A few little tips can help make recycling in Lane County a breeze.Byline: Recycling recycling, the process of recovering and reusing waste products—from household use, manufacturing, agriculture, and business—and thereby reducing their burden on the environment. By Pete Chism For The Register-Guard An estimated 78 percent of material that is dumped in to Short Mountain Landfill can be recycled in Lane County. Many community members believe the material going into the landfill is a lost commodity. The resources and potential jobs that the recovery of these resources could potentially create are lost in the garbage can. In 1992, the average Oregonian tossed 4.2 pounds of material into their garbage can a day; today, that number remains unchanged. After more than 10 years, we have seen an increase in the recovery of material, but our landfills continue to grow at the same rate. Recycling is the easiest way to pitch in. Here are some tips on recycling in your home. Rinse containers right after they are emptied, so they don't get crusty crust·y adj. crust·i·er, crust·i·est 1. Having, resembling, or being a crust. 2. Rough or surly in manner. See Synonyms at gruff. or moldy moldy animal feed overgrown with fungus; the feed may be harvested and stored or be still in the ground. moldy corn disease see leukoencephalomalacia, fusariummoniliforme. . (It also cuts back on ants.) Start a small recycling collection area in your house. I have a grocery bag (reused of course) for paper, a grocery bag for bottles, tubs, jars and cans. and a bucket (with a lid) for food scraps. Designate a larger outside collection area, so as the bags in the house fill, you can empty them in the outside containers. When pick-up day comes, take the containers to the street. Once you get your system down, you won't waste a lot of time, and you'll gain satisfaction knowing that you've contributed to the greater good. Once people get hooked on recycling, some tend to want to recycle re·cy·cle tr.v. re·cy·cled, re·cy·cling, re·cy·cles 1. To put or pass through a cycle again, as for further treatment. 2. To start a different cycle in. 3. a. everything. They say, "But this window is glass. Why can't I put it in the glass container?" I applaud these efforts, but ambition sometimes creates problems for the recycling collectors and processors. There are guidelines guidelines, n.pl a set of standards, criteria, or specifications to be used or followed in the performance of certain tasks. about what can and can't be recycled. If you're not sure about a material you would like to recycle, call your hauler or Lane County Waste Management at 682-4120 to see if it can be recycled. Here are some common materials that end up in recycling containers that don't belong. Soiled paper: Make sure that the paper you recycle is just paper. Paper contaminated contaminated, v 1. made radioactive by the addition of small quantities of radioactive material. 2. made contaminated by adding infective or radiographic materials. 3. an infective surface or object. with food or oil, like most pizza boxes pizza box - [Sun] The largish thin box housing the electronics in (especially Sun) desktop workstations, so named because of its size and shape and the dimpled pattern that looks like air holes. , goes in the garbage. I usually rip off the top and recycle the unsoiled part. Used tissues belong in the trash as well; they not only contaminates the recycling process, but they also lead to heath concerns. Plastic bags and lids: Most grocery stores collect this material and return it to their distributor, where it gets recycled into other plastic products, such as plastic/wood composite lumber lumber, term for timber that has been cut into boards for use as a building material. The major steps in producing lumber involve logging (the felling and preparation of timber for shipment to sawmills), sawing the logs into boards, grading the boards according to . Due to market availability, plastic lids and bags are not collected at Lane County transfer sites. Windows, light bulbs and ceramic glass: These types of glass contaminate con·tam·i·nate v. 1. To make impure or unclean by contact or mixture. 2. To expose to or permeate with radioactivity. con·tam·i·nant n. the recycling process for container glass. Just remember, if it's not a glass container, don't leave it at the curb or at a drop-off site. Lane County Waste Management also is working on improving recycling awareness through the Master Recycler Program. The fourth Master Recycler class is under way and the fifth will start in the fall. To request an application, call Lorraine at 682-2059. The increase in waste generation has prompted Lane County to launch the second phase of the waste prevention campaign, Less is Best. Less is Best provides more creative and simple ways to reduce waste generation. For Less is Best waste prevention tips, check out our Web site at: www.lanecounty.org/ PW_WMD WMD white muscle disease. _Recycle/ As the recycling industry continues to grow, more opportunities to recycle await us on the horizon ... stay tuned. Pete Chism is a waste management specialist with Lane County. This column is provided by Lane County Recycling. |
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