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Future Financial LLC and Recycling

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Future Financial LLC

Recycling is an effort that everyone must partake. It is not only limited to the individuals and families and communities, recycling also includes corporations and companies. Yes, even the big ones. Specially the big ones.

In talking about recycling, the first thing that comes to mind are the segregation of the garbage, however, it is not all there is to it. As it was reported before, Nintendo failed in their recycling efforts (according to Greenpeace) regarding their game consoles. Recycling is not limited to only one thing, it is all about making as less junks as possible — reusing things that can still be used and not just letting it rot in some dump site.

With this thought in mind, Future Financial LLC, whose proprietor, Anthony Pellegrino, has made a vow to make recycling as one of the things that his firm must prioritize. So, in their commitment, they have started to do the following simple steps:

  • Printing on both sides of the paper
  • Recycling of toner cartridges
  • Having a company policy to shutdown all computers at the end of the day
  • Giving PCs that cannot be fixed to Four Eyes Squad to be recycled

It may not be that much, however, we should keep in mind that every thousand mile journeys started with a single step. Isn’t it better to take part in these kinds of efforts no matter how small your contribution is than doing nothing at all?

What have you done today?


The proprietor of Future Financial LLC, Anthony Pellegrino, have been catering the financial service industry for the last 7 years. He has worked with big names in the business and have always excelled and made the businesses profitable. Right now he is concentrating in Mortgage and Financial services that his firm offers. The company is located at the following address:

One Lincoln Centre 18 West 140 Butterfield Road, 15th Floor
Oakbrook Terrace, Illinois 60181
800-293-0797

Nintendo Failed in Greenpeace’s E-Waste Report

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Last Tuesday, Greenpeace, the environmental watchdog, gave Nintendo a failing grade regarding its effort to recycle game consoles and phase out the use of toxic chemicals.

In the environmental watchdog’s sixth quarterly guide to “green” electronics released Nov. 27, Nintendo became the first manufacturer to receive zero out of 10 points. Greenpeace says that the Japanese video-game company – which has not yet issued a statement responding to the report – provides no information on the materials used in manufacturing its consoles nor on its plans to cut hazardous chemicals. Thus it “completely fails to show any environmental credentials.”

nintendo logo

Topping the list of 18 global electronics manufactures are Sony, Ericsson, and Samsung, with each receiving 7.7 points. Greenpeace praised these companies for eliminating the most harmful chemicals from their products and for transparency on their take-back and recycling programs. The environmental group punished last year’s leader, Nokia, for breaking promises to recycle hardware in five of six countries where Greenpeace conducted spot-checks with hidden cameras.

Legislative director of Greenpeace, Rick Hind, said that to achieve higher rankings, companies need to walk the talk instead of making vague commitments to future progress. He also added that environmental leadership and innovation are evident as companies put products on the market free of hazardous chemicals and institute recycling take-back programs which are actually operational.

Discarded electronics can be a valuable source of raw materials, but absent a legal framework and a collections scheme, most end up in landfills, where they are a major source of toxins.

In the US, so-called e-waste represents 2 percent of the garbage in landfills, but 70 percent of overall toxic waste, according to Mother Jones magazine.

But regulations to reduce e-waste are beginning to take hold. According to the Associated Press, eight US states, including five just this year, have passed laws requiring electronicsmakers to take back and recycle their own products. In March, the United Nations launched an initiative to set global standards for e-waste recycling.

Until such standards are implemented, however, environmental activists will rely on the public shaming of companies, hoping that the bad press will compel them to clean up their act. Greenpeace claims victory in a campaign that sought to persuade Apple, Inc. to become greener. The campaign, which included a spoof of Apple’s website, prompted a detailed response from Apple CEO Steve Jobs, who pledged to change his company’s manufacturing and recycling policies.

But some analysts doubt the effectiveness of such tactics. BusinessWeek reports that a Roper poll, released in August, found that only 4 in 10 Americans say they’re willing to pay more for a product that benefits the environment.