DISH and Reworx Partner to Recycle Electronics, Create Second Chances

Scott Greczkowski

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DISH and Reworx Partner to Recycle Electronics, Create Second Chances

Partnership benefits environment while providing jobs to individuals with disabilities and other barriers to employment

ENGLEWOOD, Colo. & ATLANTA--(BUSINESS WIRE [2])--DISH has partnered with Reworx, an electronics recycling program that employs individuals with disabilities and those who face barriers to traditional hiring. Reworx will recycle the pay-TV provider’s retired satellite receivers and related electronics in an extension of DISH’s existing sustainability operations that last year processed more than 26 million pounds of materials.

“Reworx not only furthers DISH’s sustainability endeavors by keeping nearly all received materials out of landfills, but it also yields another critical byproduct: opportunity,” said Jim LaRocque, DISH SVP of Service. “Reworx provides much-needed second chances by putting individuals to work. Steady employment can be a motivating force that prompts a sense of purpose, feelings of independence and, in many cases, helps staff rebuild their lives.”

“DISH looks to create efficiencies that allow the company to pass savings to its customers while keeping with its goal to reduce and eliminate waste,” said Mike Daniels, Reworx COO. “The responsible disposal of DISH electronics is a smart operation with a lasting environmental and, now, social impact. By recognizing this value, DISH advances its business objectives while forever impacting the lives of our people.”

Kelley Ferguson, shipping and receiving coordinator at Reworx, shares her perspective in a video [3] on the partnership, saying Reworx provides opportunities from which she believes her daughter will one day benefit.

“This company has always had a special place in my heart,” said Ferguson. “I have a special needs daughter so I really believe in their cause. One day I feel sure my daughter will be in the program, so she’ll be able to conquer and be able to get out in the workforce.”

Reworx employees are supported by nonprofit Nobis Works’ staff who provide ongoing training to help achieve continued professional success. Last year, Reworx employed 67 individuals, resulting in an economic impact of more than $961,000 in taxes paid and reductions in public assistance. This social enterprise has also been recognized for excellence in operations, becoming the first Georgia-based electronics recycler to achieve the EPA’s prestigious R2 (Responsible Recycling) certification.

While DISH’s partnership with Reworx is new, the pay-TV provider has long been committed to sustainable practices in the way it utilizes and disposes of equipment. Prior to recycling a satellite receiver, DISH works to maximize use with an average receiver lifespan of seven years. Once a set-top box is no longer viable, partners like Reworx sort, breakdown, recycle and resell materials retrieved from the receiver like plastics and precious metals. In 2012, DISH recycled 1.2 million pounds of plastic and 4.45 million pounds of steel. DISH also recycles materials such as cables, cardboard, remote controls, batteries and PC boards.
 
Reworx sounds like a sweat-shop to me, which would be right up Charlie's alley. " Barriers to traditional employment " usually equals illegals and those with criminal records.
 
Reworx sounds like a sweat-shop to me, which would be right up Charlie's alley. " Barriers to traditional employment " usually equals illegals and those with criminal records.

Sounds like the work crew the State of Texas hired to redo all our roofs at the prison, I used to work at before retirement. That was till my fellow officer made a special call to ICE and had them all picked up. Funny how a governor of the state of Texas can talk so much smack about illegals and the border and have no problem using illegals from Mexico and even ex-cons from Mexico to work for practically nothing.
 
Sounds like the work crew the State of Texas hired to redo all our roofs at the prison, I used to work at before retirement. That was till my fellow officer made a special call to ICE and had them all picked up. Funny how a governor of the state of Texas can talk so much smack about illegals and the border and have no problem using illegals from Mexico and even ex-cons from Mexico to work for practically nothing.

As long as they are not paying non-illegal immigrant prices, I see no issue with it. The problem is that someone is charging the goverment $20+ per hour and paying the illegals $5 and pocketing the difference.
 
As long as they are not paying non-illegal immigrant prices, I see no issue with it. The problem is that someone is charging the goverment $20+ per hour and paying the illegals $5 and pocketing the difference.

They used a contractor called Liqua-tech, who was supposedly responsible for screening all the workers to make sure they were legitimate. This way the state of Texas could say they had no knowledge of the workers real past,(plausible deniability), even though the state was the one who sent all the worker backgrounds and legal status, citizenship on an I.O.C. to the prison informing us of their status.
 
Reworx sounds like a sweat-shop to me, which would be right up Charlie's alley. " Barriers to traditional employment " usually equals illegals and those with criminal records.
There's always more than a few in every crowd. :rolleyes:

Way to take a positive and turn it into something it isn't.
 
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Actually reading the press release I would assume Reworx employs handicaped/disabled, people just out of rehab and probably parolees.
 

Need Brain Help (maybe Hopeless)

Dish Installers,have you ever heard of this?

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