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| photography by - e http://www.erineppenbaugh.tumblr.com | 
Like most people, I have a lot of pet peeves.  I hate watching the  smoker in the car in front of me throw their cigarette out the window.    I lose my mind when a police officer drives by me 20 miles over the  speed limit with no lights or sirens on.  And I am so thankful that I  will not have to see the Huskers lose yet another game to Texas.  But  when I see someone's trash at the curb, overflowing with garbage bags  and other junk, and no recycling bin- well, then you have officially sent me  over the edge.  And not just for the reasons you might think.
I think most people would consider recycling a liberal, tree  hugging, koombya issue for hippies to worry about.  And certainly those  types will gravitate towards recycling and doing what they can to  reduce, reuse, and recycle trash items.  But thanks to the city of  Omaha's recycling program- and similar programs nationwide I'm sure-  even if you don't care one bit about what is going on with the earth,  don't care about things like the Great Pacific Garbage Patch, and believe our  energy policy should be "drill, baby, drill," then I'm here to tell you  that recycling is most assuredly a conservative issue as much as it is a liberal issue.
Impossible?  Not at all.  At this time, the city of Omaha pays $14 million a year (link) for  garbage collection- this includes yard waste, trash, and recycling  pickup.  This averages out to about $8.74 per household per month, which  sounds pretty reasonable to me.  This cost is taken from the City's  General Revenue fund- i.e. the property and sales taxes that we all pay.  
So what does this have to do with recycling?  Well, last year, according to the Wasteline newsletter that the city sends out every month, the city was able to sell the recycling products picked up at the curb for over $650,000 while saving $360,000 in landfill "tipping" fees.   So by recycling, right now we are putting back nearly 1/14th of our  trash budget into the city coffers.  This is not insignificant,  especially in these times of budget shortfalls  Unfortunately, it also equals out to about $1.50 per person.  We could probably do better taking our cans down to one of those Golden Goat recycling deals setup in various parking lots.    
So the problem is participation, or lack thereof.  Data isn't available,  but I would personally estimate that about 60% of households in the  neighborhoods that I have lived in do not recycle.  Data shows that  nationwide, 80% of households recycle, but I would venture that on an  average week, most of the recyclable items in half of those homes are  going into the regular trash.  So with a little more effort at the homes that do recycle, and a lot more effort from the ones that don't, we could easily push that number to $2 million saved, or 1/7 of the garbage budget.  I grant that many people live in apartments, and thus city recycling isn't available to them, but I still think that Omaha citizens could easily push that number up.  
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| photography by - e http://www.erineppenbaugh.tumblr.com | 
I can say that personally, this week when I took our household  trash down to the curb, we had one bag of trash from a three-person  household and a full recycling bin worth of stuff.  We had reduced our  total trash to one bag thanks to following aggressive recycling habits  as well as using reusable containers.  (My wife and I also bring home recycling from our respective jobs, so I  am not including this in our total.  We had two additional bins filled,  but I realize that most people are not going to be as dedicated as we  are.)  We're not getting our $8.74 worth a  month I guess but someone has to chip in for the guy that puts out 16  bags of grass clippings every week.


What good reason could the city have for NOT allowing apartments or condos to recycle? Condo owners and apartment landlords pay the same taxes, if not more, than owners of single family homes.
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ReplyDeleteThe city of Omaha does not collect any garbage at apartment complexes over four-units- the landlords are responsible for it. But there is an option for those who wish to recycle: http://www.recyclepal.us/ I can't vouch for it as I've never used it, but it's worth a shot for people.
ReplyDeleteBTW you have some cool stuff up at your blog, I'm linking it on our page. Too bad you're done with it now!
Thanks. Take a look at engageomaha.com - it's covering a lot of the same issues that your blog is.
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