Car seat Recycling.
Established in 2002, our car seat recycling program has a goal of
recycing every expired, damaged, recalled or unuseable car seat we receive. Car seats are made of
many recycleable components, but due to the labor required for deconstruction, most regular municipal
recycling programs can not or will not take them. They do not have the resources to deal with a complex
assembly like a car seat. This is where our program begins.
Begun by Bill Flinchbaugh out of frustration over old car seats ending up in the dumpster following car
seat safety events. The collection of these 'old' car seats began and started to fill his garage while
he worked with his local municipal recycling contractor to establish a process for handling and recycling
his ever expanding collection of 'old' seats. While this process did allow him to establish one of the
most complete collections of sample car seats available, the garage was filling up and his local recycler
was in no hurry to take on more work. Almost a year later, he began developing a relationship with the
Court system to attract 'volunteers' with a court mandated responsibility to give a little back to the
community. Initially these volunteers assisted with car seat events in the area. Recognizing the labor
pool he was collecting, Bill soon had these folks breaking down the car seats in the garage. Now he had
most of the pieces in place and a plan was established with the local recycling contractor.
In late 2003, as Bill was finding himself with the opportunity to take on CCASAF, he was also encouraging
local thrift stores and used children's goods stores to stop selling used car seats. Initial resistance was
overcome by offering to collect the car seats received and provide assistance to families seaking car seats
from the retailers. With a plan for used seat collection, an abundance of seats to assist families in need,
a labor force to deconstruct old seats and some modest storage, all that was missing was a collection method.
Long a shade tree mechanic, Bill had been following the changes in tax code related to vehicle donations.
With a relationship established from another foundation whose board he had served on, Bill began to ask
friends with older box truck moving vehicles for a candidate for donation. (More on vehicle donation
programs to follow.) A candidate truck was identified and the final puzzle piece was in place. The process
is collection, inspection, sorting, counting, deconstruction, sorting component materials and delivery to
the recycling center.
In 2005, over 750 car seats were collected and recycled. Our pace for 2006 exceeded 1200 seats. The weight
of the collected and recycled materials has not been calculated, but it is considerable. An average car seat
is about 5 pounds of #5 plastic, cloth, foam, nylon harnesses, some polystyrene plastic and some metal. The
bulk of the weight is the car seat shell made of the #5 plastic. This plastic, though not in high demand,
is easily recyclable and often returns to us as plastic lumber or butter tubs. Most deliveries made to the
local recycler are between a pickup truck load and a partly full 15 foot box truck. All recyclable components
are delivered to the recycler. Non-recyclable parts, mostly nylon harness straps, polystyrene, foam and some
cloth, are currently sent to the land fill. Some cloth covers are used for cleaning rags, given to quilters,
used for cloth paper making classes or kept for seats in our loaner program.
May 2008. more information is available on our NEW web site.
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Copyright 2004-08. All rights reserved. Contact: B.Flinchbaugh