City eWaste: A Franchise Tackling the Growing E-Waste Crisis
Electronic waste (commonly called eWaste) is one of the fastest growing waste streams globally, and the numbers are stark. According to the 2024 Global E-Waste Monitor, the world generated about 62 million metric tons of eWaste in 2022 — up roughly 82% from 2010. Only about 22.3% of that was documented as being formally collected and recycled in an environmentally sound manner. If current trends hold, global e-waste is expected to rise to 82 million metric tons by 2030. Against that backdrop, City eWaste is emerging as a dynamic model for how smaller and mid-sized municipalities and businesses can more responsibly manage their electronic waste streams.
From Humble Beginnings to a National Franchise
City eWaste is a company based in Franklin, Tennessee. It was formerly known as “Franklin eWaste.” Under its rebranded name, City eWaste has begun offering a franchise model, aiming to scale its services to many more U.S. communities.
The company specializes in providing electronic waste recycling for municipalities, businesses, and residents. Its services include secure drop-off stations, assistance organizing collection events, container services for eWaste, certified downstream recycling (using R2-certified recyclers), secure data destruction, and issuing certificates of recycling.
One of their recent projects is in Williamson County, Tennessee. City eWaste has helped establish five secure drop-off stations in convenience centers in Nolensville, Grassland, Fairview, College Grove, plus at the county’s Solid Waste Department. These are free for residents, significantly lowering a barrier to proper disposal
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Matthew Rogers: Founder, Visionary, Local Leader
At the helm of City eWaste is Matthew Rogers, its founder and CEO. Rogers is a Franklin, Tennessee native (described as a “7th generation Franklinite”) whose interest in electronics and recycling started on a small scale but with a long-term vision.
The origin story is modest but telling: back in 2018, Rogers picked up some rain-soaked servers from a yard sale, salvaged parts, learned by trial and error (and YouTube), and sold the most valuable components. That tinkering laid the foundation for what would become a business with mission and scale. Under his leadership:
- The company rebranded from Franklin eWaste to City eWaste in mid-2024 to better reflect its broader ambitions.
- It launched a franchise model aimed specifically at “mid-market” municipalities and small to medium companies — those who often lack affordable, reliable electronics recycling or IT asset disposition services.
- Created the motto “Our Purpose is Repurpose”.
- He has emphasized keeping the business rooted in community: local drop off, outreach, education, transparency, and making responsible disposal easy and affordable.
In Rogers’s words, after 7 years of operating and refining in Franklin, the company seeks to “write the playbook” for how smaller communities can address eWaste responsibly without needing the budgets or infrastructure of large metro areas.
Why City eWaste Matters: Bridging Gaps in E-Waste Management
Given the gap between eWaste generation and proper recycling (globally only about one-quarter is formally handled), there is a real need for scalable, trustworthy, community-oriented solutions.
Here are a few areas where City eWaste is making a difference:
- Accessibility: Creating local drop-off points and free services makes it easy for households to dispose of electronics properly rather than letting them accumulate in closets or risk improper disposal.
- Security and environmental protection: By using certified recyclers, ensuring secure data destruction, and recovering valuable materials (metals, plastics), City eWaste helps reduce pollution, conserve resources, and lower the environmental footprint.
- Franchising for scale: Many large eWaste recyclers focus only on big, high-volume clients or urban areas, leaving smaller municipalities underserved. City eWaste is using an innovative franchise structure to replicate the model in many communities, helping fill that gap.
- 3 Distinct Revenue Streams From: Reselling, Secondary Metals, Precious Metals and waste services wrapped into one great Franchise Business.
The Stakes: Numbers That Won’t Be Ignored
To underscore why what City eWaste is doing is urgent, consider:
- In 2022, 62 million metric tons of eWaste were generated globally.
- Only 22.3% of that was formally collected and recycled.
- By 2030, the global eWaste stream is forecast to reach 82 million metric tons annually.
- In the U.S., recent data (as of 2022) show over 15 billion pounds (i.e., more than 7 million metric tons) of eWaste generated annually.
These figures show that unless more collection, recycling infrastructure, and community-driven programs scale up, much of this toxic, valuable waste will go unhandled—leading to harmful environmental and human health impacts, loss of recoverable materials, and missed economic opportunities.
Looking Forward: Potential & Challenges
City eWaste has momentum, but scaling eWaste solutions is complex. Key challenges include:
- Logistics & cost: collecting, transporting, processing many small sources is often more expensive per unit than handling large volumes.
- Ensuring quality control across franchisees so that data destruction, environmental standards, and safety remain high.
- Regulatory hurdles: different states and local governments have varying laws about eWaste, hazardous materials, electronics disposal, etc.
- City eWaste has solved these challenges and will continue its growth while maintaining integrity and community focus. It is the first Franchised eWaste Business and is setting the standard for how to close the gap between eWaste generated and responsibly recycled.
- With global eWaste rising at alarming rates, every community needs options to handle the electronics they discard. Matthew Rogers’s City eWaste is responding to that need by building a company rooted in locality, accountability, and franchise-scale expansion. By helping mid-sized municipalities, businesses, and residents manage electronics responsibly, City eWaste isn’t just part of the solution — for many areas, thanks to an innovative Franchise model, it will be the solution!
About the Author
Joe Fox has spent his professional career as a Senior Executive owning, operating, buying, and selling multi-site businesses. He believes entrepreneurship is a great vehicle to financial independence and career satisfaction. Joe is based in Nashville, TN and has helped startup businesses all over the US & Canada and has won numerous prestigious awards throughout his career. Contact Joe at joefox@thefranchiseconsultingcompany.com.








