upper waypoint

Reporter's Notes: Is This Recyclable?

Save ArticleSave Article
Failed to save article

Please try again

Say you consider yourself a top-notch recycler. You buy in bulk as much as possible, compost all your food scraps, can recite the recyclables bin allowable item list from memory. When trash day rolls around, what’s in your discounted black mini-can?

According to Sunset Scavenger Spokesman Robert Reed, San Francisco residents should have nothing but “film plastics” (like plastic bags from stores and dry cleaners) and polystyrene, aka Styrofoam.

But the life of a recycling ascetic ain’t easy. First of all, it means learning the rules of your particular community, since recycling practices vary depending on where you live. Probably, It means forgoing juice boxes, disposable diapers, complicated, multi-material packaging. It means you’ve scraped out your cat food cans (“contaminated” recyclables are often tossed). If you’re a paper shredder, you’ve put all the scraps into a paper bag labeled “shredded paper.” (Tiny pieces of paper are too hard to collect – sorters usually landfill them.) In short, you’ve earned a PhD in recycling. (And if you think that’s complicated, consider the Japanese.)

Some experts have argued that this is all too much trouble – that instead of aiming for zero waste, we should accept a certain amount of landfilling. Others say that the more citizens recycle, the more efficient the program becomes – hence the movement toward mandatory recycling. One point that nearly everyone seems to agree on is that products on the shelves must be designed to be more easily recyclable than they are today.

 

Is This Recyclable?

On that note, we interviewed two recycling experts: Mark Murray, director of Californians Against Waste, and Kurt Standen (no relation, amazingly to both of us), general manager of the Sacramento Recycling and Transfer Station. We came armed with six recycling stumpers, including a rubber boot, a juice box, and that much-maligned item of transport, the plastic bag. See what Standen and Murray had to say by clicking on the images below.

Sponsored



Listen to the Getting to Zero Waste radio report online.

37.741125 -122.375949

lower waypoint
next waypoint