Recycle your cardboard--or else!For the first time, the Massachusetts Department of Environmental Protection (MassDEP) has reported enforcement actions taken against violators of a ban against disposing of certain recyclable materials. Among those cited for violating a ban on throwing out recyclable materials are both waste haulers and retailers and other generators of old corrugated cor·ru·gate v. cor·ru·gat·ed, cor·ru·gat·ing, cor·ru·gates v.tr. To shape into folds or parallel and alternating ridges and grooves. v.intr. containers (OCC OCC See: Options Clearing Corporation OCC See Options Clearing Corporation (OCC). ) and other recyclables. Waste hauling companies cited were: Allied Disposal of Quincy; BFI BFI - brute force and ignorance Waste Systems of Revere Revere, city (1990 pop. 42,786), Suffolk co., E Mass., a residential suburb of Boston, on Massachusetts Bay; settled c.1630, set off from Chelsea and named for Paul Revere 1871, inc. as a city 1914. and Yarmouth; Frade's Disposal of New Bedford New Bedford, city (1990 pop. 99,922), seat of Bristol co., SE Mass., at the mouth of the Acushnet River on Buzzard's Bay; settled 1640, set off from Dartmouth 1787, inc. as a city 1847. and Waste Management of South Hadley and Stoughton. Retailers and other commercial generators cited included: American Red Cross American Red Cross: see Red Cross. of Dedham; Building 19 of Lynn; Ethan Allen Furniture of Bellingham; Friendly Fruit of New Bedford; Home Depot stores in Hyannis and Wareham; Lindenmeyr Munroe of Franklin; Westfield State College WSC was founded in 1838 in Barre, Massachusetts as a normal school. WSC was the first coeducational normal school in the United States. Since the 1970's, the school has expanded its program to include criminal justice, mass communications, regional planning, political science, urban of Westfield; and Wright Line of Worcester. The ban could also be used to scrutinize C&D recycling operations and contractors in the state, as concrete and wood are also materials on the banned for disposal list. "A number of well-known Massachusetts businesses and institutions continue to throw away large volumes of easy-to-recycle cardboard in spite of a state ban on its disposal, savings on disposal costs and its value as a commodity," a news release from the agency states. "Continued disposal of recyclables is a needless waste of money, raw material and in-state disposal capacity," says MassDEP Acting Commissioner Arleen O'Donnell. "Diverting material from trash dumpsters to recycling bins saves everyone money. Recycling creates feedstock for companies that manufacture products with recycled content and employ thousands of people across the Commonwealth." MassDEP estimates that more than 1.5 million tons of paper products are being disposed of in landfills and incinerators across the state every year at an average cost of $70 per ton, signifying a needless expense of up to $105 million for businesses and communities. As part of a statewide campaign to cut down on continued disposal of cardboard and other "easy-to-recycle" materials, MassDEP sent inspectors to a number of solid waste facilities during the fall to monitor compliance with a state regulation that prohibits throwing those materials away. One of every five truckloads of solid waste that inspectors observed were found to be in violation of state bans on disposal of large amounts of recyclables. One-third of the violations involved excessive amounts of cardboard: up to 40 percent of the material being thrown away, in some cases, according to MassDEP. Each violator has been issued a notice of noncompliance noncompliance failure of the owner to follow instructions, particularly in administering medication as prescribed; a cause of a less than expected response to treatment. noncompliance with the waste ban regulation and is also required to draw up a plan to stop the disposal of banned materials and submit the plan to MassDEP for approval. |
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