Recycling Changes at FHF for 2009 - 2011
As you will read in the December Windmill Board
of Directors - Woodchips and Notes from Debbie,
a change is being negotiated in the trash and recycling contract
for FHF in 2009. Trash pickups will only be on
Tuesdays while recycling pickups will be weekly on
every Friday. Some FHF residents may not realize what
is recyclable at this time. Here is some information that will
help you to make the most of the increased recycling pickups as
well as possibilities for how to deal with other recycling
options not covered by our community’s con-tract with the
Opdenaker company.
According to the Concord Township Winter 2008
news-letter, and confirmed by telephone contact with the
Opdenaker company, FHF residents may put the following items in
our recycling bins:
·
Glass — any color
·
Metal cans — aluminum, steel, and tin (NO aluminum
foil)
·
Plastics - #1 and #2 (the number is usually on the
bottom of the plastic container shown inside a triangle)
·
Newspaper
·
Phone books
·
Junk mail
·
Paper bags
·
Cardboard
·
Cereal boxes (also known as paperboard)
We are asked to please remember to rinse out all
glass, metal, and plastic containers put in the recycling bins.
Also, paper, cardboard, and cereal boxes should be
dry and free of any food, grease, or similar contamination.
Opdenaker staff requests that you do not use
plastic bags in the recycling containers. To cope with this
restriction, you may place your paper/cardboard/junk mail in a
paper bag and put it in your recycling bin. You could also tie
up those paper/cardboard items with twine. You might also want
to place the tied bundle on top of your recycling bin to keep
light weight plastic and aluminum containers from being blown
out of your bin and around our community - creating an unsightly
mess that will likely land on someone else’s property.
Plastic bags from grocery and other retail stores
may be recycled at some grocery stores (Acme, Giant, and
ShopRite) as well as the Recycle Delaware site. This site, run
by the Delaware Solid Waste Authority, has bins behind the
Sports Authority store at the Brandywine Commons shopping center
in which you may place all of the above types of recyclables.
This location is along Route 202, two tenths of a mile south of
Naamans Road on the right hand side, directly across from the
first entrance to Concord Mall Once you turn into Brandywine
Commons property, drive straight back, following the Recycle
Delaware sign, where the road will wind back to the recycling
bins. This site also provides containers for recycling of
aerosol cans (with other metal cans), household batteries,
electronic goods (you must be able to carry the items into the
walk-in recycling container yourself), and clothing and textiles
(clean clothing, drapes, sheets, towels, hats, belts, paired
socks and shoes).
Concord Township also has facilities (near the
Library and GV Middle School) which include igloo type bins for
glass (separated by color) and aluminum cans as well as a large
container for newspaper, paper bags, and junk mail.
The Delaware county web site notes that unwanted
cell phones with their power cords that plug into the wall (not
the auto) may be dropped off for recycling and reprogramming as
emergency 911 phones for domestic abuse programs at all Delaware
county libraries as well as at the Bethel Township municipal
building.
The Delaware County website also provides
information about household hazardous waste collection events.
Compact Fluorescent Light bulbs (CFLs) have been added to the
items accepted at those events. There are no more such events in
2008, and the 2009 events were not yet listed on the website.
Finally, retail stores may have specialized
recycling options. Staples has started a large item recycling
for computer and fax equipment for which they charge $10 per
piece. They also offer credits to future purchases for
recycling certain brands of inkjet printer cartridges and free
recycling of cell phones and rechargeable batteries. At Office
Depot, you can purchase small, medium, or large boxes for $5,
$1 0, and $15 respectively in which to put electronic
recyclables (list available at
www.officedepot.com website) and bring them to the store for
recycling.
Best Buy has bins at its entrance in which you can
recycle cell phones, inkjet printer cartridges, and
rechargeable batteries. Best Buy also provides mailing envelopes
which can be used to mail in these items for recycling. Office
Depot also provides free recycling for these items. Circuit City
has free recycling for the rechargeable batteries and cell
phones.
All in all, we have many opportunities to become
better stewards of the environment we all live in and which our
grandchildren will inherit from us. The above list contains only
those that this author has found. Certainly there are others
that you, the readers, know of. We will provide periodic updates
to this recycling information and welcome your input to help
inform all of your FHF neighbors. To provide such information
for future publication, please contact the editor of By the
Windmill at the phone number or email address listed on page
one of each issue.
Submitted by Marty Frick, 12/1/08
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