- Dismal participation in Sylva’s recycling begs the question
- Haywood to sort its own recycling again — this time with machines
- Haywood keeps tabs on contaminants leaching from old landfill
- County landfills grapple with fluorescent bulb conundrum
- Macon faces five-year countdown to ready more landfill space
- Lush yard waste policy costing Waynesville big bucks
- Haywood extends financial olive branch to towns for trash hauling
- Trash shuffle prompts Canton to privatize garbage pick-up
The recession has been good news for landfills.
Due to the economic downturn, less trash was thrown in landfills in North Carolina last year than any year in the past two decades. The biggest reduction in trash came from the construction industry, which is a significant contributor to landfills.
Trash in landfills amounted to 1.07 tons per capita in 2008-09 — a sharp decline from the previous year and the lowest disposal rate since 1995, according to the “North Carolina Solid Waste Management Annual Report.”
The report also found that:
More glass, plastic and aluminum were recycled than ever before. One reason for the uptick in recycling could be the new state law that went into effect in 2008 requiring any restaurant with an ABC permit to serve beer or alcohol must recycle.
Curbside recycling programs had better numbers than recycling at drop-off centers. The report recommends increasing state oversight to prevent banned materials from making it into landfills, including aluminum cans and plastic bottles.
The folks in the mountains of Western North Carolina and eastern Tennessee share more than a common boundary, they share a deep appreciation for the wild, sometimes rugged, but always beautiful landscape they call home.
