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Category: solid waste

Metro offers tips for handling holiday waste

Electronic wasteGot holiday stuff to recycle? From trees to old TVs, learn what to do with what’s left behind.

Residents with curbside service for yard debris can add their Christmas trees, wreath and swag, too. Remember to remove all lights, wire, tinsel, ornaments, nails, stands and other materials. Another option? Let a scout troop, school group or service club collect the tree as part of its fundraising program. For a small fee or donation, organizations will collect trees, along with wreaths, the first weekend of the year. Some will continue recycling them the following week. Call Metro Recycling Information at 503-234-3000 or check online for the nearest options.

Find a recycler  

Packing peanuts aren’t recyclable curbside, but folks can take clean, dry packing peanuts to a shipping store for reuse. Some locations also may accept bubble wrap and sheets of packing foam. Block foam isn’t recyclable curbside, but a handful of businesses accept polystyrene block foam marked '6' inside the recycling symbol. Another possibility? Save the materials for your next big packing project. Call Metro’s recycling hotline or search the online directory for more details on local options.

Search online

Making the switch to energy-saving LED holiday lights? Throughout its winter ZooLights festival, the Oregon Zoo is collecting old incandescent lights for recycling. Zoo visitors who drop off their old holiday light strings by Sunday, Jan. 1, 2012, will get a coupon for free fudge at the Zoo Store.

Learn more 

Consider donating excess food to a local food bank, shelter or other charitable organization that can accept it. For leftover food scraps, don’t forget to compost. With minimal equipment such as a compost bin, it's easy to turn trimmings into a garden-boosting soil amendment. Plus, Portland residents can now toss kitchen scraps – including fruit, vegetables, meat and dairy – into their green roll cart for curbside pickup. To learn more about waste-free holiday meals, visit Metro's news page.

Visit Metro News

To learn which electronics recyclers take mice, keyboards and printers, cell phones, VCRs, DVD players, fax machines or handheld devices, call Metro’s recycling hotline at 503-234-3000. Another option? Offer still-good electronics to friends or relatives who can use them. Oregon E-Cycles, a statewide industry program that collects computers, monitors and televisions for recycling, makes it even easier to keep valuable materials out of the landfill. For free recycling locations in the Oregon E-Cycles program, call 1-888-5-ECYCLE (888-532-9253) or visit the website.

Learn about Oregon E-cycles

 

From garbage and old furniture discarded in an alley to tires and rusted drums piled in a public park, it’s easy to spot an illegal dump. Metro's Regional Illegal Dumping Patrol partners with local governments including law enforcement to help clean up illegal dumps on public property. To report an illegal dump site in Multnomah, Clackamas or Washington county, call RID Patrol at 503-234-3000 or visit the website.

Learn about the RID Patrol 

Of course, Metro also has the scoop on what kinds of packaging and gift wrap are recyclable, where to take other items that residents can’t recycle at the curb and how to maximize reuse options. Call Metro’s recycling hotline for details, or get waste-wise ideas online.

Learn more at Metro's site

Behind the curtain: materials and their environmental impact

Obsessing about the potential environmental impacts of every single product you might buy? David Allaway, a senior policy analyst at the Oregon Department of Environmental Quality, wants you to stop that.

Metro tests new approach to fight illegal dumping

Illegal dumping tag

Bright orange tags that declare “This item has been illegally dumped,” are appearing on discarded sofas, mattresses and other bulky items left on street corners as part of a new effort to stop illegal dumping, clean up neighborhoods and reduce costs to Metro’s solid waste rate payers.

Reduce, reuse, reART

Imagine sorting through bits and pieces of your daily life, things you’ve tossed away, from that wild fashion accessory that never quite worked, to a well-loved baking pan used to make your family memorable meals and festive feasts.

Contemplating that tangled mess of unpredictable odds and ends and guiding them to become objects suitable to be contemplated as fine art may seem unimaginable or downright ludicrous. For Jen Fuller, one of five local artists given seven months of scavenging privileges and access to the region’s discards dropped off at Metro Central Transfer Station in Northwest Portland, "what began as an exploration of materials has morphed into an overwhelming and emotional experience."

Metro invites public comments on food waste reload facility

Recology Oregon Materials Recovery, Inc., has submitted an application to Metro to amend its facility license to accept, consolidate and reload commercial food waste and residential food waste mixed with yard debris at its Suttle Road property in North Portland. Food waste would be received and reloaded inside a new building to be constructed at the site. The public can review and comment on Recology’s application; comments must be received by 5 p.m. Friday, Aug. 5.

Apotheker remembered as a visionary, Metro's "captain" on recycling

By Nick Christensen.  This story was not subject to the approval of Metro staff or elected officials. Its content does not necessarily reflect the opinion of Metro staff or councilors.

Steve Apotheker, who died Monday at 58, worked on recycling issues for more than 30 years. Friends, coworkers say Apotheker was a visionary who worked for environmental stewardship.

Let Metro help your neighborhood clean up

Is your neighborhood planning a spring cleanup event? Let your local government know—and let Metro help cover the cost. Local governments around the region that help organize community cleanup events can qualify for Metro's neighborhood cleanup matching grant program. Cities and counties participating in this program have until Thursday, March 31, to submit a letter of intent.

Metro Central: Taking trash for 20 years

The Metro Central solid waste transfer station first opened its doors 20 years ago, welcoming in trash, recyclables and hazardous waste from residents, businesses and commercial waste haulers. Embracing the philosophy that one person's trash is another's treasure, the station has recycled more than half a million tons of material and served more than 2.3 million public customers at its Northwest Portland location. In two decades, it has moved more than 6.5 million tons of waste to landfills, a feat equal to hauling the Great Pyramid of Giza from Portland to Tacoma, Wash.

Metro Council votes to support statewide plastic bag ban

During its first council meeting with newly elected President Tom Hughes and District 1 Councilor Shirley Craddick, the Metro Council passed a resolution introduced by Councilor Rex Burkholder and co-sponsored by Craddick to support a statewide ban on single-use plastic bags at retail stores. Although the Metro resolution doesn’t affect actual policy, it’s a strong sign of solidarity with the legislation’s proponents. Plastic bags cannot be recycled curbside but frequently get mixed with other recyclables and clog sorting machines at material recovery facilities. They account for as much as 30 percent of overall labor costs at local recycling facilities. Plastic bags also don’t biodegrade and instead often make it into waterways where they accumulate and harm marine life. The cities of Portland and Lake Oswego have already passed similar resolutions, as have municipalities and countries across the world including Los Angeles County, Italy, Ireland, the UK and parts of Australia.

Metro Council approves food recycling facility in northeast Portland

The Metro council last night unanimously approved a franchise permit for Columbia Biogas to operate a facility in northeast Portland that will recycle food waste from commercial and industrial sources, keep about 200,000 tons of waste out of landfills or the sewer system, and produce enough electricity to power up to 5,000 homes. Columbia Biogas plans to convert local food waste into renewable power, clean water, fertilizer and soil amendments.