Food and Farm -
Recycling
back
<
21 Things You Didn't RECYCLE! Know
You Can
Garbage.
Americans produce more and
more of it every year, when
we need to be producing
less. Even the most
waste-conscious among us can
feel overwhelmed by the
amount of household waste
that goes beyond what
municipal recyclers and
compost bins can handle.
That?s why our editors spent
the summer of 2007
investigating the state of
waste management in our
country, putting this list
togther for you, explaining
how we can get serious about
the three R?s ? reducing,
reusing, and recycling ? and
divert more waste away from
landfills. (To download the
entire recycling issue of
the Quarterly, visit our
archives page.)
1. Appliances: Goodwill
accepts working appliances,
www.goodwill.org, or you can
contact the Steel Recycling
Institute to recycle them.
800/YES-1-CAN,
www.recycle-steel.org.
2. Batteries: Rechargeables
and single-use: Battery
Solutions, 734/467-9110,
www.batteryrecycling.com.
3. Cardboard boxes: Contact
local nonprofits and women?s
shelters to see if they can
use them. Or, offer up used
cardboard boxes at your
local Freecycle.org listserv
or on Craigslist.org for
others who may need them for
moving or storage. If your
workplace collects at least
100 boxes or more each
month,
UsedCardboardBoxes.com
accepts them for resale.
4. CDs/DVDs/Game Disks: Send
scratched music or computer
CDs, DVDs, and PlayStation
or Nintendo video game disks
to AuralTech for
refinishing, and they?ll
work like new: 888/454-3223,
www.auraltech.com.
5. Clothes: Wearable
clothes can go to your local
Goodwill outlet or shelter.
Donate wearable women?s
business clothing to Dress
for Success, which gives
them to low-income women as
they search for jobs,
212/532-1922,
www.dressforsuccess.org.
Offer unwearable clothes and
towels to local animal
boarding and shelter
facilities, which often use
them as pet bedding.
Consider holding a clothes
swap at your office, school,
faith congregation or
community center. Swap
clothes with friends and
colleagues, and save money
on a new fall wardrobe and
back-to-school clothes.
6. Compact fluorescent
bulbs: Take them to your
local IKEA store for
recycling: www.ikea.com.
7. Compostable
bio-plastics: You probably
won?t be able to compost
these in your home compost
bin or pile. Find a
municipal composter to take
them to at
www.findacomposter.com.
8. Computers and
electronics: Find the most
responsible recyclers, local
and national, at www.ban.org/pledge/Locations.html.
9. Exercise videos: Swap
them with others at
www.videofitness.com.
10. Eyeglasses: Your local
Lion?s Club or eye care
chain may collect these.
Lenses are reground and
given to people in need.
11. Foam packing: Your
local pack-and-ship store
will likely accept foam
peanuts for reuse. Or, call
the Plastic Loose Fill
Producers Council to find a
drop-off site: 800/828-2214.
For places to drop off foam
blocks for recycling,
contact the Alliance of Foam
Packaging Recyclers,
410/451-8340,
www.epspackaging.org/info.html
12. Ink/toner cartridges:
Recycleplace.com pays
$1/each.
13. Miscellaneous: Get your
unwanted items into the
hands of people who can use
them. Offer them up on your
local Freecycle.org or
Craigslist.org listserv, or
try giving them away at
Throwplace.com or giving or
selling them at iReuse.com.
iReuse.com will also help
you find a recycler, if
possible, when your items
have reached the end of
their useful lifecycle.
14. Oil: Find Used Motor Oil
Hotlines for each state:
202/682-8000,
www.recycleoil.org.
15. Phones: Donate cell
phones: Collective Good will
refurbish your phone and
sell it to someone in a
developing country:
770/856-9021,
www.collectivegood.com. Call
to Protect reprograms cell
phones to dial 911 and gives
them to domestic violence
victims:
www.donateaphone.com.
Recycle single-line phones:
Reclamere, 814/386-2927,
www.reclamere.com.
16. Sports equipment: Resell
or trade it at your local
Play It Again Sports outlet,
800/476-9249,
www.playitagainsports.com.
17. ?Technotrash?: Project
KOPEG offers an e-waste
recycling program that can
help you raise funds for
your organization. Use
Project KOPEG to recycle
iPods, MP3 players, cell
phones and chargers, digital
cameras, PDAs, palm pilots,
and more. Also, easily
recycle all of your CDs,
jewel cases, DVDs, audio and
video tapes, pagers,
rechargeable and single-use
batteries, PDAs, and
ink/toner cartridges with
GreenDisk?s Technotrash
program. For $30, GreenDisk
will send you a cardboard
box in which you can ship
them up to 70 pounds of any
of the above. Your fee
covers the box as well as
shipping and recycling fees.
800/305-GREENDISK,
www.greendisk.com.
18. Tennis shoes: Nike?s
Reuse-a-Shoe program turns
old shoes into playground
and athletic flooring.
www.nikereuseashoe.com. One
World Running will send
still-wearable shoes to
athletes in need in Africa,
Latin America, and Haiti.
www.oneworldrunning.com.
19. Toothbrushes and
razors: Buy a recycled
plastic toothbrush or razor
from Recycline, and the
company will take it back to
be recycled again into
plastic lumber. Recycline
products are made from used
Stonyfield Farms? yogurt
cups. 888/354-7296,
www.recycline.com.
20. Tyvek envelopes:
Quantities less than 25:
Send to Shirley Cimburke,
Tyvek Recycling Specialist,
5401 Jefferson Davis Hwy.,
Spot 197, Room 231,
Richmond, VA 23234.
Quantities larger than 25,
call 866/33-TYVEK.
21. Stuff you just can?t
recycle: When practical,
send such items back to the
manufacturer and tell them
they need to manufacture
products that close the
waste loop responsibly.
GOOD
PLANETS ARE HARD TO FIND !
PLEASE
TAKE THE EXTRA MINUTE !
|
|
|