CELL PHONES FOR SOLDIERS AND ED’S NASCAR CONNECTION, KICK OFF CELL PHONE COLLECTION DRIVE IN LAUREL, DE

NORWELL, Mass., October, 2008 – More than 150,000 troops are serving overseas and are away from their families. Cell Phones for Soldiers and Laurel Based Ed’s Nascar Connection are calling on all Americans to support for these brave men and women by donating your unused cell phones. Cell Phones for Soldiers hopes to collect over 50,000 cell phones this year to help keep troops connected with their families.   

 “We’re proud to show our support for U.S. soldiers, and to contribute to a worthy cause like Cell Phones for Soliders,” says Ed Argerake, owner of Ed’s Nascar Connection.

“Over the past few years, we have been amazed by the generosity of others. But, we have also seen the need to support our troops continue.” says Brittany Bergquist, Cell Phones for Soldiers co-founder. “It is easy for Americans to make a small sacrifice of support by donating their unused cell phones, and providing families with a much-needed connection to their loved ones overseas.”  

Local residents can support the collection drive by donating their phones at the Ed’s Nascar Connection location:

-          30599 Sussex Hwy Laurel, DE 302-875-5714

 Cell Phones for Soldiers was founded by teenagers Robbie and Brittany Bergquist from Norwell, Mass., with $21 of their own money. Since then, the registered 501c3 non-profit organization has raised almost $1 million in donations and distributed more than 500,000 prepaid calling cards to soldiers serving overseas.

 “We are continuously overwhelmed by the enthusiastic support of thousands of Americans who have helped our troops speak with their loved ones,” says the teens’ father, Bob Bergquist. “However, the need for support keeps growing as more soldiers are sent to the Middle East or are asked to serve extended tours of duty.”

 Through increased fundraising efforts, the Bergquist family hopes to raise more than $9 million in the next five years to fund new programs, such as providing video phones and prepaid service to allow soldiers abroad to see their families on a regular basis.

 The donated phones are sent to ReCellular, which pays Cell Phones for Soldiers for each phone – enough to provide an hour of talk time to soldiers abroad.

 Approximately half of the phones ReCellular processes are reconditioned and resold to wholesale companies in over 40 countries around the world. Phones and components that cannot be refurbished are dismantled and recycled to reclaim materials, including:

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Gold, silver and platinum from circuit boards

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Copper wiring from phone chargers

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Nickel, iron, cadmium and lead from battery packs

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Plastic from phone cases and accessories 

About Cell Phones for Soldiers:

Cell Phones for Soldiers was created by Brittany & Robbie Bergquist of Norwell MA.  After reading a story about a soldier who ran up a huge phone bill calling home from Iraq, these two teenagers decided to help out.  They started by opening an account with $21.00 of their own money.  They are collecting cash donations and old cell phones.  The cell phones are recycled for cash and the proceeds are used to buy prepaid calling cards for our soldiers serving in the Middle East.  Cell Phones For Soldiers is a registered 501(c)(3) non-profit organization.  Their efforts have motivated people and businesses around the country to donate to this worthy cause.  Their goal is to provide every US soldier with a way to call home for free.  For more information, please visit www.cellphonesforsoldiers.com
 

Three things to remember before you recycle your wireless phone:

Terminate your service for the phone you are donating.

Clear the phone’s memory of contacts and other stored information. Go to www.recyclewirelessphones.com to learn how to do this;

Remove your phone’s SIM card, if it has one. Phones that operate on GSM networks use SIM cards. If you are not sure if your phone uses a SIM card or if you need assistance removing your SIM card, contact your wireless provider.

You can drop off your wireless phone either at Ed's Nascar Connection through nationwide recycling programs such as Cell Phones for Soldiers (www.cellphonesforsoldiers.com), in retails stores that collect wireless phones – such as AT&T wireless stores – or through other mail-in programs.

 

Cell Phone Recycling Fact Sheet

According to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, electronic waste (e-waste) is accumulating almost three times faster than ordinary household trash.

Researchers at Carnegie Mellon University estimate that at least 60 million PCs have already been buried in U.S. landfills.

An estimated 100 to 130 million cell phones are no longer being used, many languishing in storage.

Recycling cell phones reduces greenhouse gas emissions, keeps valuable material out of landfills and incinerators, and conserves natural resources.

Cell phones and accessories are made from valuable resources such as precious metals, copper, and plastics - all of which require energy to extract and manufacture.

According to the EPA, if Americans recycled 100 million phones, we could save enough upstream energy to power more than 194,000 U.S. households for a year.

If consumers were able to reuse those 100 million cell phones, the environmental savings would be even greater, saving enough energy to power more than 370,000 U.S. homes each year.

Recycling just a million cell phones reduces greenhouse gas emissions equal to taking 1,368 cars off the road for a year.

The EPA has targeted cell phone recycling because fewer than 20 percent of cell phones are recycled each year and most people do not know where to recycle them.

In 2007, according to ABI Research, a N.Y.-based technology market research firm, 1.2 billion phones were sold worldwide. Sixty percent of them replaced existing phones. In the United States, phones are cast aside after, on average, 12 months.

Three things to remember before you recycle your wireless phone:

Terminate your service

Clear the phone’s memory of contacts and other stored information. Go to www.recyclewirelessphones.com to learn how to do this;

Remove your phone’s SIM card, if it has one. Phones that operate on GSM networks use SIM cards. If you are not sure if your phone uses a SIM card or if you need assistance removing your SIM card, contact your wireless provider.

You can drop off your wireless phone either through nationwide recycling programs such as Cell Phones for Soldiers (www.cellphonesforsoldiers.com), in retails stores that collect wireless phones – such as AT&T wireless stores – or through mail-in programs.

Comments or questions about this website, email web@edsnascarconnection.com