associations (92208)
  • CPSC Partners (92208)
  • California Product Stewardship Council Participating Cities amp Counties (9108)
  • Contact CPSC
Page 22: A Better Way: Product Stewardship. To shift California’s product waste management system from one focused on government funded and ratepayer financed.

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

1 Producers

Key role design product stewardship

program and achieve defined outcomendash Flexibility to design program in the

most efficient mannerndash Prepare and implement planndash Demonstrate performance

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

2 Retailers

ndash Provide information from producers to customers

ndash Only sell ldquoregisteredrdquo productsndash Voluntary involvement in EOL collection

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

3 Consumers

ndash Participate in collection systemsndash Pay for EOL management

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

4 State Government

ndash Establish statutory requirements and regulations to achieve goals using guiding principles

ndash Approve plans developed by producersndash Make plans and performance

information publicndash Deliver oversight and enforcementndash Level playing field

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

5 Local Government

ndash Explore system effectiveness withndash stakeholdersndash May choose to participatendash Assist in information disseminationndash Obtain compensation from producers

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

6 Haulers 7 Collectors and Recyclers

ndash Provide safe collection and handling of products and materials with compensation

ndash Provide information to help producers enhance recovery

ndash Seek system improvements with other stakeholders

Framework EPR

Essential Elements

See ldquoExtended Producer Responsibility Framework ndash

Checklistrdquo

Amador City Chula Vista Cupertino Diamond Bar Dixon El Cerrito Elk Grove Fresno Indian Wells IsletonLa Verne Lemon Grove Los Altos Hills Morgan Hill 1048707Vernon

CPSC Participants ndash 28 Cities (92208)

MonroviaOakland Palo Alto Pasadena Rio Vista San Dimas San Joaquin San Jose Santa Cruz Santa Monica Sierra Madre Union City Vacaville Vernon

Alameda County Amador County ISWMButte CountyCentral Contra Costa County

SWMDel Norte SWMAHumboldt SWMALos Angeles County IWM

Task Force

CPSC Participants ndash 23 Counties (92208)

AlpineAmadorButteCalaverasColusaDel Norte CountyEl Dorado

GlennImperialInyoLassenMaderaMariposaModocMono

Rural Countiesrsquo Environmental Services Joint Powers Authority (ESJPA)

Marin County JPA Mariposa CountyMendocino County SWMANapa County Sacramento County San Bernardino County San Francisco CountySan Joaquin County

San Mateo CountySanta Barbara CountySanta Clara County Santa Cruz County Solano County Sonoma County WMATehama County Yolo County

NevadaPlumasSierraSiskiyouTehamaTrinityTuolumne

CPSC Participants ndash 15 Associations (92208)

bull Association of Bay Area Governments Bay Area Hazardous Waste Management Facility Allocation Committee bull Association of Bay Area Governments (ABAG) bull Bay Area Clean Water Agencies bull Bay Area Stormwater Management Agencies Association bull California Council of Directors of Environmental Health (CCDEH) bull California Stormwater Quality Association bull East Bay Municipal Utility District bull Los Angeles County Sanitation District bull Los Angeles County Solid Waste Task Force bull Mojave Desert and Mountain Recycling Authority bull Rural Countiesrsquo Environmental Services Joint Powers Authority (ESJPA) (Counties of Alpine Amador Butte Calaveras Colusa Del Norte El Dorado Glenn Imperial Inyo Lassen Madera Mariposa Modoc Mono Nevada Plumas Sierra Siskiyou Tehama Trinity Tuolumne) bull Sacramento Business Environmental Resource Center bull Sacramento County Regional Sanitation Districtbull Santa Clara Valley CLEAN South Bay

bull West Valley Clean Water (Campbell Los Gatos Monte Serena Saratoga)

CPSC Partners (92208)

bull Green Party Los Angles Countybull Long Beach Coalition for Safe Environmentbull Sierra Club ndash Solano Groupbull Gills Onions LLCbull Teleosis Institute ndash Green Pharmacy Programbull Keep California Beautifulbull Waste Management of Orange Countybull California Resource Connectionsbull Marin Sanitary Servicebull Allied Waste ndash Daily Citybull Reverse Logistics Associationbull CRampR Waste and Recycling Servicesbull Pacific Recycling Solutionsbull CA Sierra Club Natural Resources Committee amp Zero Waste Committeebull Total Recycling Associatesbull Many individual citizens have signed the pledge

California Product Stewardship Council Participating Cities amp Counties (9108)

Contact CPSCHeidi SanbornExecutive Director HeidiCalPSCorg916-485-7753

wwwCalPSCorg

Funded by a Grant from the California Integrated Waste Management Board Zero Waste mdash You Make It Happen

copy 2008 by the California Integrated Waste Management Board (CIWMB) All rights reserved

This publication or parts thereof may not be reproduced without permission from CIWMB

Developed with support from the Product Policy Institute

  • Slide 1
  • Mission
  • Bill Worrell
  • The High Cost of Compliance
  • Per Capita Waste Production
  • Changing Waste
  • Products are disposable
  • U-Waste Designed for Disposal
  • Sharps Prohibited Waste
  • Slide 10
  • Multi Media
  • Slide 12
  • Growth in CA Total Waste
  • Slide 14
  • Slide 15
  • Slide 16
  • Slide 17
  • Slide 18
  • Applying the Producer Responsibility Framework
  • Slide 20
  • Authority Needed to Implement EPR Framework
  • EPR Framework Approach Roles and Responsibilities
  • Roles and Responsibilities (continued)
  • Slide 24
  • Slide 25
  • Slide 26
  • Slide 27
  • Slide 28
  • Framework EPR
  • Essential Elements
  • CPSC Participants ndash 28 Cities (92208)
  • CPSC Participants ndash 23 Counties (92208)
  • CPSC Participants ndash 15 Associations (92208)
  • CPSC Partners (92208)
  • California Product Stewardship Council Participating Cities amp Counties (9108)
  • Contact CPSC
Page 23: A Better Way: Product Stewardship. To shift California’s product waste management system from one focused on government funded and ratepayer financed.

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

2 Retailers

ndash Provide information from producers to customers

ndash Only sell ldquoregisteredrdquo productsndash Voluntary involvement in EOL collection

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

3 Consumers

ndash Participate in collection systemsndash Pay for EOL management

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

4 State Government

ndash Establish statutory requirements and regulations to achieve goals using guiding principles

ndash Approve plans developed by producersndash Make plans and performance

information publicndash Deliver oversight and enforcementndash Level playing field

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

5 Local Government

ndash Explore system effectiveness withndash stakeholdersndash May choose to participatendash Assist in information disseminationndash Obtain compensation from producers

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

6 Haulers 7 Collectors and Recyclers

ndash Provide safe collection and handling of products and materials with compensation

ndash Provide information to help producers enhance recovery

ndash Seek system improvements with other stakeholders

Framework EPR

Essential Elements

See ldquoExtended Producer Responsibility Framework ndash

Checklistrdquo

Amador City Chula Vista Cupertino Diamond Bar Dixon El Cerrito Elk Grove Fresno Indian Wells IsletonLa Verne Lemon Grove Los Altos Hills Morgan Hill 1048707Vernon

CPSC Participants ndash 28 Cities (92208)

MonroviaOakland Palo Alto Pasadena Rio Vista San Dimas San Joaquin San Jose Santa Cruz Santa Monica Sierra Madre Union City Vacaville Vernon

Alameda County Amador County ISWMButte CountyCentral Contra Costa County

SWMDel Norte SWMAHumboldt SWMALos Angeles County IWM

Task Force

CPSC Participants ndash 23 Counties (92208)

AlpineAmadorButteCalaverasColusaDel Norte CountyEl Dorado

GlennImperialInyoLassenMaderaMariposaModocMono

Rural Countiesrsquo Environmental Services Joint Powers Authority (ESJPA)

Marin County JPA Mariposa CountyMendocino County SWMANapa County Sacramento County San Bernardino County San Francisco CountySan Joaquin County

San Mateo CountySanta Barbara CountySanta Clara County Santa Cruz County Solano County Sonoma County WMATehama County Yolo County

NevadaPlumasSierraSiskiyouTehamaTrinityTuolumne

CPSC Participants ndash 15 Associations (92208)

bull Association of Bay Area Governments Bay Area Hazardous Waste Management Facility Allocation Committee bull Association of Bay Area Governments (ABAG) bull Bay Area Clean Water Agencies bull Bay Area Stormwater Management Agencies Association bull California Council of Directors of Environmental Health (CCDEH) bull California Stormwater Quality Association bull East Bay Municipal Utility District bull Los Angeles County Sanitation District bull Los Angeles County Solid Waste Task Force bull Mojave Desert and Mountain Recycling Authority bull Rural Countiesrsquo Environmental Services Joint Powers Authority (ESJPA) (Counties of Alpine Amador Butte Calaveras Colusa Del Norte El Dorado Glenn Imperial Inyo Lassen Madera Mariposa Modoc Mono Nevada Plumas Sierra Siskiyou Tehama Trinity Tuolumne) bull Sacramento Business Environmental Resource Center bull Sacramento County Regional Sanitation Districtbull Santa Clara Valley CLEAN South Bay

bull West Valley Clean Water (Campbell Los Gatos Monte Serena Saratoga)

CPSC Partners (92208)

bull Green Party Los Angles Countybull Long Beach Coalition for Safe Environmentbull Sierra Club ndash Solano Groupbull Gills Onions LLCbull Teleosis Institute ndash Green Pharmacy Programbull Keep California Beautifulbull Waste Management of Orange Countybull California Resource Connectionsbull Marin Sanitary Servicebull Allied Waste ndash Daily Citybull Reverse Logistics Associationbull CRampR Waste and Recycling Servicesbull Pacific Recycling Solutionsbull CA Sierra Club Natural Resources Committee amp Zero Waste Committeebull Total Recycling Associatesbull Many individual citizens have signed the pledge

California Product Stewardship Council Participating Cities amp Counties (9108)

Contact CPSCHeidi SanbornExecutive Director HeidiCalPSCorg916-485-7753

wwwCalPSCorg

Funded by a Grant from the California Integrated Waste Management Board Zero Waste mdash You Make It Happen

copy 2008 by the California Integrated Waste Management Board (CIWMB) All rights reserved

This publication or parts thereof may not be reproduced without permission from CIWMB

Developed with support from the Product Policy Institute

  • Slide 1
  • Mission
  • Bill Worrell
  • The High Cost of Compliance
  • Per Capita Waste Production
  • Changing Waste
  • Products are disposable
  • U-Waste Designed for Disposal
  • Sharps Prohibited Waste
  • Slide 10
  • Multi Media
  • Slide 12
  • Growth in CA Total Waste
  • Slide 14
  • Slide 15
  • Slide 16
  • Slide 17
  • Slide 18
  • Applying the Producer Responsibility Framework
  • Slide 20
  • Authority Needed to Implement EPR Framework
  • EPR Framework Approach Roles and Responsibilities
  • Roles and Responsibilities (continued)
  • Slide 24
  • Slide 25
  • Slide 26
  • Slide 27
  • Slide 28
  • Framework EPR
  • Essential Elements
  • CPSC Participants ndash 28 Cities (92208)
  • CPSC Participants ndash 23 Counties (92208)
  • CPSC Participants ndash 15 Associations (92208)
  • CPSC Partners (92208)
  • California Product Stewardship Council Participating Cities amp Counties (9108)
  • Contact CPSC
Page 24: A Better Way: Product Stewardship. To shift California’s product waste management system from one focused on government funded and ratepayer financed.

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

3 Consumers

ndash Participate in collection systemsndash Pay for EOL management

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

4 State Government

ndash Establish statutory requirements and regulations to achieve goals using guiding principles

ndash Approve plans developed by producersndash Make plans and performance

information publicndash Deliver oversight and enforcementndash Level playing field

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

5 Local Government

ndash Explore system effectiveness withndash stakeholdersndash May choose to participatendash Assist in information disseminationndash Obtain compensation from producers

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

6 Haulers 7 Collectors and Recyclers

ndash Provide safe collection and handling of products and materials with compensation

ndash Provide information to help producers enhance recovery

ndash Seek system improvements with other stakeholders

Framework EPR

Essential Elements

See ldquoExtended Producer Responsibility Framework ndash

Checklistrdquo

Amador City Chula Vista Cupertino Diamond Bar Dixon El Cerrito Elk Grove Fresno Indian Wells IsletonLa Verne Lemon Grove Los Altos Hills Morgan Hill 1048707Vernon

CPSC Participants ndash 28 Cities (92208)

MonroviaOakland Palo Alto Pasadena Rio Vista San Dimas San Joaquin San Jose Santa Cruz Santa Monica Sierra Madre Union City Vacaville Vernon

Alameda County Amador County ISWMButte CountyCentral Contra Costa County

SWMDel Norte SWMAHumboldt SWMALos Angeles County IWM

Task Force

CPSC Participants ndash 23 Counties (92208)

AlpineAmadorButteCalaverasColusaDel Norte CountyEl Dorado

GlennImperialInyoLassenMaderaMariposaModocMono

Rural Countiesrsquo Environmental Services Joint Powers Authority (ESJPA)

Marin County JPA Mariposa CountyMendocino County SWMANapa County Sacramento County San Bernardino County San Francisco CountySan Joaquin County

San Mateo CountySanta Barbara CountySanta Clara County Santa Cruz County Solano County Sonoma County WMATehama County Yolo County

NevadaPlumasSierraSiskiyouTehamaTrinityTuolumne

CPSC Participants ndash 15 Associations (92208)

bull Association of Bay Area Governments Bay Area Hazardous Waste Management Facility Allocation Committee bull Association of Bay Area Governments (ABAG) bull Bay Area Clean Water Agencies bull Bay Area Stormwater Management Agencies Association bull California Council of Directors of Environmental Health (CCDEH) bull California Stormwater Quality Association bull East Bay Municipal Utility District bull Los Angeles County Sanitation District bull Los Angeles County Solid Waste Task Force bull Mojave Desert and Mountain Recycling Authority bull Rural Countiesrsquo Environmental Services Joint Powers Authority (ESJPA) (Counties of Alpine Amador Butte Calaveras Colusa Del Norte El Dorado Glenn Imperial Inyo Lassen Madera Mariposa Modoc Mono Nevada Plumas Sierra Siskiyou Tehama Trinity Tuolumne) bull Sacramento Business Environmental Resource Center bull Sacramento County Regional Sanitation Districtbull Santa Clara Valley CLEAN South Bay

bull West Valley Clean Water (Campbell Los Gatos Monte Serena Saratoga)

CPSC Partners (92208)

bull Green Party Los Angles Countybull Long Beach Coalition for Safe Environmentbull Sierra Club ndash Solano Groupbull Gills Onions LLCbull Teleosis Institute ndash Green Pharmacy Programbull Keep California Beautifulbull Waste Management of Orange Countybull California Resource Connectionsbull Marin Sanitary Servicebull Allied Waste ndash Daily Citybull Reverse Logistics Associationbull CRampR Waste and Recycling Servicesbull Pacific Recycling Solutionsbull CA Sierra Club Natural Resources Committee amp Zero Waste Committeebull Total Recycling Associatesbull Many individual citizens have signed the pledge

California Product Stewardship Council Participating Cities amp Counties (9108)

Contact CPSCHeidi SanbornExecutive Director HeidiCalPSCorg916-485-7753

wwwCalPSCorg

Funded by a Grant from the California Integrated Waste Management Board Zero Waste mdash You Make It Happen

copy 2008 by the California Integrated Waste Management Board (CIWMB) All rights reserved

This publication or parts thereof may not be reproduced without permission from CIWMB

Developed with support from the Product Policy Institute

  • Slide 1
  • Mission
  • Bill Worrell
  • The High Cost of Compliance
  • Per Capita Waste Production
  • Changing Waste
  • Products are disposable
  • U-Waste Designed for Disposal
  • Sharps Prohibited Waste
  • Slide 10
  • Multi Media
  • Slide 12
  • Growth in CA Total Waste
  • Slide 14
  • Slide 15
  • Slide 16
  • Slide 17
  • Slide 18
  • Applying the Producer Responsibility Framework
  • Slide 20
  • Authority Needed to Implement EPR Framework
  • EPR Framework Approach Roles and Responsibilities
  • Roles and Responsibilities (continued)
  • Slide 24
  • Slide 25
  • Slide 26
  • Slide 27
  • Slide 28
  • Framework EPR
  • Essential Elements
  • CPSC Participants ndash 28 Cities (92208)
  • CPSC Participants ndash 23 Counties (92208)
  • CPSC Participants ndash 15 Associations (92208)
  • CPSC Partners (92208)
  • California Product Stewardship Council Participating Cities amp Counties (9108)
  • Contact CPSC
Page 25: A Better Way: Product Stewardship. To shift California’s product waste management system from one focused on government funded and ratepayer financed.

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

4 State Government

ndash Establish statutory requirements and regulations to achieve goals using guiding principles

ndash Approve plans developed by producersndash Make plans and performance

information publicndash Deliver oversight and enforcementndash Level playing field

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

5 Local Government

ndash Explore system effectiveness withndash stakeholdersndash May choose to participatendash Assist in information disseminationndash Obtain compensation from producers

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

6 Haulers 7 Collectors and Recyclers

ndash Provide safe collection and handling of products and materials with compensation

ndash Provide information to help producers enhance recovery

ndash Seek system improvements with other stakeholders

Framework EPR

Essential Elements

See ldquoExtended Producer Responsibility Framework ndash

Checklistrdquo

Amador City Chula Vista Cupertino Diamond Bar Dixon El Cerrito Elk Grove Fresno Indian Wells IsletonLa Verne Lemon Grove Los Altos Hills Morgan Hill 1048707Vernon

CPSC Participants ndash 28 Cities (92208)

MonroviaOakland Palo Alto Pasadena Rio Vista San Dimas San Joaquin San Jose Santa Cruz Santa Monica Sierra Madre Union City Vacaville Vernon

Alameda County Amador County ISWMButte CountyCentral Contra Costa County

SWMDel Norte SWMAHumboldt SWMALos Angeles County IWM

Task Force

CPSC Participants ndash 23 Counties (92208)

AlpineAmadorButteCalaverasColusaDel Norte CountyEl Dorado

GlennImperialInyoLassenMaderaMariposaModocMono

Rural Countiesrsquo Environmental Services Joint Powers Authority (ESJPA)

Marin County JPA Mariposa CountyMendocino County SWMANapa County Sacramento County San Bernardino County San Francisco CountySan Joaquin County

San Mateo CountySanta Barbara CountySanta Clara County Santa Cruz County Solano County Sonoma County WMATehama County Yolo County

NevadaPlumasSierraSiskiyouTehamaTrinityTuolumne

CPSC Participants ndash 15 Associations (92208)

bull Association of Bay Area Governments Bay Area Hazardous Waste Management Facility Allocation Committee bull Association of Bay Area Governments (ABAG) bull Bay Area Clean Water Agencies bull Bay Area Stormwater Management Agencies Association bull California Council of Directors of Environmental Health (CCDEH) bull California Stormwater Quality Association bull East Bay Municipal Utility District bull Los Angeles County Sanitation District bull Los Angeles County Solid Waste Task Force bull Mojave Desert and Mountain Recycling Authority bull Rural Countiesrsquo Environmental Services Joint Powers Authority (ESJPA) (Counties of Alpine Amador Butte Calaveras Colusa Del Norte El Dorado Glenn Imperial Inyo Lassen Madera Mariposa Modoc Mono Nevada Plumas Sierra Siskiyou Tehama Trinity Tuolumne) bull Sacramento Business Environmental Resource Center bull Sacramento County Regional Sanitation Districtbull Santa Clara Valley CLEAN South Bay

bull West Valley Clean Water (Campbell Los Gatos Monte Serena Saratoga)

CPSC Partners (92208)

bull Green Party Los Angles Countybull Long Beach Coalition for Safe Environmentbull Sierra Club ndash Solano Groupbull Gills Onions LLCbull Teleosis Institute ndash Green Pharmacy Programbull Keep California Beautifulbull Waste Management of Orange Countybull California Resource Connectionsbull Marin Sanitary Servicebull Allied Waste ndash Daily Citybull Reverse Logistics Associationbull CRampR Waste and Recycling Servicesbull Pacific Recycling Solutionsbull CA Sierra Club Natural Resources Committee amp Zero Waste Committeebull Total Recycling Associatesbull Many individual citizens have signed the pledge

California Product Stewardship Council Participating Cities amp Counties (9108)

Contact CPSCHeidi SanbornExecutive Director HeidiCalPSCorg916-485-7753

wwwCalPSCorg

Funded by a Grant from the California Integrated Waste Management Board Zero Waste mdash You Make It Happen

copy 2008 by the California Integrated Waste Management Board (CIWMB) All rights reserved

This publication or parts thereof may not be reproduced without permission from CIWMB

Developed with support from the Product Policy Institute

  • Slide 1
  • Mission
  • Bill Worrell
  • The High Cost of Compliance
  • Per Capita Waste Production
  • Changing Waste
  • Products are disposable
  • U-Waste Designed for Disposal
  • Sharps Prohibited Waste
  • Slide 10
  • Multi Media
  • Slide 12
  • Growth in CA Total Waste
  • Slide 14
  • Slide 15
  • Slide 16
  • Slide 17
  • Slide 18
  • Applying the Producer Responsibility Framework
  • Slide 20
  • Authority Needed to Implement EPR Framework
  • EPR Framework Approach Roles and Responsibilities
  • Roles and Responsibilities (continued)
  • Slide 24
  • Slide 25
  • Slide 26
  • Slide 27
  • Slide 28
  • Framework EPR
  • Essential Elements
  • CPSC Participants ndash 28 Cities (92208)
  • CPSC Participants ndash 23 Counties (92208)
  • CPSC Participants ndash 15 Associations (92208)
  • CPSC Partners (92208)
  • California Product Stewardship Council Participating Cities amp Counties (9108)
  • Contact CPSC
Page 26: A Better Way: Product Stewardship. To shift California’s product waste management system from one focused on government funded and ratepayer financed.

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

5 Local Government

ndash Explore system effectiveness withndash stakeholdersndash May choose to participatendash Assist in information disseminationndash Obtain compensation from producers

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

6 Haulers 7 Collectors and Recyclers

ndash Provide safe collection and handling of products and materials with compensation

ndash Provide information to help producers enhance recovery

ndash Seek system improvements with other stakeholders

Framework EPR

Essential Elements

See ldquoExtended Producer Responsibility Framework ndash

Checklistrdquo

Amador City Chula Vista Cupertino Diamond Bar Dixon El Cerrito Elk Grove Fresno Indian Wells IsletonLa Verne Lemon Grove Los Altos Hills Morgan Hill 1048707Vernon

CPSC Participants ndash 28 Cities (92208)

MonroviaOakland Palo Alto Pasadena Rio Vista San Dimas San Joaquin San Jose Santa Cruz Santa Monica Sierra Madre Union City Vacaville Vernon

Alameda County Amador County ISWMButte CountyCentral Contra Costa County

SWMDel Norte SWMAHumboldt SWMALos Angeles County IWM

Task Force

CPSC Participants ndash 23 Counties (92208)

AlpineAmadorButteCalaverasColusaDel Norte CountyEl Dorado

GlennImperialInyoLassenMaderaMariposaModocMono

Rural Countiesrsquo Environmental Services Joint Powers Authority (ESJPA)

Marin County JPA Mariposa CountyMendocino County SWMANapa County Sacramento County San Bernardino County San Francisco CountySan Joaquin County

San Mateo CountySanta Barbara CountySanta Clara County Santa Cruz County Solano County Sonoma County WMATehama County Yolo County

NevadaPlumasSierraSiskiyouTehamaTrinityTuolumne

CPSC Participants ndash 15 Associations (92208)

bull Association of Bay Area Governments Bay Area Hazardous Waste Management Facility Allocation Committee bull Association of Bay Area Governments (ABAG) bull Bay Area Clean Water Agencies bull Bay Area Stormwater Management Agencies Association bull California Council of Directors of Environmental Health (CCDEH) bull California Stormwater Quality Association bull East Bay Municipal Utility District bull Los Angeles County Sanitation District bull Los Angeles County Solid Waste Task Force bull Mojave Desert and Mountain Recycling Authority bull Rural Countiesrsquo Environmental Services Joint Powers Authority (ESJPA) (Counties of Alpine Amador Butte Calaveras Colusa Del Norte El Dorado Glenn Imperial Inyo Lassen Madera Mariposa Modoc Mono Nevada Plumas Sierra Siskiyou Tehama Trinity Tuolumne) bull Sacramento Business Environmental Resource Center bull Sacramento County Regional Sanitation Districtbull Santa Clara Valley CLEAN South Bay

bull West Valley Clean Water (Campbell Los Gatos Monte Serena Saratoga)

CPSC Partners (92208)

bull Green Party Los Angles Countybull Long Beach Coalition for Safe Environmentbull Sierra Club ndash Solano Groupbull Gills Onions LLCbull Teleosis Institute ndash Green Pharmacy Programbull Keep California Beautifulbull Waste Management of Orange Countybull California Resource Connectionsbull Marin Sanitary Servicebull Allied Waste ndash Daily Citybull Reverse Logistics Associationbull CRampR Waste and Recycling Servicesbull Pacific Recycling Solutionsbull CA Sierra Club Natural Resources Committee amp Zero Waste Committeebull Total Recycling Associatesbull Many individual citizens have signed the pledge

California Product Stewardship Council Participating Cities amp Counties (9108)

Contact CPSCHeidi SanbornExecutive Director HeidiCalPSCorg916-485-7753

wwwCalPSCorg

Funded by a Grant from the California Integrated Waste Management Board Zero Waste mdash You Make It Happen

copy 2008 by the California Integrated Waste Management Board (CIWMB) All rights reserved

This publication or parts thereof may not be reproduced without permission from CIWMB

Developed with support from the Product Policy Institute

  • Slide 1
  • Mission
  • Bill Worrell
  • The High Cost of Compliance
  • Per Capita Waste Production
  • Changing Waste
  • Products are disposable
  • U-Waste Designed for Disposal
  • Sharps Prohibited Waste
  • Slide 10
  • Multi Media
  • Slide 12
  • Growth in CA Total Waste
  • Slide 14
  • Slide 15
  • Slide 16
  • Slide 17
  • Slide 18
  • Applying the Producer Responsibility Framework
  • Slide 20
  • Authority Needed to Implement EPR Framework
  • EPR Framework Approach Roles and Responsibilities
  • Roles and Responsibilities (continued)
  • Slide 24
  • Slide 25
  • Slide 26
  • Slide 27
  • Slide 28
  • Framework EPR
  • Essential Elements
  • CPSC Participants ndash 28 Cities (92208)
  • CPSC Participants ndash 23 Counties (92208)
  • CPSC Participants ndash 15 Associations (92208)
  • CPSC Partners (92208)
  • California Product Stewardship Council Participating Cities amp Counties (9108)
  • Contact CPSC
Page 27: A Better Way: Product Stewardship. To shift California’s product waste management system from one focused on government funded and ratepayer financed.

Roles and Responsibilities(continued)

6 Haulers 7 Collectors and Recyclers

ndash Provide safe collection and handling of products and materials with compensation

ndash Provide information to help producers enhance recovery

ndash Seek system improvements with other stakeholders

Framework EPR

Essential Elements

See ldquoExtended Producer Responsibility Framework ndash

Checklistrdquo

Amador City Chula Vista Cupertino Diamond Bar Dixon El Cerrito Elk Grove Fresno Indian Wells IsletonLa Verne Lemon Grove Los Altos Hills Morgan Hill 1048707Vernon

CPSC Participants ndash 28 Cities (92208)

MonroviaOakland Palo Alto Pasadena Rio Vista San Dimas San Joaquin San Jose Santa Cruz Santa Monica Sierra Madre Union City Vacaville Vernon

Alameda County Amador County ISWMButte CountyCentral Contra Costa County

SWMDel Norte SWMAHumboldt SWMALos Angeles County IWM

Task Force

CPSC Participants ndash 23 Counties (92208)

AlpineAmadorButteCalaverasColusaDel Norte CountyEl Dorado

GlennImperialInyoLassenMaderaMariposaModocMono

Rural Countiesrsquo Environmental Services Joint Powers Authority (ESJPA)

Marin County JPA Mariposa CountyMendocino County SWMANapa County Sacramento County San Bernardino County San Francisco CountySan Joaquin County

San Mateo CountySanta Barbara CountySanta Clara County Santa Cruz County Solano County Sonoma County WMATehama County Yolo County

NevadaPlumasSierraSiskiyouTehamaTrinityTuolumne

CPSC Participants ndash 15 Associations (92208)

bull Association of Bay Area Governments Bay Area Hazardous Waste Management Facility Allocation Committee bull Association of Bay Area Governments (ABAG) bull Bay Area Clean Water Agencies bull Bay Area Stormwater Management Agencies Association bull California Council of Directors of Environmental Health (CCDEH) bull California Stormwater Quality Association bull East Bay Municipal Utility District bull Los Angeles County Sanitation District bull Los Angeles County Solid Waste Task Force bull Mojave Desert and Mountain Recycling Authority bull Rural Countiesrsquo Environmental Services Joint Powers Authority (ESJPA) (Counties of Alpine Amador Butte Calaveras Colusa Del Norte El Dorado Glenn Imperial Inyo Lassen Madera Mariposa Modoc Mono Nevada Plumas Sierra Siskiyou Tehama Trinity Tuolumne) bull Sacramento Business Environmental Resource Center bull Sacramento County Regional Sanitation Districtbull Santa Clara Valley CLEAN South Bay

bull West Valley Clean Water (Campbell Los Gatos Monte Serena Saratoga)

CPSC Partners (92208)

bull Green Party Los Angles Countybull Long Beach Coalition for Safe Environmentbull Sierra Club ndash Solano Groupbull Gills Onions LLCbull Teleosis Institute ndash Green Pharmacy Programbull Keep California Beautifulbull Waste Management of Orange Countybull California Resource Connectionsbull Marin Sanitary Servicebull Allied Waste ndash Daily Citybull Reverse Logistics Associationbull CRampR Waste and Recycling Servicesbull Pacific Recycling Solutionsbull CA Sierra Club Natural Resources Committee amp Zero Waste Committeebull Total Recycling Associatesbull Many individual citizens have signed the pledge

California Product Stewardship Council Participating Cities amp Counties (9108)

Contact CPSCHeidi SanbornExecutive Director HeidiCalPSCorg916-485-7753

wwwCalPSCorg

Funded by a Grant from the California Integrated Waste Management Board Zero Waste mdash You Make It Happen

copy 2008 by the California Integrated Waste Management Board (CIWMB) All rights reserved

This publication or parts thereof may not be reproduced without permission from CIWMB

Developed with support from the Product Policy Institute

  • Slide 1
  • Mission
  • Bill Worrell
  • The High Cost of Compliance
  • Per Capita Waste Production
  • Changing Waste
  • Products are disposable
  • U-Waste Designed for Disposal
  • Sharps Prohibited Waste
  • Slide 10
  • Multi Media
  • Slide 12
  • Growth in CA Total Waste
  • Slide 14
  • Slide 15
  • Slide 16
  • Slide 17
  • Slide 18
  • Applying the Producer Responsibility Framework
  • Slide 20
  • Authority Needed to Implement EPR Framework
  • EPR Framework Approach Roles and Responsibilities
  • Roles and Responsibilities (continued)
  • Slide 24
  • Slide 25
  • Slide 26
  • Slide 27
  • Slide 28
  • Framework EPR
  • Essential Elements
  • CPSC Participants ndash 28 Cities (92208)
  • CPSC Participants ndash 23 Counties (92208)
  • CPSC Participants ndash 15 Associations (92208)
  • CPSC Partners (92208)
  • California Product Stewardship Council Participating Cities amp Counties (9108)
  • Contact CPSC
Page 28: A Better Way: Product Stewardship. To shift California’s product waste management system from one focused on government funded and ratepayer financed.

Framework EPR

Essential Elements

See ldquoExtended Producer Responsibility Framework ndash

Checklistrdquo

Amador City Chula Vista Cupertino Diamond Bar Dixon El Cerrito Elk Grove Fresno Indian Wells IsletonLa Verne Lemon Grove Los Altos Hills Morgan Hill 1048707Vernon

CPSC Participants ndash 28 Cities (92208)

MonroviaOakland Palo Alto Pasadena Rio Vista San Dimas San Joaquin San Jose Santa Cruz Santa Monica Sierra Madre Union City Vacaville Vernon

Alameda County Amador County ISWMButte CountyCentral Contra Costa County

SWMDel Norte SWMAHumboldt SWMALos Angeles County IWM

Task Force

CPSC Participants ndash 23 Counties (92208)

AlpineAmadorButteCalaverasColusaDel Norte CountyEl Dorado

GlennImperialInyoLassenMaderaMariposaModocMono

Rural Countiesrsquo Environmental Services Joint Powers Authority (ESJPA)

Marin County JPA Mariposa CountyMendocino County SWMANapa County Sacramento County San Bernardino County San Francisco CountySan Joaquin County

San Mateo CountySanta Barbara CountySanta Clara County Santa Cruz County Solano County Sonoma County WMATehama County Yolo County

NevadaPlumasSierraSiskiyouTehamaTrinityTuolumne

CPSC Participants ndash 15 Associations (92208)

bull Association of Bay Area Governments Bay Area Hazardous Waste Management Facility Allocation Committee bull Association of Bay Area Governments (ABAG) bull Bay Area Clean Water Agencies bull Bay Area Stormwater Management Agencies Association bull California Council of Directors of Environmental Health (CCDEH) bull California Stormwater Quality Association bull East Bay Municipal Utility District bull Los Angeles County Sanitation District bull Los Angeles County Solid Waste Task Force bull Mojave Desert and Mountain Recycling Authority bull Rural Countiesrsquo Environmental Services Joint Powers Authority (ESJPA) (Counties of Alpine Amador Butte Calaveras Colusa Del Norte El Dorado Glenn Imperial Inyo Lassen Madera Mariposa Modoc Mono Nevada Plumas Sierra Siskiyou Tehama Trinity Tuolumne) bull Sacramento Business Environmental Resource Center bull Sacramento County Regional Sanitation Districtbull Santa Clara Valley CLEAN South Bay

bull West Valley Clean Water (Campbell Los Gatos Monte Serena Saratoga)

CPSC Partners (92208)

bull Green Party Los Angles Countybull Long Beach Coalition for Safe Environmentbull Sierra Club ndash Solano Groupbull Gills Onions LLCbull Teleosis Institute ndash Green Pharmacy Programbull Keep California Beautifulbull Waste Management of Orange Countybull California Resource Connectionsbull Marin Sanitary Servicebull Allied Waste ndash Daily Citybull Reverse Logistics Associationbull CRampR Waste and Recycling Servicesbull Pacific Recycling Solutionsbull CA Sierra Club Natural Resources Committee amp Zero Waste Committeebull Total Recycling Associatesbull Many individual citizens have signed the pledge

California Product Stewardship Council Participating Cities amp Counties (9108)

Contact CPSCHeidi SanbornExecutive Director HeidiCalPSCorg916-485-7753

wwwCalPSCorg

Funded by a Grant from the California Integrated Waste Management Board Zero Waste mdash You Make It Happen

copy 2008 by the California Integrated Waste Management Board (CIWMB) All rights reserved

This publication or parts thereof may not be reproduced without permission from CIWMB

Developed with support from the Product Policy Institute

  • Slide 1
  • Mission
  • Bill Worrell
  • The High Cost of Compliance
  • Per Capita Waste Production
  • Changing Waste
  • Products are disposable
  • U-Waste Designed for Disposal
  • Sharps Prohibited Waste
  • Slide 10
  • Multi Media
  • Slide 12
  • Growth in CA Total Waste
  • Slide 14
  • Slide 15
  • Slide 16
  • Slide 17
  • Slide 18
  • Applying the Producer Responsibility Framework
  • Slide 20
  • Authority Needed to Implement EPR Framework
  • EPR Framework Approach Roles and Responsibilities
  • Roles and Responsibilities (continued)
  • Slide 24
  • Slide 25
  • Slide 26
  • Slide 27
  • Slide 28
  • Framework EPR
  • Essential Elements
  • CPSC Participants ndash 28 Cities (92208)
  • CPSC Participants ndash 23 Counties (92208)
  • CPSC Participants ndash 15 Associations (92208)
  • CPSC Partners (92208)
  • California Product Stewardship Council Participating Cities amp Counties (9108)
  • Contact CPSC
Page 29: A Better Way: Product Stewardship. To shift California’s product waste management system from one focused on government funded and ratepayer financed.

Essential Elements

See ldquoExtended Producer Responsibility Framework ndash

Checklistrdquo

Amador City Chula Vista Cupertino Diamond Bar Dixon El Cerrito Elk Grove Fresno Indian Wells IsletonLa Verne Lemon Grove Los Altos Hills Morgan Hill 1048707Vernon

CPSC Participants ndash 28 Cities (92208)

MonroviaOakland Palo Alto Pasadena Rio Vista San Dimas San Joaquin San Jose Santa Cruz Santa Monica Sierra Madre Union City Vacaville Vernon

Alameda County Amador County ISWMButte CountyCentral Contra Costa County

SWMDel Norte SWMAHumboldt SWMALos Angeles County IWM

Task Force

CPSC Participants ndash 23 Counties (92208)

AlpineAmadorButteCalaverasColusaDel Norte CountyEl Dorado

GlennImperialInyoLassenMaderaMariposaModocMono

Rural Countiesrsquo Environmental Services Joint Powers Authority (ESJPA)

Marin County JPA Mariposa CountyMendocino County SWMANapa County Sacramento County San Bernardino County San Francisco CountySan Joaquin County

San Mateo CountySanta Barbara CountySanta Clara County Santa Cruz County Solano County Sonoma County WMATehama County Yolo County

NevadaPlumasSierraSiskiyouTehamaTrinityTuolumne

CPSC Participants ndash 15 Associations (92208)

bull Association of Bay Area Governments Bay Area Hazardous Waste Management Facility Allocation Committee bull Association of Bay Area Governments (ABAG) bull Bay Area Clean Water Agencies bull Bay Area Stormwater Management Agencies Association bull California Council of Directors of Environmental Health (CCDEH) bull California Stormwater Quality Association bull East Bay Municipal Utility District bull Los Angeles County Sanitation District bull Los Angeles County Solid Waste Task Force bull Mojave Desert and Mountain Recycling Authority bull Rural Countiesrsquo Environmental Services Joint Powers Authority (ESJPA) (Counties of Alpine Amador Butte Calaveras Colusa Del Norte El Dorado Glenn Imperial Inyo Lassen Madera Mariposa Modoc Mono Nevada Plumas Sierra Siskiyou Tehama Trinity Tuolumne) bull Sacramento Business Environmental Resource Center bull Sacramento County Regional Sanitation Districtbull Santa Clara Valley CLEAN South Bay

bull West Valley Clean Water (Campbell Los Gatos Monte Serena Saratoga)

CPSC Partners (92208)

bull Green Party Los Angles Countybull Long Beach Coalition for Safe Environmentbull Sierra Club ndash Solano Groupbull Gills Onions LLCbull Teleosis Institute ndash Green Pharmacy Programbull Keep California Beautifulbull Waste Management of Orange Countybull California Resource Connectionsbull Marin Sanitary Servicebull Allied Waste ndash Daily Citybull Reverse Logistics Associationbull CRampR Waste and Recycling Servicesbull Pacific Recycling Solutionsbull CA Sierra Club Natural Resources Committee amp Zero Waste Committeebull Total Recycling Associatesbull Many individual citizens have signed the pledge

California Product Stewardship Council Participating Cities amp Counties (9108)

Contact CPSCHeidi SanbornExecutive Director HeidiCalPSCorg916-485-7753

wwwCalPSCorg

Funded by a Grant from the California Integrated Waste Management Board Zero Waste mdash You Make It Happen

copy 2008 by the California Integrated Waste Management Board (CIWMB) All rights reserved

This publication or parts thereof may not be reproduced without permission from CIWMB

Developed with support from the Product Policy Institute

  • Slide 1
  • Mission
  • Bill Worrell
  • The High Cost of Compliance
  • Per Capita Waste Production
  • Changing Waste
  • Products are disposable
  • U-Waste Designed for Disposal
  • Sharps Prohibited Waste
  • Slide 10
  • Multi Media
  • Slide 12
  • Growth in CA Total Waste
  • Slide 14
  • Slide 15
  • Slide 16
  • Slide 17
  • Slide 18
  • Applying the Producer Responsibility Framework
  • Slide 20
  • Authority Needed to Implement EPR Framework
  • EPR Framework Approach Roles and Responsibilities
  • Roles and Responsibilities (continued)
  • Slide 24
  • Slide 25
  • Slide 26
  • Slide 27
  • Slide 28
  • Framework EPR
  • Essential Elements
  • CPSC Participants ndash 28 Cities (92208)
  • CPSC Participants ndash 23 Counties (92208)
  • CPSC Participants ndash 15 Associations (92208)
  • CPSC Partners (92208)
  • California Product Stewardship Council Participating Cities amp Counties (9108)
  • Contact CPSC
Page 30: A Better Way: Product Stewardship. To shift California’s product waste management system from one focused on government funded and ratepayer financed.

Amador City Chula Vista Cupertino Diamond Bar Dixon El Cerrito Elk Grove Fresno Indian Wells IsletonLa Verne Lemon Grove Los Altos Hills Morgan Hill 1048707Vernon

CPSC Participants ndash 28 Cities (92208)

MonroviaOakland Palo Alto Pasadena Rio Vista San Dimas San Joaquin San Jose Santa Cruz Santa Monica Sierra Madre Union City Vacaville Vernon

Alameda County Amador County ISWMButte CountyCentral Contra Costa County

SWMDel Norte SWMAHumboldt SWMALos Angeles County IWM

Task Force

CPSC Participants ndash 23 Counties (92208)

AlpineAmadorButteCalaverasColusaDel Norte CountyEl Dorado

GlennImperialInyoLassenMaderaMariposaModocMono

Rural Countiesrsquo Environmental Services Joint Powers Authority (ESJPA)

Marin County JPA Mariposa CountyMendocino County SWMANapa County Sacramento County San Bernardino County San Francisco CountySan Joaquin County

San Mateo CountySanta Barbara CountySanta Clara County Santa Cruz County Solano County Sonoma County WMATehama County Yolo County

NevadaPlumasSierraSiskiyouTehamaTrinityTuolumne

CPSC Participants ndash 15 Associations (92208)

bull Association of Bay Area Governments Bay Area Hazardous Waste Management Facility Allocation Committee bull Association of Bay Area Governments (ABAG) bull Bay Area Clean Water Agencies bull Bay Area Stormwater Management Agencies Association bull California Council of Directors of Environmental Health (CCDEH) bull California Stormwater Quality Association bull East Bay Municipal Utility District bull Los Angeles County Sanitation District bull Los Angeles County Solid Waste Task Force bull Mojave Desert and Mountain Recycling Authority bull Rural Countiesrsquo Environmental Services Joint Powers Authority (ESJPA) (Counties of Alpine Amador Butte Calaveras Colusa Del Norte El Dorado Glenn Imperial Inyo Lassen Madera Mariposa Modoc Mono Nevada Plumas Sierra Siskiyou Tehama Trinity Tuolumne) bull Sacramento Business Environmental Resource Center bull Sacramento County Regional Sanitation Districtbull Santa Clara Valley CLEAN South Bay

bull West Valley Clean Water (Campbell Los Gatos Monte Serena Saratoga)

CPSC Partners (92208)

bull Green Party Los Angles Countybull Long Beach Coalition for Safe Environmentbull Sierra Club ndash Solano Groupbull Gills Onions LLCbull Teleosis Institute ndash Green Pharmacy Programbull Keep California Beautifulbull Waste Management of Orange Countybull California Resource Connectionsbull Marin Sanitary Servicebull Allied Waste ndash Daily Citybull Reverse Logistics Associationbull CRampR Waste and Recycling Servicesbull Pacific Recycling Solutionsbull CA Sierra Club Natural Resources Committee amp Zero Waste Committeebull Total Recycling Associatesbull Many individual citizens have signed the pledge

California Product Stewardship Council Participating Cities amp Counties (9108)

Contact CPSCHeidi SanbornExecutive Director HeidiCalPSCorg916-485-7753

wwwCalPSCorg

Funded by a Grant from the California Integrated Waste Management Board Zero Waste mdash You Make It Happen

copy 2008 by the California Integrated Waste Management Board (CIWMB) All rights reserved

This publication or parts thereof may not be reproduced without permission from CIWMB

Developed with support from the Product Policy Institute

  • Slide 1
  • Mission
  • Bill Worrell
  • The High Cost of Compliance
  • Per Capita Waste Production
  • Changing Waste
  • Products are disposable
  • U-Waste Designed for Disposal
  • Sharps Prohibited Waste
  • Slide 10
  • Multi Media
  • Slide 12
  • Growth in CA Total Waste
  • Slide 14
  • Slide 15
  • Slide 16
  • Slide 17
  • Slide 18
  • Applying the Producer Responsibility Framework
  • Slide 20
  • Authority Needed to Implement EPR Framework
  • EPR Framework Approach Roles and Responsibilities
  • Roles and Responsibilities (continued)
  • Slide 24
  • Slide 25
  • Slide 26
  • Slide 27
  • Slide 28
  • Framework EPR
  • Essential Elements
  • CPSC Participants ndash 28 Cities (92208)
  • CPSC Participants ndash 23 Counties (92208)
  • CPSC Participants ndash 15 Associations (92208)
  • CPSC Partners (92208)
  • California Product Stewardship Council Participating Cities amp Counties (9108)
  • Contact CPSC
Page 31: A Better Way: Product Stewardship. To shift California’s product waste management system from one focused on government funded and ratepayer financed.

Alameda County Amador County ISWMButte CountyCentral Contra Costa County

SWMDel Norte SWMAHumboldt SWMALos Angeles County IWM

Task Force

CPSC Participants ndash 23 Counties (92208)

AlpineAmadorButteCalaverasColusaDel Norte CountyEl Dorado

GlennImperialInyoLassenMaderaMariposaModocMono

Rural Countiesrsquo Environmental Services Joint Powers Authority (ESJPA)

Marin County JPA Mariposa CountyMendocino County SWMANapa County Sacramento County San Bernardino County San Francisco CountySan Joaquin County

San Mateo CountySanta Barbara CountySanta Clara County Santa Cruz County Solano County Sonoma County WMATehama County Yolo County

NevadaPlumasSierraSiskiyouTehamaTrinityTuolumne

CPSC Participants ndash 15 Associations (92208)

bull Association of Bay Area Governments Bay Area Hazardous Waste Management Facility Allocation Committee bull Association of Bay Area Governments (ABAG) bull Bay Area Clean Water Agencies bull Bay Area Stormwater Management Agencies Association bull California Council of Directors of Environmental Health (CCDEH) bull California Stormwater Quality Association bull East Bay Municipal Utility District bull Los Angeles County Sanitation District bull Los Angeles County Solid Waste Task Force bull Mojave Desert and Mountain Recycling Authority bull Rural Countiesrsquo Environmental Services Joint Powers Authority (ESJPA) (Counties of Alpine Amador Butte Calaveras Colusa Del Norte El Dorado Glenn Imperial Inyo Lassen Madera Mariposa Modoc Mono Nevada Plumas Sierra Siskiyou Tehama Trinity Tuolumne) bull Sacramento Business Environmental Resource Center bull Sacramento County Regional Sanitation Districtbull Santa Clara Valley CLEAN South Bay

bull West Valley Clean Water (Campbell Los Gatos Monte Serena Saratoga)

CPSC Partners (92208)

bull Green Party Los Angles Countybull Long Beach Coalition for Safe Environmentbull Sierra Club ndash Solano Groupbull Gills Onions LLCbull Teleosis Institute ndash Green Pharmacy Programbull Keep California Beautifulbull Waste Management of Orange Countybull California Resource Connectionsbull Marin Sanitary Servicebull Allied Waste ndash Daily Citybull Reverse Logistics Associationbull CRampR Waste and Recycling Servicesbull Pacific Recycling Solutionsbull CA Sierra Club Natural Resources Committee amp Zero Waste Committeebull Total Recycling Associatesbull Many individual citizens have signed the pledge

California Product Stewardship Council Participating Cities amp Counties (9108)

Contact CPSCHeidi SanbornExecutive Director HeidiCalPSCorg916-485-7753

wwwCalPSCorg

Funded by a Grant from the California Integrated Waste Management Board Zero Waste mdash You Make It Happen

copy 2008 by the California Integrated Waste Management Board (CIWMB) All rights reserved

This publication or parts thereof may not be reproduced without permission from CIWMB

Developed with support from the Product Policy Institute

  • Slide 1
  • Mission
  • Bill Worrell
  • The High Cost of Compliance
  • Per Capita Waste Production
  • Changing Waste
  • Products are disposable
  • U-Waste Designed for Disposal
  • Sharps Prohibited Waste
  • Slide 10
  • Multi Media
  • Slide 12
  • Growth in CA Total Waste
  • Slide 14
  • Slide 15
  • Slide 16
  • Slide 17
  • Slide 18
  • Applying the Producer Responsibility Framework
  • Slide 20
  • Authority Needed to Implement EPR Framework
  • EPR Framework Approach Roles and Responsibilities
  • Roles and Responsibilities (continued)
  • Slide 24
  • Slide 25
  • Slide 26
  • Slide 27
  • Slide 28
  • Framework EPR
  • Essential Elements
  • CPSC Participants ndash 28 Cities (92208)
  • CPSC Participants ndash 23 Counties (92208)
  • CPSC Participants ndash 15 Associations (92208)
  • CPSC Partners (92208)
  • California Product Stewardship Council Participating Cities amp Counties (9108)
  • Contact CPSC
Page 32: A Better Way: Product Stewardship. To shift California’s product waste management system from one focused on government funded and ratepayer financed.

CPSC Participants ndash 15 Associations (92208)

bull Association of Bay Area Governments Bay Area Hazardous Waste Management Facility Allocation Committee bull Association of Bay Area Governments (ABAG) bull Bay Area Clean Water Agencies bull Bay Area Stormwater Management Agencies Association bull California Council of Directors of Environmental Health (CCDEH) bull California Stormwater Quality Association bull East Bay Municipal Utility District bull Los Angeles County Sanitation District bull Los Angeles County Solid Waste Task Force bull Mojave Desert and Mountain Recycling Authority bull Rural Countiesrsquo Environmental Services Joint Powers Authority (ESJPA) (Counties of Alpine Amador Butte Calaveras Colusa Del Norte El Dorado Glenn Imperial Inyo Lassen Madera Mariposa Modoc Mono Nevada Plumas Sierra Siskiyou Tehama Trinity Tuolumne) bull Sacramento Business Environmental Resource Center bull Sacramento County Regional Sanitation Districtbull Santa Clara Valley CLEAN South Bay

bull West Valley Clean Water (Campbell Los Gatos Monte Serena Saratoga)

CPSC Partners (92208)

bull Green Party Los Angles Countybull Long Beach Coalition for Safe Environmentbull Sierra Club ndash Solano Groupbull Gills Onions LLCbull Teleosis Institute ndash Green Pharmacy Programbull Keep California Beautifulbull Waste Management of Orange Countybull California Resource Connectionsbull Marin Sanitary Servicebull Allied Waste ndash Daily Citybull Reverse Logistics Associationbull CRampR Waste and Recycling Servicesbull Pacific Recycling Solutionsbull CA Sierra Club Natural Resources Committee amp Zero Waste Committeebull Total Recycling Associatesbull Many individual citizens have signed the pledge

California Product Stewardship Council Participating Cities amp Counties (9108)

Contact CPSCHeidi SanbornExecutive Director HeidiCalPSCorg916-485-7753

wwwCalPSCorg

Funded by a Grant from the California Integrated Waste Management Board Zero Waste mdash You Make It Happen

copy 2008 by the California Integrated Waste Management Board (CIWMB) All rights reserved

This publication or parts thereof may not be reproduced without permission from CIWMB

Developed with support from the Product Policy Institute

  • Slide 1
  • Mission
  • Bill Worrell
  • The High Cost of Compliance
  • Per Capita Waste Production
  • Changing Waste
  • Products are disposable
  • U-Waste Designed for Disposal
  • Sharps Prohibited Waste
  • Slide 10
  • Multi Media
  • Slide 12
  • Growth in CA Total Waste
  • Slide 14
  • Slide 15
  • Slide 16
  • Slide 17
  • Slide 18
  • Applying the Producer Responsibility Framework
  • Slide 20
  • Authority Needed to Implement EPR Framework
  • EPR Framework Approach Roles and Responsibilities
  • Roles and Responsibilities (continued)
  • Slide 24
  • Slide 25
  • Slide 26
  • Slide 27
  • Slide 28
  • Framework EPR
  • Essential Elements
  • CPSC Participants ndash 28 Cities (92208)
  • CPSC Participants ndash 23 Counties (92208)
  • CPSC Participants ndash 15 Associations (92208)
  • CPSC Partners (92208)
  • California Product Stewardship Council Participating Cities amp Counties (9108)
  • Contact CPSC
Page 33: A Better Way: Product Stewardship. To shift California’s product waste management system from one focused on government funded and ratepayer financed.

CPSC Partners (92208)

bull Green Party Los Angles Countybull Long Beach Coalition for Safe Environmentbull Sierra Club ndash Solano Groupbull Gills Onions LLCbull Teleosis Institute ndash Green Pharmacy Programbull Keep California Beautifulbull Waste Management of Orange Countybull California Resource Connectionsbull Marin Sanitary Servicebull Allied Waste ndash Daily Citybull Reverse Logistics Associationbull CRampR Waste and Recycling Servicesbull Pacific Recycling Solutionsbull CA Sierra Club Natural Resources Committee amp Zero Waste Committeebull Total Recycling Associatesbull Many individual citizens have signed the pledge

California Product Stewardship Council Participating Cities amp Counties (9108)

Contact CPSCHeidi SanbornExecutive Director HeidiCalPSCorg916-485-7753

wwwCalPSCorg

Funded by a Grant from the California Integrated Waste Management Board Zero Waste mdash You Make It Happen

copy 2008 by the California Integrated Waste Management Board (CIWMB) All rights reserved

This publication or parts thereof may not be reproduced without permission from CIWMB

Developed with support from the Product Policy Institute

  • Slide 1
  • Mission
  • Bill Worrell
  • The High Cost of Compliance
  • Per Capita Waste Production
  • Changing Waste
  • Products are disposable
  • U-Waste Designed for Disposal
  • Sharps Prohibited Waste
  • Slide 10
  • Multi Media
  • Slide 12
  • Growth in CA Total Waste
  • Slide 14
  • Slide 15
  • Slide 16
  • Slide 17
  • Slide 18
  • Applying the Producer Responsibility Framework
  • Slide 20
  • Authority Needed to Implement EPR Framework
  • EPR Framework Approach Roles and Responsibilities
  • Roles and Responsibilities (continued)
  • Slide 24
  • Slide 25
  • Slide 26
  • Slide 27
  • Slide 28
  • Framework EPR
  • Essential Elements
  • CPSC Participants ndash 28 Cities (92208)
  • CPSC Participants ndash 23 Counties (92208)
  • CPSC Participants ndash 15 Associations (92208)
  • CPSC Partners (92208)
  • California Product Stewardship Council Participating Cities amp Counties (9108)
  • Contact CPSC
Page 34: A Better Way: Product Stewardship. To shift California’s product waste management system from one focused on government funded and ratepayer financed.

California Product Stewardship Council Participating Cities amp Counties (9108)

Contact CPSCHeidi SanbornExecutive Director HeidiCalPSCorg916-485-7753

wwwCalPSCorg

Funded by a Grant from the California Integrated Waste Management Board Zero Waste mdash You Make It Happen

copy 2008 by the California Integrated Waste Management Board (CIWMB) All rights reserved

This publication or parts thereof may not be reproduced without permission from CIWMB

Developed with support from the Product Policy Institute

  • Slide 1
  • Mission
  • Bill Worrell
  • The High Cost of Compliance
  • Per Capita Waste Production
  • Changing Waste
  • Products are disposable
  • U-Waste Designed for Disposal
  • Sharps Prohibited Waste
  • Slide 10
  • Multi Media
  • Slide 12
  • Growth in CA Total Waste
  • Slide 14
  • Slide 15
  • Slide 16
  • Slide 17
  • Slide 18
  • Applying the Producer Responsibility Framework
  • Slide 20
  • Authority Needed to Implement EPR Framework
  • EPR Framework Approach Roles and Responsibilities
  • Roles and Responsibilities (continued)
  • Slide 24
  • Slide 25
  • Slide 26
  • Slide 27
  • Slide 28
  • Framework EPR
  • Essential Elements
  • CPSC Participants ndash 28 Cities (92208)
  • CPSC Participants ndash 23 Counties (92208)
  • CPSC Participants ndash 15 Associations (92208)
  • CPSC Partners (92208)
  • California Product Stewardship Council Participating Cities amp Counties (9108)
  • Contact CPSC
Page 35: A Better Way: Product Stewardship. To shift California’s product waste management system from one focused on government funded and ratepayer financed.

Contact CPSCHeidi SanbornExecutive Director HeidiCalPSCorg916-485-7753

wwwCalPSCorg

Funded by a Grant from the California Integrated Waste Management Board Zero Waste mdash You Make It Happen

copy 2008 by the California Integrated Waste Management Board (CIWMB) All rights reserved

This publication or parts thereof may not be reproduced without permission from CIWMB

Developed with support from the Product Policy Institute

  • Slide 1
  • Mission
  • Bill Worrell
  • The High Cost of Compliance
  • Per Capita Waste Production
  • Changing Waste
  • Products are disposable
  • U-Waste Designed for Disposal
  • Sharps Prohibited Waste
  • Slide 10
  • Multi Media
  • Slide 12
  • Growth in CA Total Waste
  • Slide 14
  • Slide 15
  • Slide 16
  • Slide 17
  • Slide 18
  • Applying the Producer Responsibility Framework
  • Slide 20
  • Authority Needed to Implement EPR Framework
  • EPR Framework Approach Roles and Responsibilities
  • Roles and Responsibilities (continued)
  • Slide 24
  • Slide 25
  • Slide 26
  • Slide 27
  • Slide 28
  • Framework EPR
  • Essential Elements
  • CPSC Participants ndash 28 Cities (92208)
  • CPSC Participants ndash 23 Counties (92208)
  • CPSC Participants ndash 15 Associations (92208)
  • CPSC Partners (92208)
  • California Product Stewardship Council Participating Cities amp Counties (9108)
  • Contact CPSC