Monthly Archives: May 2009

‘Wild ride, killing bring quiet town lots of attention’

The quiet suburb of Glenwood was anything but Friday morning as a hijacked school bus plowed through its main streets, bashed into cars and landed in a front yard, its out-of-control driver halted with two fatal shots to the head from a police officer.

What drove Ronald Newsome, the regular driver of the bus, into such a rage that he led police on a wild chase from South Holland, striking numerous vehicles and allegedly trying to run down cops, isn’t yet known.

And at a news conference Friday afternoon, South Holland police declined to comment on witness statements that Newsome had a gun and fired at police before he was killed.

The police chief’s official statement makes no mention of him being armed.

The phone number listed at Newsome’s address in the 12100 block of South Wallace Street was disconnected.

Newsome was pronounced dead at St. James Hospital in Chicago Heights on Friday morning, a spokesman for the Cook County medical examiner’s office said. He died from multiple gun shot wounds, a spokesman said.

South Holland Police Chief Warren Millsaps told reporters one of his officers fired two shots at the bus as it lurched toward him, instantly killing Newsome.

Witnesses said it appeared that the driver turned left onto a lawn, then tried to escape on foot. Construction workers redoing the sewers along West Main Street in Glenwood witnessed the chase and said Newsome started firing shots and officers returned fire. They said they heard between five and eight gunshots in quick succession.

Kevin Wolfe, 45, was part of the crew improving sewers along Glenwood-Dyer Road. He was heading back to the job site from a nearby quarry when the bus flew by.

“I was coming from the quarry, and he came darting through and actually hit two cars, and the cops were chasing him,” Wolfe said from his truck. “All of a sudden when he lost control of the thing … we saw him crash. And as soon as he got out, he jumped out and

started running. They got him right as he was coming out of the bus. We heard the shots fire, ding, ding, ding, ding.”

Millsaps said officers had ordered Newsome out of the stopped bus but he turned to the left in an attempt to hit the officers standing in front of the bus.

The chief would not identify the South Holland officer who shot Newsome and would not answer questions about whether Newsome had a gun.

“Anytime you have a bus fleeing from police at 65 miles per hour, it’s a deadly weapon,” he said. “The officers used appropriate force necessary to stop him.”

Newsome, a First Student Transportation Co. employee, took the bus from the company’s South Holland lot about 7:30 a.m., angered when his boss told him he could not drive because he was behaving badly, according to a company spokeswoman.

No children were aboard, but a monitor hired by First Student was on the bus. Her identity wasn’t released by the company or police. When the bus stopped at the end of what must have been a terrifying ride for her, she ran into the Dennis’ Glenwood Marathon gas station, mechanics said.

“She ran in here after that happened,” said mechanic Patrick Connolly, of South Holland. “Nobody got her name; she was all upset.”

His colleague, Darrein DeMario, 25, already was working when “five or six” shots rang out.

“I don’t know who shot first,” DeMario said. “I heard (the driver) shot first.”

The neighbor, whose house on West Main Street nearly was hit by the bus, was out of town for work, Connolly said. The bus’s grill stopped just a few feet shy of the blue painted clapboard home squarely on the front lawn in a yard quickly cordoned off with yellow police tape.

“He’s going to have a fit, man,” Connolly said.

The village of about 9,000 people is hardly the “Mayberry” it was 50 years ago, said 61-year-old lifelong resident Ted Lyons, but police chases and shootings still come as a shock.

He watched a little of the chaos but mostly minded his business over a cup of coffee outside his house several doors down from the scene, avoiding the fray. Why would anyone want to speak to him, he wondered.

“It’s all down there,” he said, pointing to the street choked with debris. “I didn’t steal the damn bus.”

As published in the SouthtownStar, May 31, 2009, on page A4.
PDF 2009-05 Toss Your TV || The SouthtownStar || A1
2009-05 Bus hijacking || The SouthtownStar || A4

‘Making the digital switch? Toss your old TV set properly.’

The guts of an old television set look like a bunch of junk.

There’s a heavy glass screen, a bunch of plastic plugs and a jumble of wires tucked inside a wooden or plastic cabinet. A cathode ray tube, the key to the picture, hides more glass, a metal frame and up to eight pounds of lead.

Nothing will prevent Southlanders from chucking old sets once the June 12 switch changes broadcast signals to digital, when analog TVs, the kind with the tube inside rather than a digital tuner, become obsolete. Curbside garbage pickup grabs electronics, too. State law doesn’t yet prevent electronic trash – or e-waste – from going to the landfill.

“They go into the landfill and the tubes and all are hazardous to our earth – there’s mercury in there,” said Jean Porter, a mother of two who runs a “freecycle” recycling group in Orland Park and Tinley Park. “It’s ridiculous to throw things out. One’s man’s trash is another man’s treasure.”

Not that couch potatoes are rushing to toss their old analogs en masse, since cable watchers will experience a seamless conversion. Many others with tube TVs opted for converter boxes, which at about $50 or $60 come cheaper than a new digital TV.

Still, to mistake any of those old TVs as trash is shortsighted. The guts of a TV can be hazardous if not treated properly. They take up a lot of space as trash. And they’re valuable as raw materials when recycled.

They’re also gold to a Chicago Heights company, which will transform those insides into ingredients purchased by American manufacturers.

Salvaging everything possible

Walls of old console TVs stand inside Intercon Solutions’ giant warehouse, piled up 10 feet tall on an industrial floor still scarred with steel rails from when the Washington Street building contained railroad cars.

Shrink-wrapped on wide pallets, TVs in bulky wood consoles and colored plastic cases alike await disassembly in a process Intercon Solutions calls “demanufacturing.” Pieces get unscrewed, unhooked, unfastened, all by hand, in the opposite order of their manufacture.

The parts are then sorted by materials and packaged for shipping to a series of manufacturers within the United States (but none in Illinois).

Nearby, workers are dismantling old telecommunications consoles from the outside in, while conveyor belts sit silent, full of plastic calculators from another shift. And a carton of old film unspoiled from Defense Department reels waits to be stripped of its silver.

Mark Medic of Intercon said this recycling process is tidier than shredding, and keeps hazardous materials from contaminating the ground. Intercon doesn’t resell working gadgets overseas for consumer reuse. And they put nothing into landfills, he said.

This is important because the lead alone in TVs causes health problems when released haphazardly into the environment. Other heavy metals like mercury and cadmium – found in the TV tubes – also can contaminate groundwater. Mercury causes birth defects and damages the central nervous system. Lead poisoning often leads to learning disabilities in children. And cadmium irreversibly damages kidneys and lungs, and softens bones.

Intercon pulls the lead components out of the sets and sends them downstate where the metal is smelted out. The smelters get the glass, too, which they use to help regulate the heat of the smelting process.

The lead is resold to electronics companies, mostly for use as solder. Wood from cabinets is chipped up for particle board. And the plastics become plastic lumber and parking bumpers.

And the more metals that can be salvaged from junk, the fewer that must be mined underground.

You don’t want to fill the landfill

Intercon charges for recycling dropoffs. Several times a year, the company partners with area municipalities who pay the fees, which start at $10 and depend on the size of the set.

Will County has several free recycling dropoff centers and ships electronics they collect to a Plainfield recycler similar to Intercon. The county has just added a location at the New Lenox Township offices; e-recycling is open to county residents.

“You don’t want to fill the landfill with (hazardous materials), you don’t want to fill the landfill anyway,” said Marta Keane, a recycling specialist at the Will County Land Use Department. “Once it’s full, we have to make a new one somewhere else. So why it fill it up with televisions just because we’re going to switch to digital?”

Consumers want to recycle their gadgets, according to an industry group, the Consumer Electronics Association. In 2005, when nearly 65 million TVs were discarded, 17 percent of those sets were recycled, 63 percent were given away and 21 percent were trashed. By 2007, recycled TVs increased to 20 percent, while 59 percent were given away and 21 percent were trashed.

And local freecycle groups – Internet-based efforts to give unwanted stuff away so useful things don’t clog landfills – are growing in popularity. Groups in Oak Lawn and Orland Park have been finding new homes for old TV sets,

But electronic recycling still takes individual effort and initiative. State law doesn’t yet ban trashing your TV, and Homewood Disposal, which contracts for most south suburban municipal garbage collection, still picks up televisions left alongside trash cans.

“As of right now, everything is still going into the garbage,” said site manager Jon Schroeder of televisions. “Customers put it out at the curb with the trash and our trash trucks pick it up.”

Illinois passed a law in September requiring manufacturers to take back e-waste and recycle it, said Dave Walters, a waste reduction manager at the Illinois Environmental Protection Agency. The law starts to take effect in 2010, and by 2012, all TVs, computer
monitors and printers, and other electronics will be banned from the landfill stream.

“The new Illinois law is really much broader than other states,” Walters said. “it’s the first piece of legislation that includes printers.”

About 20 states have some kind of e-waste laws, most of which are recycling programs rather than bans on landfills.

“So I would not say we’re late in coming to the game,” Walters said. “We’re ahead of the curve than in other states.”

Go recycle that old TV!
  • New Lenox Township recycles electronics for Will County residents at its town hall, 1100 S. Cedar Road.
  • Freecycle has groups in most south suburbs. Find your town and post your TV for pickup at http://www.freecycle.org.
  • Best Buy stores have been offering electronics recycling for consumers, who pay a $10 fee for each item with a screen and receive a $10 Best Buy gift card. The stores will not take TVs bigger than 32 inches, console televisions, appliances, or microwaves. Participating locations include 7330 191st St., Tinley Park, 15854 S. La Grange
  • Rd., Orland Park, 4707 Lincoln Mall Drive, Lincoln Mall, Matteson, and 4925 Cal Sag Road, Crestwood.
  • And Intercon Solutions, 1001-59 Washington, Chicago Heights, will take TV dropoffs if you call ahead, (708) 756-9838, and shipments if you attach payment. Fees to recycle televisions start at $10 and vary by size. Check out http://www.interconrecycling.com for more information.

[SIDEBAR]

Yohannah Scott had a 27-inch TV that was just too good to throw out.

And yet she didn’t want it anymore.

So she posted this message on the Chicago Ridge freecycle Web site:
“OFFER: 27″ JVC tv older but still works -60501.”

About 10 responses later, a gentleman showed up to cart it out of her Summit home.

“He stated that his went out and he needed another one,” she said. “It worked just fine, I just had no room for it. If no one wanted it I would have donated it.”

But the Goodwill isn’t taking TVs, and while commercial recyclers can process TVs and other old electronics that have outlived their usefulness into scrap and raw materials, working equipment is being passed from people sick of looking at old junk to others in need of that exact same old junk.

Local freecycle groups are facilitating the free person-to-person exchanges to keep useful things out of landfills through http://www.freecycle.org.

And folks are still looking for analogs, which still will work with cable, video players and game systems.

A mother was looking for an old working TV on the Chicago Ridge site after her daughter got a new Nintendo Wii for her birthday. Another lady in Chicago Ridge was looking for “anyone going to a flat screen and looking to give away their old, bulky, cable ready, color TV?”And a Steger woman setting up house for the first time was looking for a small set for a child’s room.

The Goodwill store in Orland Park isn’t taking TV donations because disposing of broken sets costs too much, said Cheryl Lighthouse, the charity’s Chicago-area spokeswoman.

Jean Porter, a freecycle moderator for the Orland Park and Tinley Park group, said her members are looking to get rid of their electronics.

“I would say most posts regarding TV’s are offers, and a few ‘wants” – people looking to pick up free sets, she said. Nikki Mackovitch, who moderates a group in Oak Lawn and Burbank, and another in Chicago, said participants seem to be hanging onto their old sets but clamoring for converter box coupons.

“We have seen a small increase in TVs offered compared to normal, but I do not think it has been a great surge,” she said. “I think with the economy the way it is right now, many people will not be switching their TVs over just yet,” she continued. “I know we cannot afford to ourselves as much as we would love to.”

As published in the SouthtownStar, May 31, 2009, on pages A1 and A3. 

PDF 2009-05 Toss Your TV || The SouthtownStar || A1

2009-05 Toss Your TV || The SouthtownStar || A3