Three Humble-area retailers are collecting used i9500
S4 cell phones and cell-phone accessories to be recycled to provide
calling cards for military service members stationed overseas.Cell Phones for
Soldiers, is a 501(3) organization that was launched in 2004 by Massachusetts
teenagers Robbie and Brittany Bergquist. It started as a way to show the
Bergquist family's appreciation for service personnel.
The program
collects cell phones that are sent to a recycling center in Ohio.The recycling
center will, depending on the condition of the phone, strip the phone of the
small metal components to be reused in other phones, or the phones will be
refurbished to be resold in other markets.Brittany Bergquist said the type of
cell phones they collect are typically the older flip phones that are quickly
disappearing from the market, but they will take all kinds.
"Any type of
phone is acceptable," she said. "Even bag phones, car phones and those old brick
phones from when cell phones first came out."Bergquist said the phones don't
have to be in working condition to be accepted.They have accepted phones that
are water-logged, have been run over or smashed beyond repair.
"We accept
all of them," she said.The money derived from the Ohio recycling center for
those old cell phones is used to purchase calling cards that are sent to the
troops overseas.The inspiration for Cell Phones for Soldiers came as a result of
a news story that Brittany and Robbie Bergquist had seen in their hometown about
a soldier who'd amassed an $8,000 cell-phone bill to speak with loved ones from
his overseas location.
"It was the first time we'd ever heard that the
troops had to pay for their own phone calls home," she said."We knew we wanted
to do something to make a difference."Their first hope was to pay off the
soldier's i9500 S4
1:1 cell phone bill, but when they realized they could do more to
help, they became inspired.DSsSed2ed
"We knew this was our calling," she
said.Calling cards can be requested by the military service member's family or
through the service members command by contacting Cell Phones for Soldiers
through their website.Bergquist said Cell phones for Soldiers has sent out
requests for as many as 5,000 calling cards at one time, which were distributed
by unit chaplains or commanders who often work tirelessly to maintain good
morale among the troops.
"It makes us feel good that we can support our
troops and really help our heroes," she said.Since the launch of the nonprofit,
it has provided 2.5 million phone cards, which equates to 181 million minutes of
talk time.The program has also recycled more about 10.8 million cell phones,
reducing their impact on landfills throughout the United States.
"This is
what Cell Phones for Soldiers has become, and it's incredible to have touched so
many lives," Bergquist said.Through July 31, the PostNet locations will be
collecting used cell phones during regular business hours.
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