Your recycling skills determine whether your entire load is recycled. If you mix the wrong materials with your recyclables, they contaminate the load and it ends up in the landfill. Below are the top five problem items, and tips to help you recycle right.
These are the #1 recycling foul! Putting recyclables in plastic bags and mixing in loose bags can cause sorting machines to malfunction, shut down or catch fire.
Recycle plastic bags at grocery stores and other retail collection sites.
Not all glass is recyclable. Do not recycle window glass, drinking glasses, mirrors, dishes and cups, vases or ceramics.
Take glass to a public recycling collection site or ask your collector for a specific list of accepted items.
Food and liquids left in recyclable containers contaminate the entire load.
Placing non-numbered plastics, including styrofoam, in the recycling bin increases the cost of the recycling process and collection services.
Not sure if it’s recyclable? When it doubt, throw it out!
Placing discarded clothing in the recycling bin increases the cost of the recycling process and collection services.
Items that are contaminated with concentrated pesticides (i.e. agriculture pesticides) should go to Lincoln's Hazardous Waste Center. Visit haztogo.com for more information.
Recyclables are collected in curbside bins, apartment or business recycling containers or at public recycling sites.
Private recycling collectors haul the materials to recycling processors for sorting before they are shipped to manufacturers. Ask your collector for a specific list of accepted items.
Incoming loads are scanned and sorted.
Companies use the non-contaminated recyclables to make new products, reducing the need to use raw natural resources.
Recyclables are sent to the landfill if they are mixed with contaminants — plastic bags, broken glass, food waste, non-recyclable plastics, clothing and other textiles.
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