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Midwestern Workgroup on Carpet Recovery
The Midwestern Workgroup on Carpet Recycling was established to address concerns about the growing amount of carpet that is reaching the end of its useful life and entering the waste stream in the Midwest region. Participants in this joint project promoted the idea of product stewardship as a method to address waste carpet.
The workgroup was originally spearheaded by the states of Minnesota, Iowa and Wisconsin, with involvement from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (U.S. EPA). The initial focus of their work was regional, but their efforts grew to be national in scope.
Meetings were facilitated by Cat Wilt of the Center for Clean Products and Clean Technologies, based at the University of Tennessee. The center received funding from U.S. EPA to support conduct research on the status of current take-back programs and recycling in the carpet industry and identify barriers and opportunities to increasing the recovery and recycling of carpet in the Upper Midwest.
The workgroup grew to include 40 representatives from the carpet industry (manufacturers, carpet retailers and recyclers), federal, state and local governments, and non-governmental environmental groups. The final agreement had the support of more than 15 state governments.
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The Midwestern Workgroup started with ambitious goals.
The workgroup finalized its efforts with an agreement that was signed by a representative of the workgroup and the president of the Carpet and Rug Institute (CRI) in January 2001.
Agreement (January 2001)