Common Recycling and Disposal Questions


Topics

  1. Paint Recycling - Disposal
  2. Wine Cork Recycling
  3. Compact Florescent Lightbulb Disposal
  4. Computer and Electronic Recycling
  5. What is Recycled in Madison County?
  6. What is Recycled in Jersey County?
  7. How do I Dispose of Unwanted Medicines?
  8. How do I Dispose of old incandescent Christmas Lights?
  9. How do I recycle zip lock style plastic bags?
  10. Battery recycling (leaving Sierra Club site to earth911.com)

Paint Recycling - Disposal

IEPA Household Hazardous Waste Management Unit Information: 

1. The easiest way to dispose of old paint is to use it up completely.

If you still have paint leftover, then keep painting. You can pain something else that doesn't even have to need the paint, such as an old piece of cardboard, scrap lumber, or even the inside of your garage. This works well if you have a small amount left in the can. Afterwards, let the can dry out and dispose of it with your regular household trash.

2. Or you can use the Ultimate Kitty Litter Paint Disposal Method:

Determine if the paint is still liquefied. If it's completely dried out, you may place the lid back on and dispose of it with your regular trash. If it's liquid then do the following:

a. Buy a cheap bag of cat litter. Pour it into the liquid paint in the paint can.

b. Then, wait for the cat litter and paint mixture to solidify - if the paint is oil or solvent based, make sure you're in a well ventilated area away from ignition sources. Once the paint is completely absorbed by the cat litter.....

c. Place the lids back on the cans and mix with your regular trash, or leave the lids off the cans at the curb so the hauler can see that it's all dried up - your waste hauler will take it from there!

If you don’t want to do the above two ideas, then you can wait for Madison County to hold their annual Household Hazardous Waste Drive, TBA. Call their office for updates on when and where that will be: 618-296-6647.

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Wine Cork Recycling

Rewind Your Wine

Wine-lovers have only five choices when deciding what to do with the 15 billion wine corks that end up in landfills each year: continue to throw them away, get crafty, buy only screw-cap bottles, don’t drink as much wine, or recycle the. A couple of years ago, the Fredericktown, Mo.-based company Yemm & Hart started a mail-in recycling program that recycles wine corks into LEED-certified building materials like cork tiles. Great idea!

But while we have green intentions, we still have a huge jar full of corks. Thankfully, local marketing firm Cork Tree Creative just made it easier. The Edwardsville company collects corks from retailers, grocers and wine consumers and sends them off to Yemm & Hart as part of a new program called Rewind your Wine. Organizers hope that recycling wine corks, including those plastic ones, will be as simple as recycling paper and plastics. Erato on Main in Edwardsville and St. Louis-based Ionia Atlantic Imports are on board, as are Kirkwood’s Grapevine Wines and Madinger Wines. So next time you’re at a tasting or buying a bottle of wine from your favorite shop, encourage participation.

Info:
Bars, restaurants and wine retailers throughout the St. Louis area interested in participating in the program should call Laura Reed at Cork Tree Creative at 618.656.7333. For consumer drop-off locations, visit www.rewindyourwine.com for more information.

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Compact Florescent Lightbulb Disposal

CFLs should be disposed of properly with other household hazardous waste products such as paint, batteries and thermostats. Please avoid throwing out spent CFLs in the household trash. They contain electronic components and an extremely small amount of mercury. The amount of mercury is so small that it does not pose a health risk to you or your family. However, we are working to keep large accumulations of CFLs out of the landfills. Be sure to follow the proper disposal options described below:

    Check with your local or municipal government entity responsible for solid waste or household hazardous waste collection. Some communities offer disposal or recycling programs that accept spent CFLs. You can also visit www.lamprecycle.org to research your state’s disposal laws and recycling programs.

    Take them to Office Depot or Lowe's in Alton or Edwardsville for free!

    To reduce the risk of bulb breakage and contamination, wrap the bulb in a sealed plastic bag.

    Never incinerate CFLs.

    If your ENERGY STAR-qualified bulb fails within the one-year warranty period, return it to the place of purchase for a replacement bulb, and fill out a CFL failure card.

What is mercury?

Mercury is a naturally occurring element that is present throughout the environment. Human activity can release some of that mercury into the air, water and soil. In the U.S., coal-fired power plants are the biggest source of mercury emissions to the air. When mercury enters water, biological processes transform it to a highly toxic form that builds up in fish and animals that eat fish. Repeated exposure to large quantities of mercury represents the biggest risk to humans, especially for children and women of childbearing age. People are exposed to mercury primarily by eating contaminated fish.

Because CFLs contain mercury, is it better for the environment to use incandescent bulbs?

No – you need to consider the broader perspective of the energy savings compared to the impacts of energy generation. Using energy-efficient products, like CFLs, is one way to curb our regions growing energy demands. Experts agree that given a choice between CFLs and ordinary incandescent bulbs, CFLs are better for you and the environment because they save money, conserve energy and reduce landfill waste and coal-fired power plant emissions.

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Computer and Electronic Recycling

Public Act 95-0959 

Signed into law on Sept. 17, 2008; effective Sept. 17, 2008. Creates the Electronics Products Recycling and Reuse Act. Requires electronics manufacturers to collect and recycle or process for reuse residential televisions, printers, computer monitors, computers, laptop computers and printers (collectively known as "covered electronics devices," or CEDs), and other "eligible electronics devices" (EEDs) at no charge to consumers.

Beginning January 1, 2012 landfills would be prohibited from knowingly accepting any CEDs for disposal. This includes televisions, computers, printers, and computer monitors (both residential and non-residential).  The burning or incineration of televisions, computers, printers and computer monitors would also be prohibited.

Electronic Recycling is becoming more necessary, as Electronic scrap is the fastest growing part of the solid waste stream. TVs, computers, monitors, cell phones and other electronic equipment contain lead, mercury, cadmium and other toxic materials. Only about 12 percent of e-waste is recycled nationwide. The rest ends up in landfills. According to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, even the tiniest amount of toxics leaking from a landfill can badly pollute our drinking water supplies. Out of 2.6 million tons of obsolete electronics, or E-Scrap, generated in the U.S. in 2005, only 330,000 tons were recycled. Yet the state and local counties hold few (if any) events each year, forcing the non-profit world to step up and offer recycling drives for residents.

 

2012 Monthly Electronic Recycling Drop Off Locations, sponsored by WITS, INC.

 

PERMANENT MONTHLY RECYCLING SITES

February through November 2012~ except Mother's Day and Easter Sunday

What WITS, Inc. accepts

Fridays

12 pm - 6 pm

 

1st Fri.

Alton/Jerseyville

Bank Of Edwardsville; 4415 MLK Drive, Alton, IL 62002

2nd Fri.

Collinsville

Collinsville Overflow Lot; 223 W. Main Street, Collinsville, IL 62234

4th Fri.

Glen Carbon
/Edwardsville

Bank Of Edwardsville; 2142 S. State 157, Glen Carbon, IL 62034

 

 

 

Saturday

10 am - 4 pm

 

2nd Sat.

Granite City

America's Central Port; Former Army Depot Commissary Parking Lot at Seventh and “A” Streets off RT 3; Granite City, IL 62040

 

 

 

Sunday

10 am - 4 pm

 

4th Sun.

Hardin, IL, U of I Extension

818 S. Park Street, Hardin, IL 62047

 

You can take your items directly to these processors/businesses for FREE or call for a pick up (there is a fee for pick up)

Somtech Recycling
By appointment only
415 Ridge Street
Alton, IL 62002
Cell: 618-593-2981 or office 618-463-2954
 
TOTALL Metal Recycling
2700 Missouri Avenue
Granite City, IL 62040
Toll Free: 866.470.5763
 
 
WITS, Inc.
647 E Holly
Saint Louis MO 63147
314-382-1650
 
Wecare Recycling
330 W 1st North St
Carlinville, IL 62626-1703
(217) 854-8888
 
CJD E-Cycling
Drop of locations and hours:
WildTrak Bikes at 1001 East Broadway in Alton, IL 62002. Tues-Fri. 10am-6pm; and Sat. 10am-5pm
MAW Salvage at 1020 Fosterburg Road in Brighton, IL 62012. Mon-Fri. 8am-5pm; and Sat. 8am-2pm

 

Best Buy, takes two pieces at any time

Results
 
2010
Computer and Electronic Recycling Drives Results:
Jerseyville: 25 TONS collected
Brighton: 22 TONS collected
Collinsville: 15 TONS collected
Hardin: 8 TONS collected

 
2009
Computer and Electronic Recycling Drives Results:
Alton: 21.5 TONS collected
Collinsville: 21 TONS collected
Jerseyville: 11 TONS collected
Hardin: 5 TONS collected
 
Total: 58.5 TONS collected from 619 cars!
 

 
2008
Computer and Electronic Recycling Drives Results: 52 TONS collected from 887 cars!

 
 2007
 Computer and Electronic Recycle Drives Results: 58 TONS collected from 365 cars!
 
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What is Recycled in Madison County?

Paper • Newspapers • Magazines and catalogues • Junk mail • Office paper • Chipboard -- cereal/dry-food boxes • Corrugated cardboard (2’ x 3’ flattened pieces) • Telephone directories

Aluminum cans

Tin/Steel cans

Glass food and beverage containers (all colors – no lids)

#1-#5 & #7 plastics (numbers on the bottom of plastic containers – no lids)

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What is Recycled in Jersey County?

Paper • Newspapers • Magazines and catalogues • Junk mail • Office paper • Chipboard -- cereal/dry-food boxes • Corrugated cardboard (2’ x 3’ flattened pieces) • Telephone directories

Aluminum cans

Tin/Steel cans

Glass food and beverage containers (all colors – no lids)

#1-#5 & #7 plastics (numbers on the bottom of plastic containers – no lids)

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How do I Dispose of Unwanted Medicines?

Several Police Departments accept all unwanted medicines to remove potentially dangerous, controlled substances from the nation's medicine cabinets so they will not be used illegally or disposed of improperly so as to harm the environment or public health.

 

 

Participant

Collection Site

Address

City

 

Alton Police Dept.

 

Alton Police Dept. Front Lobby Permanent Drop Box

Any Time

Open Lobby

1700 East Broadway

Alton

 

Edwardsville Police Dept.

RP Lumber

514 E Vandalia St.

Edwardsville

 

Fairview Heights Police Dept.

St. Clair Square

134 St. Clair Square

Fairview Heights

 

Granite City Police Dept.

Walgreens Parking Lot

3732 Nameoki Road

Granite City

 

Swansea Police Dept.

Walgreens

2532 N. Illinois St.

Swansea

 

Trenton Police Dept.

Trenton Police Dept.

9:00 – Noon

25 West Indiana St.

Trenton

 

Permanent Drop Sites

Located in Lobby

Address

City

 

Caseyville Police Dept.

Open Lobby Time

10 W. Morris St.

Caseyville

 

Collinsville Police Dept.

Open Lobby Time

200 W. Clay St.

Collinsville

 

Fairmont City Police Dept.

8:00 – 4:00 M-F except holidays

2601 N. 41st St.

Fairmont City

 

Maryville

Open Lobby Time

2500 N. Center St.

Maryville

 

Items Accepted

Prescription medications, vitamins, over-the –counter medications, hormones, painkillers, and antibiotics

 

Items NOT Accepted

Hypodermic needles, intravenous solutions, mercury thermometers, hearing aids, oxygen tanks, or other hazardous household waste.

To dispose of unwanted medicines at home, follow these simple steps:

  1. Add water to the medicine container to dissolve the tablets or dilute the liquid.
  2. Empty medicine & water from its container into a disposable & sealable bag.
  3. Mix in a handful of undesirable solid substance such as kitty litter or coffee grounds.
  4. Remove & destroy ALL identifying personal information from the prescription label of the original medicine container.
  5. Place bag in trash on trash pick-up day.  Recycle plastic or glass container.

How do I Dispose of old incandescent Christmas Lights?

Bring them the Green Gift Bazaar on Nov. 27th at the Riverbender.com Community Center in Alton. Time TBA.


How do I recycle zip lock style plastic bags?

You can recycle zip lock style bags as long as they are clean AND the hard zipper part is cut off. You can throw the baggie part with your “film” plastic bags, grocery bags, bread bags, dry cleaner bags, etc. in the local supermarket or other plastic recycling bins. Recycling plastic is still not very efficient and not as environmentally friendly as people believe, so we suggest cleaning and reusing the zip lock style bags at least once before you recycle them

Revised: May 11, 2010.

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