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July 27, 2010

Baltimore recycling: 1+1=50

 

Baltimoreans have recycled 50 million pounds of waste since weekly collection began last July, city officials report.

Despite some hiccups as the city shifted twice-weekly trash collection to once a week, the weekly recycling pickups under One Plus One have boosted the city's recycling volume by more than 50 percent.

Mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake was to celebrate the milestone this morning in Edmondson Village, where she was to be joined by community leaders.

"We thought the easier we could make recycling, the better participation would be. It actually exceeded our estimates," said Celeste Amato, spokeswoman for the city Department of Public Works.

More than half of the city's residents didn't even use trashcans before One Plus One began, Amato says, so city officials expected a hard sell in a lot of neighborhoods.  But community leaders got behind the effort. 

It helped that Cleaner Greener Baltimore, a city program, and the Baltimore Community Foundation handed out $17,000 in recycling grants for block parties, workshops and distribution of more than 1,000 recycling bins.

Besides reducing the flow of waste to incinerators and landfills, recycling earns the cash-strapped city a little money. Waste Management Recycle America, which contracts to take the city's recyclables, has paid $190,000 so far this year, officials report.

There's still work to do. Amato says city inspectors are "strategically enforcing" sanitation violations in about 40 neighborhoods where trash and recyclables still get left out in bags or dumped in alleys.

Baltimore Sun file photo of Waste Management Recycle America in Elkridge

Posted by Tim Wheeler at 10:00 AM | | Comments (2)
        

Comments

We're just vacationing in OCMD and it amazed me to learn that they've canceled recycling here because it costs too much. Maybe OCMD should talk to Baltimore?

I was recently told that single-stream recycling means that my mixed recyclables (cans, plastics, cardboard, newspapers) are shredded (without being sorted) and used to top off landfills. Any truth to that?

TW: All the local governments in the Baltimore area at least have recycling programs. Those mixed recyclables should get sorted and sold for re-use, though if the market for them gets soft enough maybe it's cheaper just to landfill the lot. Does anyone know of any place where that's happening?

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About the bloggers
Tim WheelerTim Wheeler reports on the environment and Chesapeake Bay. A native of West Virginia, he has focused mainly on Maryland's environment since moving here in 1983. Along the way, he's crewed aboard a skipjack in the bay, canoed under city streets up the Jones Fall from the Inner Harbor, and gone deep underground in a western Maryland coal mine. He loves seafood, rambles in the country and good stories. He hopes to share some here.

Contributor Christy Zuccarini has been blogging about the local DIY craft scene for a year for Baltimoresun.com. She brings her pespective on all things handmade to B'More Green, where she will highlight projects you can do yourself as well as crafters who are integrating sustainable methods and materials.
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