Friday, January 4, 2008

Recycling Incentives

From experience, recycling is not the same from state to state and probably just as different from town to town. Our experience in Chicago and Florida were nearly identical, just rinse and put all items together in one bin. But in Colorado, this is not the case. (see previous post)

There was one difference between Florida and Chicago. Our town in Chicago had an interesting recycling system that built in a financial incentive for recycling. Each bag of trash required a $2.?? Sticker you bought at the grocery store, but recyclables were free. We made it a point to recycle absolutely everything and could sometimes make it by with only 1 or 2 bags of paid trash. We’ve had to be a bit more altruistic in our motivations for recycling here, which probably contributed to my procrastination in finding out the rules in our new town. In Illinois, new residents were sent a brochure explaining the system, but Colorado trash is all privately managed, and I wonder if the rules are different for each company. With our current company, we didn’t receive any information about recycling (that I know of). Technically, we get charged as a one can family or a two can family. Recycling helps to stay a one can family (though we could just buy a bigger can since ours is small).

Recycling Transitions

It’s been three or four garbage days now that I’ve been recycling in Colorado. When we moved in, I was sad we left our recycling bin in Illinois, and decided to go to Home Depot right away to get a new one. Assuming that recycling was the same nationally, I didn’t think this would be an issue.

When we got to the HD, we went straight to the back where the trash cans are and scanned the huge shelves, looking for the friendly blue bins with the white recycling logo. None. We looked at each other quizzically and found a woman with an orange apron. “Where are the recycling bins?” we asked. She said, “Well, if we have them, they would be here, but they aren’t a big seller here, so it doesn’t look like we have any.”

What could we say but, “Oh.”?

It was a bit confusing and not just a little humorous to us that in a state where they don’t use salt on ice to preserve the environment, a recycling bin could not be found in the Home Depot…because there wasn’t a market for them!

So we continued to throw recyclables in the trash. First the excuse was that we were in transition, and then it was the pregnancy and newborn stage. Finally, after seeing the recycling truck go by the house for two and a half years, I called our trash company and had a pleasant 5 minute conversation with the woman at our trash company. She simply and politely explained the rules, and in doing so, raised my respect for Colorado tremendously. All that I needed to do was to separate glass, cans, paper and plastics (1 and 2 only). I should put them each out in a separate bag, paper or plastic, and the trash people would put them in the recycling part of their truck. No need for a plastic bin that would itself need to be recycled someday, just put recyclables in something recyclable and you’re good to go.

Paper bags seem to be easier to use for separating items. So, this whole process has made me finally bold enough to answer “paper” to the “paper or plastic” question at the grocery store, though I’ve noticed that the baggers aren’t well trained in how to pack them anymore.