We've had a number of stakeholders reach out to us, virtually the entirety of which have been supportive of this bill, a lot of them around the environmental components of this and the reduction of waste in landfills.
We know that a lot of incubators or groups that are trying to figure out new ways to do things are working on this kind of stuff. In fact, just down the street from where I am right now is a brand new incubator called Grand Innovations. Their almost entire focus is on dealing with what they call the “new waste”. People are throwing out, for the first time, a large flat-screen TV. How does the industry break that down? How does it separate the precious metals versus the recyclables to things that have to go in landfill? This is what they're trying to work on right now, things such as batteries, technology designed to sort and recycle small batteries. These are all things that I have talked to different groups about in terms of what they're working on.
What this bill would attempt to do is to reduce the incredible load of waste that is heading their way and try to manage that. This, of course, is going to be driven by the consumer, but again, it comes down to cost. If something is cheaper to repair than it is to replace, people will likely make that choice.