Residential
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Glass containers (05):
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All glass containers used for packaging food or beverages.
|
Aluminum cans (06):
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Food and beverage containers made entirely of aluminum.
|
Newspaper (03):
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All paper marketed as newsprint or newspaper and containing
at least 70% newsprint or newspaper (American Paper Institute grades
#6, #7 and #8 news).
|
Mixed office (02):
|
All computer paper, all high-grade white paper (including letterhead,
typing paper, copier paper, onionskin, tissue, and notepad).
|
Corrugated (01):
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Containers and similar paper items, usually used to transport
supplies, equipment, parts, or other merchandise.
|
Other paper/ magazines/junk mail (04):
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All magazine stock, white and colored paper and envelopes.
|
Plastic (08):
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Containers such as polyethylene terephthalate (PETE - #1) soda
bottles, high-density polyethylene (HDPE -#2) milk, water or detergent
bottles.
|
Yard trimmings (19):
|
Leaves (19), grass clippings (18), stumps (20), brush (17),
and other lawn and garden trimmings from homes, institutions, commercial
or industrial sources.
|
Steel cans (07):
|
Rigid containers made exclusively or primarily of steel, tin-plated
steel, and composite steel and aluminum cans used to store food, beverages,
paint, and a variety of other household and consumer products.
|
Tires (15):
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Rubber-based scrap auto-motive, truck, and specialty tires (e.g.,
forklift tires).
|
White goods and light iron (11):
|
All large appliances such as washers, dryers, refrigerators,
etc., as well as products made from sheet iron, such as shelving,
file cabinets, metal desks, recycled or reconditioned steel drums,
stainless steel and other nonstructural ferrous scrap.
|
Consumer electronics (21)
|
Any appliance used in the home or business that includes circuitry.
Consumer electronics includes the components and subassemblies that
collectively make up the electronic products and may, when individually
broken down, include batteries, mercury switches, capacitors, containing
PCB's, cadmium plated parts and lead or cadmium containing plastics.
Examples of consumer electronics include, but are not limited to,
computers, printers, copiers, telefacsimiles, VCRs, stereos, televisions,
and telecommunication devices.
|
Food scraps (23):
|
Food plate waste and food processing wastes. Food processing
wastes include food processing vegetative waste (material generated
in trimming and reject sorting operations from the processing of fruits
and vegetables in canneries or similar industries, e.g., tomato skins,
pepper cores, bean snips, cranberry hulls, etc.), food processing
residuals and animal processing wastes. If the material is transported
and processed as animal feed, it may be identified as such.
|
Textiles (29):
|
Cloth material such as cotton, linen, wool, nylon, polyester,
etc., derived from clothing, cloth diapers, linens, carpet, etc.
|
Commercial
| |
Glass containers (05):
|
All glass containers used for packaging food or beverages.
|
Aluminum cans (06):
|
Food and beverage containers made entirely of aluminum.
|
Newspaper (03):
|
All paper marketed as newsprint or newspaper and containing
at least 70% newsprint or newspaper (American Paper Institute grades
#6, #7 and #8 news).
|
Mixed office (02):
|
All computer paper, all high-grade white paper (including letterhead,
typing paper, copier paper, onionskin, tissue, and notepad).
|
Corrugated (01):
|
Containers and similar paper items, usually used to transport
supplies, equipment, parts, or other merchandise.
|
Other paper/ magazines/junk mail (04):
|
All magazine stock, white and colored paper and envelopes.
|
Plastic (08):
|
Containers such as polyethylene terephthalate (PETE - #1) soda
bottles, high-density polyethylene (T-IDPE #2) milk, water or detergent
bottles.
|
Steel cans (07):
|
Rigid containers made exclusively or primarily of steel, tin-plated
steel, and composite steel and aluminum cans used to store food, beverages,
paint, and a variety of other household and consumer products.
|
Tires (15):
|
Rubber-based scrap auto-motive, truck and specialty tires (e.g.
forklift tires).
|
White goods and light iron (11):
|
All large appliances such as washers, dryers, refrigerators,
etc., as well as products made from sheet iron, such as shelving,
file cabinets, metal desks, recycled or reconditioned steel drums,
stainless steel and other nonstructural ferrous scrap.
|
Consumer electronics (21)
|
Any appliance used in the home or business that includes circuitry.
Consumer electronics includes the components and assemblies that collectively
make up the electronic products and may, when individually broken
down, include batteries, mercury switches, capacitors, containing
PCB's, cadmium plated parts and lead or cadmium containing plastics.
Examples of consumer electronics include, but are not limited to,
computers, printers, copiers telefacsimiles, VCRs, stereos, televisions,
and telecommunication devices.
|
Food scraps (23):
|
Food plate waste and food processing wastes. Food processing
wastes include food processing vegetative waste (material generated
in trimming and reject sorting operations from the processing of fruits
and vegetables in canneries or similar industries, e.g., tomato skins,
pepper cores, bean snips, cranberry hulls, etc.), food processing
residuals and animal processing wastes. If the material is transported
and processed as animal feed, it may be identified as such.
|
Textiles (29):
|
Cloth material such as cotton, linen, wool, nylon, polyester,
etc., derived from clothing, cloth diapers, linens, carpet, etc.
|