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Recycling on the rise after new program implementation
By Chris Fitzgerald
KP News
According to “Earth Matters,” the
newsletter published by Pierce County Public Works and
Utilities’ Environmental Services, those big, square
recycling bins residents who subscribe to garbage
services have been using for almost a year are making a
difference at area landfills.
Steve Womback of the county’s solid
waste division said in an interview that in this first
year alone, 37,000 tons of recyclable materials have
been kept out of landfills and are now returning into
the market as new products.
Prior to changing to the one-cart
program, recycling had faced a downward trend
countywide; the three-bin-plus-bag system was just too
bunglesome for busy households, officials said.
According to county statistics, after one full year of
the new program, residents are recycling 70 percent more
materials overall, paper recycling is up 82 percent, and
container recycling (which includes aluminum, plastics,
steel and glass) has increased 27 percent.
The new system, like the garbage
pickup service itself, is voluntary in Pierce County.
Residents who opt for garbage pickup automatically sign
up for recycling, although they are not required to
recycle. The motivation to participate in recycling
comes into play through a small rate deduction ($1 per
month) and a rebate system (based on values of
recyclables) built into the program, regulated by the
state Utilities and Transportation Commission.
According to Womback, county costs
to provide the service amounts to $4.75 per
participating household per month, including rent on the
carts, route pickup and preliminary resorting of
recyclables. Garbage haulers are required to return 70
percent of recycle earnings back to the customers, based
on a retroactive annual audit conducted by the UTC every
fall. This is why, on statements from the local
provider, American Disposal Co., participants see a line
that reads “value of recyclables” beside a figure that
is deducted from the amount owed. The annual audit is
coming up in November, so the value will be slightly
different on upcoming statements; the amount is
determined by the value of recyclables to the secondary
market to which the provider sells.
Glass is consistently sold at a
loss, and easily contaminates other recycled resources,
which keeps it out of the curbside recycle program, the
county says. Drop-off recycling centers, not subsidized
by the curbside program, accept glass (and also sell it
at a loss), but make up the difference in the value of
recyclable newspapers and magazines. By sorting
according to color for glass, and kind for paper, users
of drop-off recycling centers help keep these facilities
self-supporting and open.
Womback credits his staff for their
care in listening to public concerns and desires to
learn more about how to both recycle and become
“greener” at home. Cheryl Mizener, an office assistant
in the solid waste division, has had difficulty keeping
up with the demand for worm composting classes, a
relatively new offering by the department, and held
primarily at customer request. She says the last time
they were offered, she received about 95 calls to
register (classes seat 30 people); so far, as a result
the recent newsletter, she has fielded more than 400
calls for the classes. Of those, she said, about 50
percent consistently sign up. The three-hour class is
free without materials, and costs $30 for those who’d
like a bin and red worm “starters” included. The county
would like to know if participants are actually using
their new skills, bins and worms, and plans to begin
surveying former students from the first year.
Classes are booked through February
2007, and Mizener “keeps adding more classes as the
calls keep coming in.” She notes their worm supplier,
The Worms’ Wrangler, has told her he cannot harvest the
critters fast enough for the demand. According to “Barry
the Wrangler,” “there is a worm shortage nationwide,”
and this is a good thing, Mizener says.
Womback and his staff are so
pleased at customer response, they are looking to begin
a similar class on generalized composting of leaves and
gardening refuse. Homeowners have become so accustomed
to recycling these kinds of debris that county
facilities for yard waste recycling, designed to
accommodate 29 tons, routinely accept 56 tons. Most of
this is processed into “PREP” (Pierce County recycled
products) and wholesaled to landscapers and other
commercial customers. “It’s pure organic,” Womback says,
“and most likely what people see around newly planted
trees in parks, developments, and around new buildings.”
He says that although the 2007
permanent burn ban does not apply to the Key Peninsula,
his division is interested in assisting people to find
ways other than burning to dispose of yard waste,
land-clearing debris and remodeling/construction refuse.
Taking usable but unwanted or outgrown items to a
landfill is also not an option the solid waste division
encourages. The agency wants people to think of other
disposal resources, like second-hand stores,
donation-based groups, and a resource the county has
created, a Website where individuals can sell or offer
goods for reuse:
www.2good2toss.com.
©Copyright 2005-2008, Key Peninsula
News, all rights reserved.
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