Visitors are encouraged to review updated parking options due to construction.
Clean, dry corrugated cardboard is not accepted in the landfill. Corrugated cardboard has three or more layers of paper with a rippled middle layer.
If your household needs to start recycling:
If you’re a business owner or a contractor that needs to start recycling:
Clean, dry corrugated cardboard is not accepted in the landfill, per Lincoln Municipal Code 8.32.040. Corrugated cardboard is defined as three or more layers of paper with a rippled, or corrugated, middle layer. Corrugated cardboard that is soiled with food waste or is completely wet is accepted in the landfill.
Prior to the corrugated cardboard disposal ban, corrugated cardboard made up about 9.5% of the garbage that collectors took to the landfill. It was the largest single recyclable material disposed of in the landfill. Cardboard has both a high commodity value and is in high demand by paper mills.
Related info: Recyclables Collection Sites Recycling Collectors and Processors
All Lincoln and Lancaster County residents and businesses who have their garbage collected and delivered to the landfill are affected by the ban.
The City’s recyclables collection sites are provided for Lincoln and Lancaster County residents. Businesses should contact recycling collectors to subscribe to services, or take corrugated cardboard and other recyclables directly to recycling processors. In some circumstances, businesses can be compensated for their recyclable material.
Related info: Recycling Collectors and Processors
Garbage collectors are prohibited from placing recyclable corrugated cardboard in the trucks they send to the landfill. Landfill staff monitor the waste in vehicles and require any recyclable corrugated cardboard to be removed. Residents and businesses must ensure that clean, dry corrugated cardboard is not placed in trash containers.
No. Lincoln and Lancaster County residents will not be ticketed by the City for failure to recycle corrugated cardboard. Residents should check with their garbage collectors to confirm whether they will be charged additional fees if recyclable corrugated cardboard is found in their trash.
No. Landlords and businesses will not be ticketed by the City for failure to recycle corrugated cardboard. They should contact their garbage collectors to confirm whether they will be charged additional fees if corrugated cardboard is found in their trash containers. Residents of apartments whose buildings do not offer recycling programs can take their recyclables to one of the many recyclables collection sites for no fee.
No. There is no fee to recycle cardboard at recyclables collection sites. To find a site nearest you, please see the recyclables collection sites map.
*For recycling collection service at a residence or business, the cost varies. Check with your garbage collector or a recycling service for pricing.
Yes. Pizza boxes that have pizza grease stains can be recycled, as long as there is no solid food residue.
No. The wood or Styrofoam must be separated from the corrugated cardboard before recycling.
Recycling promotes greater environmental stewardship in the community, delays the development for a new landfill, conserves resources, creates new jobs and improves the local economy. The sustainability and social responsibility culture within a community are increasingly important to its growth and economic expansion.
Lincoln was the first community in Nebraska to prohibit disposal of corrugated cardboard in landfills. Other regions with similar cardboard disposal laws include Linn County (Cedar Rapids), Iowa; Iowa City, Iowa; Fort Collins, Colorado; Sioux Falls, South Dakota; California, Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, Wisconsin and Vermont.
PDF Version(PDF, 655KB)