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North Carolina 2005 Recycling Legislation

North Carolina 2005 Recycling Legislation. The Day After…. Focus on Two Main Bills. H1465 – banning the disposal of materials effective October 2009: Plastic bottles Wooden Pallets Oil Filters Oyster shells

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North Carolina 2005 Recycling Legislation

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  1. North Carolina 2005 Recycling Legislation The Day After….

  2. Focus on Two Main Bills • H1465 – banning the disposal of materials effective October 2009: • Plastic bottles • Wooden Pallets • Oil Filters • Oyster shells • H1518 – requiring certain ABC permit-holders to recycle beverage containers by January 2008.

  3. Information for Local Governments and Private Sector (generators) • Websites: • http://www.p2pays.org/localgov/ • http://www.p2pays.org/BannedMaterials/ABCcontainer/ • http://www.p2pays.org/BannedMaterials/OilFilters/ • http://www.p2pays.org/BannedMaterials/WoodenPallets/ • http://www.ncfisheries.net/shellfish/recycle1.htm • http://www.allplasticbottles.org/ • Don’t forget grant opportunities!

  4. Some key aspects of H1465 • No requirement for local governments to start recycling programs for materials • Escape clause: A county or city may petition the Department for a waiver from the prohibition on disposal of a material described in subdivisions (9), (10), (11) and (12) ofsubsection (f) of this section in a landfill based on a showing that prohibiting the disposal of the material would constitute an economic hardship.“ • Pallets not banned from C&D landfills

  5. Oyster Shells • U.S. Harvest 130,000 tons • Exact tonnage disposed in NC is unknown, but very small • NC Harvest trends • 1902 – 1.8 million bushels • 1988 – 138,000 bushels • Current – 40,000 bushels • Decrease primarily caused by disease

  6. Why Ban Oyster Shells? • Shells have multiple uses • Driveway or trail bedding • Decorative ground or whole mulch • #1 – Can be used to help grow more oysters

  7. Oyster to Oyster Recycling • Shells are used as “cultch” or bedding to create reefs • Cultch from oyster shells is a preferred substrate for new oysters • Oyster reefs also attract other marine organisms • Oysters are an economic resource • Building reefs helps support/expand the fishery • They are also an environmental resource • Filter feeders

  8. Division of Marine Fisheries • Plants about 250,000 bushels of cultch per year. • Operates an oyster shell recycling program using drop-off sites and stock piles. • Sites are listed in 11 eastern counties • www.ncfisheries.net • Some located at county or private solid waste facilities

  9. DMF Recycling Program • Collect from drop-off sites in 11 eastern counties • Shells are moved to stockpiles • Most recycling occurs in winter • System is at capacity • Need volunteers and consolidation points

  10. DMF Fisheries Contact • Craig HardyNorth Carolina Oyster Shell Recycling ProgramP.O. Box 769Morehead City, NC 28557800-682-2632 or252-726-7021craig.hardy@ncmail.net

  11. Oil Filter Ban • NC Oil Filter Generation • 14.3 million filters • 7,150 tons (at 1 lb. Per filter) • 2 to 8 ounces of oil in each filter • Filter recycling rate  30 % • 4,290,000 filters • Disposal • 10,010,000 filters • Oil entering MSW facilities 156,000 to 625,000 gallons

  12. Recycling Oil Filters • Straightforward Process • Infrastructure is in place • Oil collection contractor • Filter contractor • Collection is similar to other special wastes • Filter recycling is a cost market • 17 local government already have programs • Local govt not required to serve private sector

  13. Oil Filter Recycling (cont) • Process similar for public and private sector • 55-gallon collection barrels • Barrels hold 250 to 400 filters • Collection cost - $40 to $85 per barrel • Avg. program recovers 1 filter for every 2 to 3 gallons of oil recovered from residential sources

  14. Oil Filter Recycling Containers

  15. Private Sector Recycling • Many garages or “lube shops” already recovery filters or collect filters separate from regular waste • Auto part stores may add filter programs to augment oil, LAB and other recycling programs • Collection process and markets basically the same as for government programs

  16. Wooden Pallets – Reasons for the Ban • As much as 250,000 to 300,000 tons disposed each year • Over 600,000 tons already recycled annually. • Large number of pallet recyclers in state, employing over 1,000 people. • Unused capacity in pallet recycling industry. • Many uses wooden pallets – reuse, recycling, mulch, fuel, value-added products. • Alternative management techniques and products available to generators.

  17. Wooden Pallets – Options for Local Governments • Passive Technical Assistance • Active Technical Assistance • Pallet Recycling Program • Combinations of all three

  18. Wooden Pallets – Local Govt Recycling Option • Assess incoming stream of pallets. • Evaluate your current services, resources, and infrastructure. • Determine best potential markets/uses of wood pallets: • Investigate collaboration with pallet recycler. • Grind for mulch and compost (with or separate from yard wastes) – in-house or contract grinder? • Use as boiler fuel or landfill cover. • Set up collection/drop-off program according to needs/markets. • Consider differential fees to encourage separation.

  19. Wooden Pallets – Local Case Study Examples • Duplin County • began collection in 2005 using single 40 yard container • Materials taken to Parker Bark for manufacturing colorized mulch • Macon County • Recycling pallets since 1998, using differential tipping fees to encourage separation • Pallets ground with yard waste for mulch but boiler fuel market pending.

  20. Local Government Collections Catawba County Duplin County Pitt County

  21. Wooden Pallets – Options for Private Generators • All generators should start with good information: • What kind of pallets are being received/used • How much of each kind • Who are the sources • Full costs of pallet handling and discarding • Generators can then assess best options.

  22. Options for Private Generators • Source Reduction: • Take-backs by suppliers or eliminating pallet receipts • Switching to alternatives: Slip sheets, reusable containers, totes, rolling carts, etc. • Use of alternative material pallets (e.g., plastic or corrugated) • Reuse/Recycling • Use one of the many NC recycling companies • Use third party pallet management companies • Exchanges, giveaways, also possible • Use local government program

  23. Other Key Points for Private Pallet Generators • Standardization and use of GMA pallets will help reusability and recyclability • Important to take advantage or cost avoidance, including: • Reduced waste container size • Changes in hauling container type • Reduced hauling schedule

  24. Chep 48 x 40 Pallet Rackable 40X 48 Plastic Pallet Nestable 40 x 48 plastic pallet Corrugated pallet Use of Slip Sheets Presswood pallet

  25. Plastic bottles • H1465 bans disposal of: Recyclable rigid plastic containers that are required to be labeled as provided in subsection (e) of this section, that have a neck smaller than the body of the container, and that accept a screw top, snap cap, or other closure. The prohibition on disposal of recyclable rigid plastic containers in landfills does not apply to rigid plastic containers that are intended for use in the sale or distribution of motor oil.

  26. Plastic bottles in local programs • Ban is an opportunity to evaluate plastic bottle collection efforts: • What does your program collect (soda bottles and milk jugs, 1’s and 2’s, all bottles)? • How does your program collect bottles – separation versus commingling, and from whom? • How is the public educated about plastic bottles? • Markets for PET and HDPE are EXCELLENT! • Many of the nation’s leading processors and largest recyclers are in the Carolinas.

  27. Why Consider All Plastic Bottles?Because 96 % of all plastic bottles are PET and HDPE!

  28. Markets for Plastic Bottles PET & HDPE Baled Bottles Pricing (picked up) • PET - $260-320 per ton • HDPE Natural - $780-820 per ton • HDPE Pigment - $580-640 per ton Source: www.WasteNews.com/smp – March 16, 2006

  29. Plastic bottles (cont’d) • DPPEA Recommendation: Modernize your program by going to “all 1’s and 2’s” or “all bottles.” • Simplifies education and public understanding • Increases diversion and capture rates • Fits well with commingling – single or dual stream • Downsides are manageable • Increase of collected materials and less contamination will outweigh out-throws • Less revenue will be balanced by greater collection efficiency and higher volumes.

  30. Plastic bottles, cont’d • Help available: • DPPEA technical assistance and grants. • Peer communities who have implemented all bottles – e.g., Orange, Iredell, and Perquimans/Chowan/Gates counties. • Markets and MRFs should support program changes. • American Plastics Council is a good source of information and assistance: allplasticbottles.org

  31. APC/Resource Recycling Survey Results Recommend “All Plastic Bottles” to their Peers? • Over 75% would switch to “all bottles” again • Over 80% would recommend “all bottles” to peers • Peer list available on www.allplasticbottles.org Source: Resource Recycling, January 2003

  32. For More Information American Plastics Council www.plastics.org www.plasticsresource.com www.allplasticbottles.org

  33. ABC Permit Recycling • HB 1518 (SL 2005-348) • Requires certain ABC permit holders to recycle beverage containers • On-site malt beverage • On-site fortified and unfortified wine • Mixed beverage • Also bans disposal of beverage containers from these establishments • Effective January 1, 2008

  34. Scope of HB 1518 • No specific requirements for local gov’t • Enforcement • Services • More than 8,000 affected permit holders • Governed by 150+ local ABC boards • Most establishments in urban areas • Searchable database – www.ncabc.com

  35. Local Government Options Approach • Do Nothing (“Free Market”) • Provide technical assistance • Passive Collection • Active Collection Players • Permit Holders (business owners & property managers) • Service Providers (recycling collection companies) • Local ABC Board of ABC Commission

  36. Do Nothing scenario • Let businesses contract on their own with private haulers • Examples ‘Downtown’ - Asheville/Curbside Management - Fayetteville/Bryant’s Recycling - Durham/Shimar & Orange • Brightleaf Square, recycling since 1995

  37. Technical Assistance route Your burden • Help identify and choose service providers • Conduct waste assessments • Assist with designing the collection program Resources • Markets Directory (DMRM) • DPPEA Guide for Permit Holders + fact sheets Tactics • Mailing information, resources, newsletters • Post information online • Organize business recycling seminars

  38. Technical Assistance example • Angus Barn, recycling since 1990 • Contacted Wake County Recycling and Solid Waste Department Contacted DPPEA • Conducted waste assessment • Added composting • Streamlined waste reduction program • Glass bottles, aluminum cans, grease and meat by-products, edible foods, food scraps, corrugated containers, office paper, high density polyethylene buckets, magazines

  39. Passive CollectionAKA Drop-Off System Access Options Continue to Allow Access, Promote, or Restrict Logistics • Feasible for rural areas with sparse restaurant and bar establishments • May be effective if site is added specifically for businesses in highly concentrated area of establishments • Likely only be utilized by smaller establishments • Potential to significantly increase containers at drop-off sites, particularly glass

  40. Active Collection • Incorporate into a county run collection program OR add onto service contract agreement you already have • Provide roll carts or dumpster service • Tax subsidized or fee based service • Voluntary or Required? • Benefits: efficient and effective means to contract business recycling, high participation rates, more reasonable cost for businesses • Challenges: costly for county, requires more labor

  41. Ahead of the CurveActive Collection Orange County • 100 businesses since 1992 • Separate materials in roll carts by glass (source separated brown, green, clear), cans, plastic, and newspaper • 2005 recycled 646 tons; estimated paper 100 tons, 548 cans and bottles, 16 tons plastics Pasquotank County • Commercial/business recycling since 1995 • 96 gall and 105 gallon roll out carts • Dual stream – fiber and containers • Fully funded through tax base

  42. Pasquotank County Commercial Recycling Program

  43. Common Barriers • Glass breakage • Source separation vs commingled • Space constrictions behind the bar and by the dumpster • Maneuvering trucks in tight downtown spaces • Cost • Viable markets • Enforcement

  44. Conclusion • Trying to avoid “I DON’T KNOW” • Focus on strengths of your community - Strong private sector recycling infrastructure = focus on haulers providing service - Have a local government processing facility? Consider providing direct service • Recycling markets are improving across the state – Don’t miss out on opportunities!

  45. What Businesses Are Affected By The New Legislation? Certain Businesses That Hold Alcohol Beverage Control Permits Must Separate, Store All Recyclable Beverage Containers. Only holders of on-premises malt beverage, on-premises unfortified wine, on-premises fortified wine and mixed beverages permits are affected by the bill. Recycling is only required for those containers that are sold at retail for on-premises consumption.

  46. Which Containers Will You Be Required To Recycle? • Glass Beverage Bottles • Aluminum Cans • Plastic Bottles

  47. Step 1. Locate A Market For The Containers Generated By Your Establishment

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