Most
communities offer their residents curbside recycling pick up. And most
consumers play their part well. They toss their empty plastic and cardboard
containers into the recycling bin and haul it to the curb on the designated
day. Fool-proof, right?
Once
that pile of stuff leaves your curb, it’s hauled to a recycling center to be
processed. But it’s not often worth the time to collect, sort, and process.
That’s because the recycling processors make money from reselling the stuff
that comes through their facilities. But when that stuff isn’t worth the
hassle, it winds up in a landfill — despite your best intentions.
What’s generally not recycled?
- Mesh bags from citrus fruits or onions
- Juice boxes
- Plastic TV dinner trays
- Keurig®-style coffee cartridges
- Loose bottle caps (attached caps are easier for machines to process)
- Boxes make of more than one material (like cardboard pasta boxes with see-through plastic windows)
- Plastic “clam shell” take-out containers
- Plastic straws and stir sticks
- Cereal box liners
- Tetra Pak® containers
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