West Central suggests what to do with your holiday trash

Saturday, December 26, 2020

There comes a moment, after the presents have been unwrapped, the lights taken down and the holiday cards tossed aside, when every reveler must decide how to dispose of their festive waste.

Millions of Americans wrap, ship and unwrap presents in the month of December. We generate about 25 percent more waste than usual during the holidays, according to the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) equating to an extra million tons of waste in landfills per week.

Holiday waste disposal can be tricky, and depending on the material and recycling guidelines in your community, you could be doing serious environmental — or even physical — harm by tossing certain holiday decorative items in those recycling bins.

While most wrappings and cards are easily processed, glitzy paper products with foil or plastic pieces could send your recyclables to a landfill. Christmas lights and tinsel are so detrimental to recycling plants that they can halt processing lines several times a day.

Here’s a guide to how you can properly dispose of your holiday trash:

Do recycle: Most wrapping paper and cardboard.

Recycling plants can process most gift wrap along with other paper products, producing hefty recycled bales. These bales are then shipped to paper mills to be repurposed into other goods, like cardboard liners.

The mills dump the bales into a water-filled vat and shred them into a pulp, almost like a blender. As the paper fibers come apart, giant screens fish out any unwanted materials, like soft plastics.

Recycling your leaning tower of Amazon Prime shipping boxes is surprisingly impactful — recycling one ton of paper saves 17 trees. However, it’s crucial to break down cardboard boxes before they get tossed in the recycle bin. Compact boxes take up way less space and help keep bins from overflowing in between pickups.

It’s iffy: Some wrapping paper and holiday cards

If your wrapping paper or holiday cards contain plastic pieces, glitter or photo paper, they can taint your recycling.

Normally, the paper recycling process can handle a few plastic bits. When you recycle an envelope with a plastic address window, for example, the paper is processed while the plastic is separated for the landfill.

Nonetheless, the system can only deal with so many impurities. Sometimes, contaminants in bedazzled cards and wrapping can slip through the sorting step, ending up in the recycled bale and reducing its purity levels. Low purity makes recycled paper less attractive to buyers at paper mills — and can also affect commerce on a global scale.

For instance, Chinese manufacturers have become fed up with paying extra for impure recycled products, advised Jeffrey Morris, an economist with Sound Resource Management Group. Earlier this year, China stopped accepting a lot of recycled materials from the U.S., causing waste management company stocks to fall and driving up domestic recycling costs. You can still recycle cards if they’re made of simple paper materials, but if you like the glam, you can tear off and recycle the paper portion and trash the rest.

“Contamination is such a big problem for us, at particularly this time of year,” Mike Taylor, director of recycling operations at Waste Management, North America’s largest residential recycling company, said. “When in doubt, throw it out.”

Don’t recycle: Ribbons, Christmas lights and your food

Though items like Christmas lights, garland, ribbons and bows may contain plastic or paper components, they also tie up the recycling process. Taylor describes these items as “tanglers.”

Tanglers get caught up in the spinning disks of sorting machines. Workers must then shut down and manually detangle the clogged equipment, which halts recycling for anywhere from five minutes to more than an hour. This nuisance not only takes up a lot of time — it can happen 5-10 times a day — it also puts workers at risk.

“The folks in the sorting process are really quality control, but more and more, people are grabbing items that shouldn’t be there,” Taylor said. “That is dangerous — if they reach for a strand of Christmas lights, it could injure their hands, it could spring back and strike them someplace else.”

Along with tanglers, organic materials like Christmas tree branches, garland and holly can also contaminate recycling. Taylor noted that holiday food waste, as throughout the rest of the year, can lower purity levels. He said it was important to rinse out containers and check out local guidelines to see what could go into the recycling bin.

“Ribbons and bows are problematic, [but there’s] a really good reuse option,” Morris said. “A lot of bows can just be picked right off, and then you can reuse them with double-sided tape.”

Gifters can save and reuse packaging materials for future presents. Packing peanuts, gift bags and tissue paper, for example, can be easily stored and reused.

Visit the West Central Solid Waste District at www.westcentralswd.com

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  • Is the Columbia Street site ever going to start taking recycling again? Those of us that don’t live in town have no other options.

    -- Posted by 3m50 on Sat, Dec 26, 2020, at 4:48 PM
  • 3m50--Jack's Trash Website says they do recycling. You might check with them to see if they have what you need!

    -- Posted by jake71 on Sun, Dec 27, 2020, at 4:13 PM
  • Jack's accepts recyclables free if you are a customer, or for a fee if not a customer.

    -- Posted by Geologist on Sun, Dec 27, 2020, at 6:08 PM
  • Thanks to you both!

    -- Posted by 3m50 on Tue, Dec 29, 2020, at 1:52 PM
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