I have no recycling, and I don't have a car to schlep stuff elsewhere so, much as I hate it, everything pretty much goes in the trash. I do better on the reduce and reuse side though.
Natter 66: Get Your Kicks.
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, pandas, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
Chicago needs to STEP up!
We did have recycling. But then it went away. I forget why.
For those who have municipal composting/green bin services, how does that work (i.e., what's included? is it mandatory? included in any normal solid waste fees or extra? how frequent? and, you know, stuff)? Here, we have curbside yard waste pickup (which the city turns into compost and/or mulch) in addition to the garbage and recycling bins, but food waste composting is left up to you.
(Y'all, this whole conversation is SO MUCH MORE INTERESTING than the work I'm not doing right now.)
The city will only pick up recycling or trash for buildings with 4 units or less. Anything larger has to take care of it on their own.
Tommy, [link]
Cool. I'll ask my building maintenance guy about it.
In Seattle it's mandatory for homes and condos, I think...recycling for apartments, but I don't think they enforce composting for apartments--I know that I didn't, in my apartment, and there weren't any bins for it. They pick it up once a week with the trash (they pick up recycling every other week, but the bin is HUGE). They charge you different amounts based on how big your garbage can is, so it's in your best interest to recycle and compost as much as you can.
Link to what can be composted: [link]
They charge you different amounts based on how big your garbage can is, so it's in your best interest to recycle and compost as much as you can.
Smart. Money always talks. San Bruno did the same years ago and it really helps.
It was news last year that SF was going to start fining people for putting coffee grounds in the trash.
I would have to pay extra for single-stream recycling with the county, which pisses me off because a properly run recycling program that encourages people to recycle can more than pay for itself. I therefore collect all the recyclables and take them to the giant recycling facility at the DeKalb Farmers Market when I go.
I spend parties pointedly moving recyclables from the trash and trash from the recyclables. This is one reason I'd just as soon people didn't "help."