It's going to be very hard not to get political on this rant, so here goes.
In November 2020, I bought a car battery from my local Pep Boys. Four and a half years and 142,384 miles later later, the battery is done. After replacing it (which I needed to do as soon as possible after it died, so from a different vendor), I went back to that place, with the original receipt, to get a refund on the $18 "core charge" (jargon meaning a deposit you have to pay when buying the battery, in order to encourage you to return it at EOL to be recycled). This location is no longer a parts store, I was told, just an oil change, smog check, and tire installation shop now, and so they can't refund me. Could I go to another Pep Boys location, I asked? Sorry, no: Pep Boys is a franchise operation, so other branches are separate businesses, and so cannot refund the charge. Can you recycle the battery anyways, I asked? No, but I can throw it in the trash for you if you like, he replied!
This strikes me as yet another "green new scam" operation, similar to the CRV racket that California runs, whereby you are supposed to get a few pennies back on bottles and cans that you return for recycling; but in reality, finding anywhere that will accept them is so difficult and requires such a long drive that obtaining that money is to all intents and purposes impossible. So basically, it's just another tax that the politicians gobble up.
By the same token, if the requirement to refund these "core charges" is easily circumvented by auto parts store chains operating as franchises, which go out of business and then reappear under different names regularly, then only a tiny proportion of these charges will ever be refunded. I'd be fascinated to know whether the parts stores pocket this money or have to hand it over to the state (and then presumably claim it back from the state if and when they refund a customer), but it's really a moot point: it is effectively not a refundable deposit at all, but just an extra sales tax disguised to look like one.
And to cap it all, the guy at this place cheerfully admitted that they don't actually recycle car batteries at all: they just toss 'em in the landfill, presumably along with the worn-out tires and used oil they swap out, and all the other hazardous waste that their operation likely generates!
In November 2020, I bought a car battery from my local Pep Boys. Four and a half years and 142,384 miles later later, the battery is done. After replacing it (which I needed to do as soon as possible after it died, so from a different vendor), I went back to that place, with the original receipt, to get a refund on the $18 "core charge" (jargon meaning a deposit you have to pay when buying the battery, in order to encourage you to return it at EOL to be recycled). This location is no longer a parts store, I was told, just an oil change, smog check, and tire installation shop now, and so they can't refund me. Could I go to another Pep Boys location, I asked? Sorry, no: Pep Boys is a franchise operation, so other branches are separate businesses, and so cannot refund the charge. Can you recycle the battery anyways, I asked? No, but I can throw it in the trash for you if you like, he replied!
This strikes me as yet another "green new scam" operation, similar to the CRV racket that California runs, whereby you are supposed to get a few pennies back on bottles and cans that you return for recycling; but in reality, finding anywhere that will accept them is so difficult and requires such a long drive that obtaining that money is to all intents and purposes impossible. So basically, it's just another tax that the politicians gobble up.
By the same token, if the requirement to refund these "core charges" is easily circumvented by auto parts store chains operating as franchises, which go out of business and then reappear under different names regularly, then only a tiny proportion of these charges will ever be refunded. I'd be fascinated to know whether the parts stores pocket this money or have to hand it over to the state (and then presumably claim it back from the state if and when they refund a customer), but it's really a moot point: it is effectively not a refundable deposit at all, but just an extra sales tax disguised to look like one.
And to cap it all, the guy at this place cheerfully admitted that they don't actually recycle car batteries at all: they just toss 'em in the landfill, presumably along with the worn-out tires and used oil they swap out, and all the other hazardous waste that their operation likely generates!
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