E-Scrap News

CRT suppliers in the crosshairs

This article originally appeared in the Summer 2019 issue of E-Scrap News. Subscribe today for access to all print content.

 

It’s been three years since Closed Loop Refining and Recovery fell apart. But even though the CRT outlet is long gone, its impact on recycling companies and the industry as a whole continues in big ways.

In new court filings seeking cleanup funds, two warehouse owners have named 41 e-scrap companies and one solid waste district they say contributed to what became the largest CRT glass stockpile in U.S. history.

The landlords invoke Superfund law in their suits.

The complaints from owners of properties in Columbus, Ohio allege the e-scrap businesses shipped CRT glass to Closed Loop Refining and Recovery’s three Columbus facilities.

According to attorneys for the landlords, settlements with many of the defendants are expected “in the near-term.” But some of the named companies have been quick to push back, noting that the property managers that took a risk by allowing Closed Loop to set up shop (and then profited from the company’s years of presence) should not just push all of the cleanup expense onto former suppliers.

Defendants named

Closed Loop was started in 2010 and accumulated CRTs at sites in Arizona and Ohio while touting plans to develop furnace technology to process the material. The furnaces never materialized, however, and the company shuttered in 2016, leaving warehouses full of glass in its wake. An estimated 316 million pounds of CRT materials remained on multiple properties in Arizona and Ohio.

New York City investment firm Garrison Southfield Park, which owns sites at 1655 and 1675 Watkins Road in Columbus, first filed its federal lawsuit against Closed Loop and a handful of e-scrap suppliers in September 2017.

The complaint claims suppliers are responsible to help fund the cleanup under the federal Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation and Liability Act (CERCLA), the same law that governs Superfund sites.

In an amended complaint filed March 28, Garrison named additional suppliers it believes shipped glass to the Ohio sites and details how much the firm thinks each of them sent.

Separately, Olymbec USA, which owns a Columbus warehouse at 2200 Fairwood Ave., filed a lawsuit on March 20 naming the same e-scrap companies as defendants. The cases are both in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Ohio.

In total, the three Ohio sites hold 158 million pounds of e-scrap, and the landlords estimate cleanup will cost $18.2 million.

Garrison’s amended complaint alleges the companies below were the top 10 e-scrap suppliers to its properties (see the table below for details on all 42 entities named in the suit).

46.0 million pounds: Kuusakoski Recycling/Vintage Tech. The companies were named in Garrison’s original federal complaint. Kuusakoski owns Vintage Tech. Garrison claims they were the largest single glass supplier to Closed Loop in Ohio, sending glass starting in 2012 and extending into 2016.

16.4 million pounds: Rochester Computer Recycling & Recovery (EWASTE+). Garrison alleges this Victor, N.Y.-based company sent e-scrap to Closed Loop from June 2012 through about March 2016.

11.6 million pounds: Robert A. Erie/E-World Recyclers. Garrison alleges now-closed E-World Recyclers, of which Erie was CEO, shipped this weight from around June 2012 to around November 2014. Erie recently served out a prison sentence and is now in a residential reentry center in San Diego after pleading guilty to one count of conspiracy in 2017. Federal prosecutors alleged he engaged in a scheme to traffic counterfeit goods that his company had been hired to destroy.

7.1 million pounds: eCycleSecure. Garrison alleges this company, based in Charlotte, N.C., sent material from June 2012 through around September 2015.

5.6 million pounds: IMS Electronics Recycling. This company, which has plants in San Diego and Columbus, was acquired in 2018 by Texas-based processor Transpere. Garrison says IMS sent material to Closed Loop from about February 2014 through February 2016.

5.3 million pounds: Dynamic Lifecycle Innovations. Garrison claims this processor, which has facilities in Wisconsin and Tennessee, sent this weight to Closed Loop from January 2013 through about March 2016.

4.6 million pounds: Federal Prison Industries (UNICOR). This agency, named as a defendant in Garrison’s original federal complaint, is alleged to have sent material to Closed Loop from May 2012 to December 2015.

3.9 million pounds: GEEP/GEEP USA. Garrison claims GEEP, based in Barrie, Ontario, sent 2.7 million pounds of material to Closed Loop between September 2012 and June 2013. It says related company GEEP USA, headquartered in Durham, N.C., sent 1.2 million pounds between September 2012 and May 2015.

2.9 million pounds: CompuPoint USA. Garrison alleges this Norcross, Ga.-based company shipped the weight from about August 2012 to about January 2016.

2.5 million pounds: American Retroworks. Garrison said this Middlebury, Vt. company sent material to Closed Loop from May 2012 to around January 2014.

In addition, Garrison’s amended complaint names for the first time as a defendant Moshe Silagi of Thousand Oaks, Calif. The filing says Silagi is former owner of 1675 Watkins Road and leased the space to Closed Loop.

Other legal cases

The federal cases came after Garrison won a judgment in state court in 2017. The Franklin County Court of Common Pleas in August 2017 ordered Closed Loop and its former leaders, Brent Benham, David Cauchi and Brian LaPoint, to pay Garrison Southfield Park more than $18 million; however, according to Garrison’s federal complaint, the company has been unable to recover the judgment.

Garrison claims 128 million pounds of CRT materials are stored at its locations on Watkins Road, including an estimated 113 million pounds of crushed, mixed leaded and unleaded glass and 15 million pounds of other e-scrap, according to the lawsuit. Garrison Southfield Park estimates the cleanup costs at $14.2 million.

Olymbec, a company based in Memphis, Tenn., estimates 30 million pounds are stored at its property on Fairwood Avenue and will cost over $4 million to clean up. Olymbec’s complaint does not provide estimates of how much weight each defendant sent to its facilities.

Benham, Cauchi and LaPoint are not named as defendants in the Olymbec complaint or Garrison’s amended complaint because they each filed for voluntary Chapter 7 bankruptcy protection, according to Garrison’s court documents. Benham filed in April 2018, Cauchi in October 2017 and LaPoint in November 2017.

The case is one of the first instances of CERCLA being invoked to pursue suppliers for the clean up of e-scrap.

In an earlier case, a federal judge in South Carolina ruled that two counties that sent CRT materials to Creative Recycling Systems were partially responsible for cleanup costs when Creative closed and left a stockpile in a warehouse. The judge in that CERCLA case also allocated substantial responsibility to the landowner, a company called Carolina Pines I. Other counties and cities had already agreed to pay out via settlement agreements before the judge’s November 2018 decision.

Court documents show the Garrison and Olymbec have been pursuing settlements with various companies. Since late 2017, Garrison, Kuusakoski and UNICOR have been asking the court to delay the case. According to a Feb. 28 delay request, they were requesting time “to pursue settlement negotiations with these Defendants and potential new defendants.” Garrison’s goal was to reach as many settlement agreements as possible before filing the amended complaint, the document states.

It’s unknown how many parties have reached an agreement with the landlords – no settlement agreements have been submitted to the court yet.

Garrison and Olymbec have been coordinating their settlement negotiations so the defendants could sign one settlement ending claims under both landowners’ lawsuits, the delay request notes.

“Garrison has been engaged in settlement talks with several of the defendants named in the Amended Complaint, including the original named defendants, for quite some time now,” attorney Karl Heisler, who represents Garrison, said in a statement to E-Scrap News. “These talks have been meaningful and productive, and we are anticipating entering into significant settlements with many of them in the near-term. It’s been an impressive showing of corporate social responsibility. Garrison has also joined forces with Olymbec, and, together, Garrison and Olymbec will be aggressively pursuing litigation against all those who have elected not to settle.”

Beyond the $14.2 million it’s seeking for cleanup costs, Garrison’s amended complaint seeks an additional $2.6 million for lost rent.

Processors respond

Several of the e-scrap companies identified as the top suppliers of CRT materials to the sites issued statements to E-Scrap News.

Kuusakoski Recycling/Vintage Tech said they stand by their decision-making.

“Environmental responsibility is an essential part of Kuusakoski and Vintage Tech’s operations and values, and we expect our partners to share in this responsibility,” the Kuusakoski/Vintage Tech statement reads in part. “To that end, Kuusakoski and Vintage Tech believe that shipping CRT material to an industry certified recycling facility that was audited and approved by the State of Ohio and various OEMs was responsible and appropriate.

“Additionally, Kuusakoski and Vintage Tech believe that both Olymbec and Garrison, as landlords for the facilities (who received substantial revenue from Closed Loop), must substantially participate in the responsibility of cleaning up the Closed Loop facilities.

Accordingly, while Kuusakoski and Vintage Tech will cooperate with any environmental response, they will also vigorously defend themselves in the litigations.”

Meanwhile, Victor, N.Y.-based EWASTE+ said it is working to help find a solution to the stockpiles.

“Over our 24-year history in the electronics recycling industry, EWASTE+ has collected and handled well over 100 million pounds of CRT devices,” according to the company statement. “During that time frame, we have engaged several different R2, ISO and/or e-Stewards-certified CRT processors – including Closed Loop. We have paid out millions of dollars in CRT processing fees to these firms and we’ve conducted regular downstream due diligence according to the requirements of our own R2 certification.

“Unfortunately, like several other CRT processors in the industry, Closed Loop’s attempt to build a sustainable domestic CRT solution ultimately failed and they went out of business before fully processing all the CRT glass received into their facilities. EWASTE+ is in active communications with the various stakeholders to resolve the issue and to come to a fair and just resolution.”

Dynamic Lifecycle Innovations noted the following:

“We pride ourselves as industry leaders who operate on a consistent basis with the highest of standards. As a company, we distinguish ourselves from others by exceeding local, state, and federal environmental, health, and safety regulations and guidelines that our industry expects and requires.

“In this instance, it is only because of certain broad language contained in a statute that has allowed our company to be drawn into this litigation and we now look forward to working towards a successful resolution.”

Finally, Vermont-based American Retroworks (ARI), which owns the processing company Good Point Recycling, noted it had brought on e-scrap industry veteran Eric Harris as legal counsel.

“Setting aside that Garrison Southfield Park lacks the legal authority to apportion this case, recyclers are incredulous that they alone are accused and forced to pay, with no mention of culpable OEMs or complicit states. A cross claim seems inevitable,” ARI noted in its statement.

Jared Paben is the associate editor for E-Scrap News and can be contacted at jared@resource-recycling.com.

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