(a) On and after July 1, 2003, no person shall offer any mercury-added product for sale or distribute any such product for promotional purposes unless the manufacturer either on its own or in concert with other persons has submitted a plan to the commissioner for a system that reasonably enables the collection of such products. If a mercury-added product is a component of another product, the collection system shall provide for removal and collection of the mercury-added component or collection of both the mercury-added component and the product containing it.

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Terms Used In Connecticut General Statutes 22a-620

  • another: may extend and be applied to communities, companies, corporations, public or private, limited liability companies, societies and associations. See Connecticut General Statutes 1-1
  • person: means any individual, firm, partnership, association, syndicate, company, trust, corporation, nonstock corporation, limited liability company, municipality, agency or political or administrative subdivision of the state, or other legal entity of any kind. See Connecticut General Statutes 22a-2

(b) The collection system shall include (1) a public education program to inform the public about the purpose of the collection program and how to participate in it; (2) a targeted capture rate for the mercury-added product or component; (3) a plan for implementing and financing the collection system; (4) documentation of the willingness of all parties to the system to implement the proposed collection system; (5) a description of the performance measures to be utilized and reported by the manufacturer to demonstrate that the collection system is meeting capture rate targets; (6) a description of additional or alternative actions that will be implemented to improve the collection system and its operation in the event that the program targets are not met; and (7) a recycling or disposal plan.

(c) Not later than July 1, 2004, and biennially thereafter, the manufacturer or entity that submitted the plan on behalf of the manufacturer shall submit a report to the commissioner and to the regional multistate clearinghouse described in section 22a-614 on the effectiveness of the collection system. The report shall include an estimate of the amount of mercury that was collected, the capture rate for the mercury-added products or components, the results of the other performance measures included in the manufacturer’s collection system plan, and such other information as the commissioner may require. The commissioner shall make such reports available to the public.

(d) The cost for the collection system shall not be borne by state or local government.

(e) The commissioner shall review any impediments identified pursuant to subdivision (7) of subsection (b) of this section and the regulations adopted under this title governing handling of waste from mercury-added products and, if necessary, may amend regulations as appropriate to facilitate collection.

(f) The following are exempt from the provisions of this section: (1) Formulated mercury-added products intended to be consumed in use, including, but not limited to, reagents, cosmetics, pharmaceuticals and other laboratory chemicals; (2) fabricated mercury-containing products where the only mercury is contained in a component that cannot feasibly be removed by the purchaser including, but not limited to, electronic products whose only mercury-added component is a mercury-containing lamp used for backlighting provided such manufacturer or trade association maintains a web-based service to provide information on recycling and safe disposal of such products; (3) photographic film and paper; (4) a manufacturer or trade association of mercury-containing lamps that maintains a toll-free telephone number and an Internet-based service to provide information on recycling and safe disposal of such lamps and directs consumers to such telephone number and service on any statutorily-required package label; (5) button cell batteries containing mercury; and (6) any other product for which the commissioner determines a collection plan is not feasible.