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Please have your automated containers out to the
curb by 7:00 am
on your collection day (collection times vary & could change without warning).
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During winter months please do
not
place your container out for collection before 6:30 a.m. This may help prevent snowplows
from tipping them over.
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As per city ordinance, please do
not
allow your waste
containers to sit out
on the street longer than 24 hours before and after waste pick-up services.
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Please
bag all your garbage
to help prevent litter. Especially bag plastic grocery sacks, packing peanuts, and
shredded paper. Please do not bag recycling and GreenWaste materials unless it is shredded
paper.
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On pickup day, please make sure the front of your containers face the street. Keep your
containers
3 to 4 feet apart
and away from other objects such as mailboxes, telephone poles, trees, and vehicles.
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Please
do not overfill your container
. Anything over 4 feet in length is too large for any of the containers. Please cut
down large tree branches and boxes. You are responsible for any spillage from your waste
container.
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Please
do not overload your containers
with bulky or heavy items such as bricks, construction materials, & appliances.
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Please
do not put hot ashes or coals
in your automated containers. If the containers melt you may be responsible for a
replacement fee.
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Please
do not put anything hazardous , flammable or restricted
in your automated containers such as: oil, car batteries, paint, TVs, or any product that
is corrosive, flammable, ignitable or reactive. Bring these types
of materials to our Household Hazardous Waste Facility for FREE. Call 750-9981 for more
details.
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Do not put glass in your curbside blue bin
as it is
not
accepted in the blue cans. Glass is very dangerous to those that sort the
materials. Please learn the types of materials for recycle.
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Please
do not put garbage next to your container
if it is full. If the materials are recyclable, the landfill has extra dumpsters to use
free of charge; if not, regular landfill fees apply.
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Please
learn what types of materials go in what bin.
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Please
use your community GreenWaste bins
or the weekly GreenWaste curbside service. This really helps decrease the amount of waste
ending up in the landfill.
The Collection Division offers a variety of dumpsters, roll-offs and 90 gallon automated
cans. Rates are dependent upon frequency of pick-up. Please refer to our
rates page
for more information and a copy of our business brochure for print.

Waste buried in a sanitary landfill decomposes anaerobic, meaning, the absence of O2
(oxygen). Without oxygen waste breaks down at a very slow rate. In essence,
waste we bury today may not decompose for 100s to 1,000s of years as certain waste has a
propensity
to stick around anyway, such as glass. We have a newspaper that has been buried in our
landfill for 38 years! The date on it is March 5, 1968. Dr. William Rathje was
involved in what he calls the
"Garbage Project"
in which he found that waste was not decomposing!
Click here for an article on Dr. Rathje submitted by the NY times.
Below is a list of items and the rate they decompose with the help of environmental
influences such as moisture and oxygen. Think about these materials in a landfill-mummified.
Banana peel…………...…..…2-5 weeks
Paper……………………........1-3 month
Wool socks………………...….1-5 years
Milk carton……….………..…....5 years
Disposable diaper…………..10-20 years
Tin can………………….....80-100 years
Aluminum can………..….200-400 years
Glass………………….....1 million years
Hard plastic containers………..unknown
Recycling has really been around for perhaps thousands of years! For example, ancient
cultures that began making metal products, could melt down old broken items like pots or swords
and make new ones.More recently, during World War I and II, people would have paper drives and
metal drives to collect materials for the war effort. Nothing was wasted! When landfilling became
a
cheap way dispose of trash in the 1940's and 1950's, recycling was less popular. But modern
recycling of glass, paper, cans, etc.became more popular again in the 1970's with drop-off
recycling centers, and in the late 1980's and1990's with curbside collection. Mother nature
is, of course, the ultimate recycler . . . without the natural decay or composting process, we'd
all be covered in leaves and other dead organic matter!
In an effort to help preserve current landfill space, and due to the rise in fuel costs,
inflation, federal storm water management requirements, and to help offset funds needed for
construction of the new landfill and post landfill closure costs, the County Council has
mandated a county wide curbside recycling program. The current landfill is scheduled to close in
2022, and we need to start offsetting that now.
In 1994 we began a network of drop-off recycle dumpster locations throughout Logan city and
eventually expanded to all other communities of Cache County. A private curbside recycle
company by the name of Sunrise was picking up recyclables in certain locations of Cache
County. They went out of business late 2003-early 2004 in which the city launched a
voluntary recycle service to select cities (Smithfield to Providence) in Cache County for
$6/month. Due to request for the program the service expanded in 2005 to Nibley,
Millville, Hyrum, Mendon and Wellsville. On April 25th, 2006 the Cache County council approved
a resolution for implementation of a “universal” residential curbside recycle
program. The program was implemented in 2 phases. Starting July 2006, the first
phase of recycle cans was delivered. In 2007 the rest of the blue cans were delivered to
the rest of the county.
No, you are not required to recycle or even use the blue bin. The County council approved
of a county wide recycling program, but that does not mean that you will be required to
recycle. Please be aware that you will still be charged the same fees as those who
continue to use and have the blue recycle bins. Everyone is required to help pay for the costs
of recycling in the County. Remember also that using the blue bin is much cheaper than having a
second black can.
We are aware that there are residents that either don’t have the budget to pay for
recycling or who produce relatively little recyclable material. The Solid Waste Advisory
Board is in the process of setting up a procedure so that individuals can apply for a rate
reduction for cases of hardship. Families may qualify on a case by case basis.
It is important to understand that the drop-sites were never really free. There are costs
involved to provide bins, maintain the bins and drop-sites, fuel costs to haul materials away,
and pay monitors to keep the drop-sites clean. Many of the drop-sites started to be abused
and received a lot of contamination, causing the other recyclable materials to have to be
hauled to the Landfill. These drop-sites have never generated enough money to keep up with the
maintenance costs and have received many complaints from nearby residents.
The recycle program is subsidized by garbage in the amount of 10 cents per resident household
per month. This figure can easily change depending on gas prices. The savings are
reflected in the cost of dumping in the landfill.
It is important that you at least rinse out your recyclables. Some people wash with soap,
but it is not necessary. Because recyclables will be used again to make another product,
they need to be rinsed out so they will not infect workers that will handle the products with
moldy, rotten, or smelly foods.
PROS:
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reduction of waste ending up in Logan City landfill (longer time before the landfill needs to
be created or expanded, costing money)
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shared cost of recycling in all of Cache
County means decreased fees-on "voluntary" or "subscription" (it was
$6/month and now has been lowered to $3/month)
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single-stream container for residents means the program is
easy (no sorting)
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single-stream container for collections: only 1 truck for lots of different
materials
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cheaper than landfilling: cost to landfill is $29/ton, cost to recycle is $0/ton
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automated service-truck does all the work
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paper material is made into insulation by a local
company
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program consideration for residents who may not afford price of recycling by working
out a fee waiver program for residents who make less than $26,000/yr.
CONS:
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trucks run on gas: cannot control price of gas which factors into the budget
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more vehicles means more greenhouse gases
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An interesting point of reference to our program-we basically collect the materials and give
them to a company called Mountain Fiber. Mountain Fiber is in charge of sorting through
materials and selling them to the best market for a possible small profit. It is a symbiotic
exchange that suits both our needs. However, a con for Mountain Fiber may be the sorting
process as it is a single-stream container and if glass gets into the recyclables it may be
dangerous to the workers they employ. Workers have been cut by glass.
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It is a disgusting job sorting through recyclables when people contaminate them with
garbage
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The con for the Environmental Department is that when people throw things in they
are not supposed to, there are contamination problems. We have a 10%-13% contamination
rate.
Before it went "universal" we had over 2,000 residents who signed up in just under 2
years. Basically residents who do not qualify for a fee waiver are billed for
services. So this may beg the question, how many residents participate in the
program. As of now I believe I can safely say 99% of residents participate. We
averaged 50 tons of recyclables per month on the subscription program and now average right
around 420 tons per month.
The curbside recycling container takes considerably less floor space than does six or seven
containers of separated recyclables used traditionally at a drop-site recycling center.
What makes this curbside container even better is that you don't have to keep it sheltered
from the rain and snow. The lid should keep recyclables dry so that the container can sit
outside instead of taking up space in your garage.
Disposing of your garbage could become much more expensive. Since everybody would be throwing
away everything, landfills would fill up faster. We would have to build more and more to accept
all of the new garbage. People who have to live near landfills are generally opposed to building
new ones. Many of our natural resources would disappear even faster. The supply of any material
on our Earth is limited. While it may seem like we could never run out, if we keep filling our
landfills with aluminum, plastic, and steel there will eventually be no more left.