Senator Cassis, under her constitutional right of protest (Art. 4, Sec. 18), protested against the passage of Senate Bill No. 897.
Senator Cassis’ statement is as follows:
I stand before you to take a little bit of a different approach on this matter. Certainly, recycling is extremely important, and we realize the hazardous nature of some of the components that today we are trying to deal with. But I do have some questions. Why are we creating a new fund and a new bureaucracy within the Department of Environmental Quality? Especially, since we have no idea how much this program is actually going to cost.
I also have to add that, as you know, if it looks like a rose and smells like a rose, it’s a rose. In this case, if it looks like a fee and smells like a fee, it’s really a tax. As you know, these things are passed on to the consumer. I think there are much better ways of handling the issue. As a matter of fact, the private sector already has programs that exist to do exactly what you are trying to put in place in the Department of Environmental Quality. Dell, Hewlett Packard, Apple, Samsung, Cannon, Panasonic, Sony, and Garmon—the free market, my friends, is working here. Now we are going to tinker with it?
Why is the state getting involved when many of the leading consumer electronic manufacturers, as I have just mentioned, have already implemented recycling programs. I really have to scratch my head. It is extremely perplexing and tends to defy common sense why a company like Dell, without offering any explanation, would advocate in favor of setting up a government bureaucracy. Are we missing something?