[Adopted 12-19-1988 by Ord. No. 36-88[1] (Ch. XXIV of the Revised General Ordinances); amended
in its entirety 4-21-2008 by Ord. No. 04-08]
[1]
Editor's Note: This ordinance also repealed
former Ch. XXIV, Mandatory Recycling, adopted 12-16-1985 by Ord. No.
44-85.
As used in this article, the following terms
shall have the meanings indicated:
Construction/demolition debris.
Any nonresidential building or establishment, including but
not limited to those used for industrial purposes, retail, wholesale,
dining, offices, professional services, shipping and receiving areas
and cafeterias.
A combining of nonputrescible source-separated recyclable
materials for the purpose of recycling.
Those materials designated within the Morris County District
Solid Waste Management Plan to be source-separated for the purpose
of recycling. These materials include:
Aluminum cans: cans made from aluminum that
was manufactured to hold a serving of a beverage. Specifically omitted
from this definition are aluminum foil and aluminum pie plates.
Glass bottles and jars: bottles and jars made
from glass, including clear, brown and green glass. "Bottle" is defined
as a receptacle having a narrow neck and a mouth that can be corked
or capped. "Jar" is defined as a wide-mouthed container that can be
capped. Caps and lids not included. Specifically omitted from this
definition are drinking glasses, windows, mirrors, light bulbs, and
anything made of Pyrex® or ceramic.
Plastic bottles (coded 1 and 2): plastic bottles
coded to indicate that they are comprised of the specific types of
plastic compounds (polymers) known as "polyethylene terephthalate
(PETE)" or high-density polyethylene (HDPE). See symbols below. "Bottle"
is defined as a receptacle having a narrow neck and a mouth that can
be corked or capped. Caps and lids not included. Any item made of
plastic that is not a bottle, and any plastic bottle without one of
the symbols shown below, is specifically omitted from this definition.
Empty bottles which contained hazardous materials, such as motor oil,
antifreeze, etc., should not be recycled.
Steel (tin) cans: an airtight container for
the distribution or storage of goods, composed of thin, usually ferrous,
metal. Examples are soup cans and tuna fish cans.
Newspaper: a publication containing news, information
and advertising, usually printed on low-cost paper called "newsprint."
Newspaper may include glossy inserts which come with the paper, dependent
upon the market conditions at the time.
Corrugated cardboard: shipping containers made
with kraft paper linerboard and corrugated medium.
Mixed paper: various categories of recyclable
paper, including, but not limited to, white and colored paper used
in printers, photocopiers and fax machines, white and colored ledger
paper, carbonless copy paper, construction paper, undeliverable mail,
mailed promotional letters/advertisements/circulars, magazines, catalogues,
envelopes, soft cover books.
Leaves: vegetative material, typically generated
in the autumn when they fall from trees and then are raked from residents'
and/or commercial lawns.
Grass clippings: vegetative material generated
when grass (lawns) are cut.
Brush: branches, woody plants and other similar
vegetative material. Leaves and grass do not constitute brush.
Natural wood waste: logs, stumps, branches and
other wood tree parts. Dimensional lumber is omitted from inclusion
in this definition.
Oil-contaminated soil: nonhazardous soil that
contains petroleum hydrocarbons (gasoline, diesel, kerosene, jet fuel,
No. 4 and No. 6 heating oils and certain other refinery products including
coal tar). This type of soil shall be determined to be nonhazardous
in accordance with the standards set forth in N.J.A.C. 7:26.
Used motor oil: motor oil from motor vehicles,
lawn mowers, boats, etc., which has served its intended useful purpose.
Lead-acid batteries: storage batteries in which
the electrodes are grids of lead containing lead oxides that change
in composition during charging and discharging, and the electrolyte
is dilute sulfuric acid. These include starting batteries such as
car batteries that deliver a short burst of high power to start the
engine. In addition, they may include deep cell batteries found on
boats or campers used to power accessories like trolling motors, winches
or lights.
Hazardous dry cell batteries: rechargeable batteries,
such as nickel-cadmium, nickel-iron, nickel metal hydride, lithium
ion, small sealed lead acid, etc. These are often used as substitutes
for nonrechargeable batteries in standard sizes such as AAA, AA, C,
D and 9V. Rechargeable batteries are commonly found in cordless tools,
cellular and cordless phones, laptop computers, cameras, remote controls,
toys, etc. Also included in this definition are nonrechargeable batteries
that are hazardous as defined by the Resource Conservation Recovery
Act (RCRA), regardless of the RCRA exclusion of household waste from
the definition of "hazardous waste" pursuant to 40 CFR 261.4(b). Nonrechargeable,
hazardous batteries include older alkaline and carbon zinc batteries
as well as silver oxide, mercury and magnesium button-type batteries,
etc. It should be noted that domestically manufactured alkaline and
carbon zinc nonrechargeable batteries made after circa 1994 eliminated
mercury content to the point that they should not be considered RCRA
hazardous and therefore are not included in this material category.
Metal appliances: appliances composed predominantly
of metal, and may include stoves, washing machines and dryers, for
example, if the appliance is predominantly metal. Also included are
air conditioners, refrigerators and dehumidifiers if they are predominantly
metal. If these appliances on the latter list contain refrigerants
that are prohibited by the Clean Air Act from being knowingly vented,
the refrigerant must be recovered accordingly.
Whole tires: tires that are whole, not chipped
into small pieces. (NOTE: Tires are allowed to be recycled and/or
incinerated for energy recovery.)
A computer central processing unit and associated hardware,
including keyboards, modems, printers, scanners and fax machines;
a cathode ray tube, a cathode ray tube device, a flat panel display
or similar video display device with a screen that is greater than
four inches measured diagonally and that contains one or more circuit
boards, including a television, and cell phones.
An established organization or foundation dedicated to public
service or culture, including but not limited to religious, educational,
health care and governmental establishments.
Any building or structure, or complex of buildings, in which
three or more dwelling units are owner-occupied or rented or leased,
or offered for rental or lease, for residential purposes (see N.J.S.A.
13:1E-99.13a) and shall include hotels, motels, or other guest houses
serving transient or seasonal guests as those terms are defined under
Subsection (j) of Section 3 of the Hotel and Multiple Dwelling Law,
P.L. 1967, c. 76 (N.J.S.A. 55:13A-1 et seq.).
The person or persons appointed by the municipal governing
body to fulfill the requirements of the Morris County Solid Waste
Management Plan and the New Jersey Statewide Mandatory Source Separation
and Recycling Act and those rules and regulations promulgated therefor.
The person or persons named by the municipality who shall
fulfill the responsibilities with respect to recycling enforcement
coordination detailed in the March 2007 Morris County Solid Waste
Management Plan Amendment Section 8.6. This person may be the same
person designated as the Municipal Recycling Coordinator.
All solid waste generated at residential, commercial, and
institutional establishments within the boundaries of the Township
of Washington which is not bulky waste or construction and demolition
debris.
Person or group of persons wishing to collect recyclable
materials and registered with the Department of Public Works.
Those materials which would otherwise become solid waste
and which may be collected, separated, or processed and returned to
the economic mainstream in the form of raw materials or products.
Any person who owns, leases and/or occupies dwellings within
the municipality, including those in multifamily dwellings and/or
single-family developments.
Includes all garbage and rubbish normally placed at the curb
at residential and nonresidential properties in the Township of Washington
for regularly scheduled collection by private haulers. As used in
this chapter, "solid waste" is deemed to be nonrecyclable material.
Recyclable materials which are separated at the point of
generation by the generator thereof from solid waste for the purposes
of recycling.
The process by which recyclable materials are separated at
the point of generation by the generator thereof from solid waste
for the purposes of recycling.
As set forth in N.J.S.A. 13:1E-99.13b(4)(c),
the Township of Washington accepts the goal of fifty-percent recycling
of municipal solid waste by 2015 and shall monitor its level of recycling
and solid waste disposal and shall strive to achieve the recycling
of 50% of the municipal solid waste generated within its borders.
Mandatory source separation. It shall be mandatory for all persons who are owners, tenants, or occupants of residential and nonresidential premises, which shall include but not be limited to retail and other commercial locations, as well as government, schools and other institutional locations within the Township of Washington to separate designated recyclable materials from all solid waste. Designated recyclable materials shall be deposited separate and apart from other solid waste generated by the owners, tenants, or occupants of such premises. This shall be done in the manner set forth in § 168-4.
A.
Residential establishments.
(1)
Residents shall separate all designated materials
from all other solid waste and shall segregate newspaper, corrugated
cardboard, mixed paper, aluminum cans, glass bottles and jars, plastic
bottles (coded 1 and 2), steel (tin) cans, leaves, grass clippings,
brush, natural wood waste, used motor oil, metal appliances, whole
tires, hazardous dry cell batteries, lead-acid batteries, oil-contaminated
soil and electronic waste for deposit at the recycling depot. These
materials shall be deposited at designated recycling centers within
the Township in accordance with the regulations established in this
article, except for leaves, grass clippings, brush or natural wood
waste on property of two acres or more, on which properties residents
must compost such waste on their own property or place at curbside
for pickup pursuant to a contract with a private recycler.
(2)
If transported to designated recycling centers, said
recyclables shall be separately bundled.
(3)
If deposited at curbside for pickup pursuant to a
contract with a private recycler, recyclables shall be prepared in
accordance with the recycler's specifications, except for leaves,
grass clippings, brush and natural wood waste. Leaves, grass clippings,
brush, natural wood waste placed at the curb or along the street,
pursuant to pickup by a private recycler, must be containerized (placed
in a trash can, bucket, bag or other vessel to prevent spilling or
blowing into the street) and be placed at the street no more than
seven days prior to a scheduled collection and shall not be placed
closer than 10 feet from any storm drain inlet. Placement of such
waste at the curb or along the street at any other time or in any
other manner is a violation of this section.
(4)
Except in those instances where a private recycler
provides curbside pickup of recyclables and specifies otherwise, all
material shall be prepared in the following manner:
(a)
Newspaper: Cross-tie with string or twine into
bundles not to exceed 12 inches in height and 30 pounds in weight.
Advertising enclosures and newspaper inserts may be bundled with newspapers.
Such bundles shall not be contained in plastic bags.
(b)
Corrugated cardboard: Flattened and tied and
may be commingled with paper bags.
(c)
Glass: Rinse and remove cap and rings.
(d)
Aluminum cans: Rinse.
(e)
Plastic bottles: Rinse.
(f)
Steel (tin) cans: Rinse.
(g)
Aluminum: Rinse.
(h)
Mixed paper: secured in string or twine-tied
bundles, not to exceed 12 inches in height or 30 pounds in weight.
Such bundles shall not be contained in plastic bags.
(i)
Brown bags: neatly folded, stacked and tied
and maybe commingled with corrugated cardboard.
(j)
Motor oil: placed in a tightly closed, unbreakable
container will be returned to residents.
(5)
From September through December, on property consisting
of less than two acres, fallen leaves shall be bagged. Brush shall
not exceed three inches in diameter and shall be cut into three-foot
lengths and bundled. Grass clippings must be left on the lawn or composted
on the property from which they are generated.
(6)
Metal appliances may be brought to the Department
of Public Works complex during the Township cleanup weeks.
(7)
Oil-contaminated soil shall not be disposed of at the recycling depot but rather shall be disposed of by the owner in accordance with procedures approved by the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection. All persons are prohibited from placing oil-contaminated soil at the curb for collection and from disposing of oil-contaminated soil in solid waste collections. Said prohibition, however, shall not impose an obligation upon the Township of Washington to provide for the collection and disposal of such waste. The collection and disposal of oil-contaminated soil is the responsibility of the resident and/or property owner. Documentation of tonnage recycled pursuant to this subsection shall be submitted in accordance with § 168-6.
(8)
All of the aforementioned provisions may, from time
to time, be modified by the Municipal Recycling Coordinator to the
extent that procedures are developed for residents to have their recyclables
recycled.
B.
Commercial establishments and institutions shall separate designated materials for recycling. Newspaper, corrugated cardboard, mixed paper, aluminum cans, glass bottles and jars, plastic bottles (coded 1 and 2), steel (tin) cans included as designated materials may be deposited at the designated recycling centers if prepared according to the above specifications. The commercial establishments and institutions shall be responsible for establishing recycling programs for the collection, transportation and marketing of all other designated materials not deposited at the designated recycling centers. Documentation of tonnage of materials recycled pursuant to such a program shall be submitted in accordance with § 168-6.
The owner of any property shall be responsible
for compliance with this article. For multifamily units, the management
or owner is responsible for setting up and maintaining the recycling
system, including collection of recyclable materials, in accordance
with guidelines or regulations established by the appropriate municipal
office. Violations and penalty notices will be directed to the owner
or management, in those instances where the violator is not easily
identifiable. The management shall issue notification and collection
rules to new tenants when they arrive and every six months during
their occupancy. A copy of all notices and information materials shall
be provided annually, by January 15, to the Municipal Recycling Coordinator.
A.
All nonresidential generators, including commercial,
industrial and institutional establishments, of solid waste shall
be required to comply with the provisions of this article.
B.
The arrangement for collection of designated recyclables
hereunder shall be the responsibility of commercial, institutional
or industrial property owners or their designee. All commercial, institutional
or industrial properties which provide outdoor litter receptacles
and disposal service for their contents shall also provide receptacles
for designated recyclable materials, for those materials commonly
deposited, in the location of the litter receptacle, and shall provide
for separate recycling service for their contents.
C.
All nonresidential facilities shall provide a copy
of its recycling plan by January 15 of each year to the Municipal
Recycling Coordinator. For purposes of this section, a contractual
commitment shall be sufficient.
D.
Quarterly documentation for certain facilities and
private recyclers.
(1)
All nonresidential facilities which do not deposit designated materials at designated municipal recycling centers and all property owners recycling materials pursuant to § 168-4A(4) shall report on a quarterly basis by the eighth of the month following the end of each quarter to the Municipal Recycling Coordinator, on such forms as may be prescribed, on recycling activities at their premises, including the recycling plan, the amount of recycled material, by material type, collected and recycled, the tonnage recycled and the vendor or vendors providing recycling service.
(2)
In addition, all private recyclers operating in the
Township of Washington are required to submit quarterly documentation
in the form of certified weight slips to the Municipal Recycling Coordinator
to verify the tonnage and volume of materials picked up and deposited
at places other than designated recycling centers in the Township.
The recycling documentation will be due on or before the eighth of
the month following the end of the quarter.
E.
All food service establishments, as defined in the
Health Code, shall, in addition to compliance with all other recycling
requirements, be required to recycle grease and/or cooking oil created
in the processing of food or food products, and maintain such records
as may be prescribed, for inspection by any code enforcement officer.
New developments of multifamily residential
units or commercial, institutional, or industrial properties (pursuant
to N.J.S.A. 13:1E-99.13a and 13:99.16c):
A.
Any application to the Planning Board of the Township
of Washington for subdivision or site plan approval for the construction
of multifamily dwellings of three or more units, single-family developments
of 50 or more units or any commercial, institutional, or industrial
development for the utilization of 1,000 square feet or more of land
must include a recycling plan. This plan must contain, at a minimum,
the following:
(1)
A detailed analysis of the expected composition and
amounts of solid waste and recyclables generated at the proposed development;
and
(2)
Locations documented on the application's site plan
that provide for convenient recycling opportunities for all owners,
tenants, and occupants. The recycling area shall be of sufficient
size and convenient location and contain other attributes (signage,
lighting, fencing, etc.) as may be determined by the Municipal Recycling
Coordinator.
B.
Prior to the issuance of a certificate of occupancy
by the Township of Washington, the owner of any new multifamily housing
or commercial, institutional, or industrial development must supply
a copy of a duly executed contract with a private recycler for the
purposes of the collection and recycling of source-separated recyclable
materials, in those instances where the municipality does not otherwise
provide this service.
C.
Provision shall be made for the indoor, or enclosed
outdoor, storage and pickup of solid waste, to be approved by the
Municipal Engineer.
A.
It shall be unlawful and a violation of this article
for solid waste collectors to collect solid waste that is mixed with,
or contains visible signs of, designated recyclable materials. It
is also unlawful for solid waste collectors to remove for disposal
those bags or containers of solid waste which visibly display a warning
notice sticker or some other device indicating that the load of solid
waste contains designated recyclable materials.
B.
It shall be the responsibility of the resident or
occupant to properly segregate the uncollected solid waste for proper
disposal or recycling. Allowing such unseparated solid waste and recyclables
to accumulate will be considered a violation of this article and the
local sanitary code.
C.
It shall be unlawful and a violation of this article
for any person to deposit any material at the designated recycling
centers which is not a designated material.
D.
It shall be unlawful and a violation of this article
for any person to deposit recycling materials outside of the designated
containers or areas at the designated recycling centers.
E.
Once placed at the curbside or at the designated recycling centers in Washington Township as provided by this article, or any rules or regulations promulgated pursuant to this article, the designated materials shall be and will become the property of the Township of Washington or its authorized agents. It shall be a violation of this article for any person, other than those authorized by the municipality, to tamper with, collect, remove, or otherwise handle designated recyclable materials. Each such collection in violation hereof from one or more properties shall constitute a separate and distinct offense punishable as hereinafter provided. Nothing contained herein, however, shall be construed to prevent authorized private recyclers from removing recyclables from the Township, provided that the private recyclers furnish tonnage and volume reports in accordance with § 168-6D(2), or to limit volunteers or charitable organizations from conducting recycling drives. The date, time, place and nature of collection shall be presented, in writing, to the Department of Public Works prior to any such drive taking place. Regularly scheduled or established collections need only be reported once, at the beginning of each calendar year. In no event shall residents remove recyclables in bulk from the Township.
A.
The Department of Public Works shall promulgate reasonable
regulations establishing the collection of recyclable materials, including
the manner, dates and times of collection of the same in accordance
with the terms of this article. Any such regulations promulgated by
the Department of Public Works shall be approved by the Township Committee
of Washington Township and may be changed, modified, repealed or amended,
in whole or in part, by majority vote of the Township Committee. Upon
adoption of these regulations, citizens of the Township of Washington
shall be advised of the regulations through every possible means of
communication available. Thereafter, all citizens shall be responsible
to comply with the requirements of this article.
B.
The Department of Public Works Superintendent or his/her
duly authorized designee is hereby designated and authorized as the
enforcement officer for this article. The enforcing agent is hereby
authorized and directed to perform random inspections of garbage set
out for disposal in order to determine whether recyclables are included
therein. An inspection may consist of sorting through containers and
opening of solid waste bags to detect, by sound or sight, the presence
of any recyclable material. Such inspections shall be conducted at
a minimum rate of 10% of residential units per quarter, 10% of commercial/institutional
establishments per quarter and 10% of the multifamily/single-family
development per quarter, until such time as the Township of Washington
shall have, in accordance with state and County of Morris criteria,
reached a fifty-percent reduction rate in the amount of solid waste
disposed. The inspections shall be reported and identified on the
annual tonnage reports provided to the County Recycling Coordinator
and to the State Department of Environmental Protection.
Class B recyclables shall not be disposed of
at designated recycling centers but rather shall be disposed of at
a location or in a manner as may be designated from time to time by
resolution of the Township Committee.
A.
Any person or group of persons wishing to collect
recyclable materials shall register with the Department of Public
Works as a private recycler.
B.
No private recycler shall conduct recycling collection
activities except pursuant to a contract with the homeowner or commercial,
industrial or institutional establishment being provided with recycling
collection services.
C.
Private recyclers may deposit recyclables at a designated
recycling center or sell the same in a private market.
A.
Any person, firm, entity or corporation who or which violates or neglects to comply with any provision of this article or any regulations promulgated thereto shall, upon conviction thereof, be punishable by a fine not less than $25 per offense and shall be subject, upon conviction, to the penalties provided in § 1-3 of the Code of the Township of Washington.
B.
Each and every day that said violation continues shall
be considered a separate offense.