Sharon Fisher Recycling Coordinator
c/o Highway Department
74 Elm Avenue East
Selkirk, NY 12158
(518) 439-4955, extension 1510
E-mail:
Hours 8:00 a.m. to noon
Recycling of certain items is mandatory for all businesses
and residents in the Town of Bethlehem (see the
brochure). Glass
bottles, plastic bottles (#1 and #2), and metal cans must be placed loose in the
recycling bin provided by private waste haulers.
Newspapers, corrugated cardboard, kraft paper bags, magazines/catalogs,
and office paper should be bagged or tied according to the hauler’s
instructions. It is important
to FLATTEN all boxes before putting curbside for recycling.
Those who use the Rupert Road Transfer Station are also required to
separate the above-mentioned items from trash for recycling. Paperboard
boxes (single layer cardboard) can be recycled all year round at the Elm Avenue
Park 'n' Ride.
The public is encouraged to donate their used eyeglasses, sunglasses and
hearing aids to their local
Lions club; look for the blue and white Lions Recycle For Sight collection
box at the Town Clerk's office at Town Hall. Located there are also drop-off
boxes for recycling the following: U.S. flags, license plates, six-pack
rings, non-alkaline household batteries and cell phones. Cell phones,
plastic six-pack rings and household batteries can also be dropped off any time
during business hours at the Highway Garage in Selkirk or Elm Avenue Park
Offices. Year round voluntary recycling is
offered for single layer paperboard boxes, clothing
and shoes, paperback books, and more. Recycle at the Rupert Road Transfer Station
or
call
the Recycling Coordinator for drop-off locations for items as well as how to recycle hard cover textbooks by removing the
cover. For more information, please see the Voluntary
Recycling List.
A voluntary recycling program for telephone books was arranged by the Town with Green Fiber, a
paper recycling company. Two (2) square green bins are placed next to the orange
clothing bins at the Elm Avenue Park n' Ride; the bins will be there April
through October. If recycling telephone books there, do not include the
plastic bag.
While visiting local stores, check out
the Environmentally Preferable Products to purchase, such as paper
products with post-consumer recycled content, remanufactured ink and toner
cartridges, and furniture, binders and organizers made with post-consumer recycled
content steel or plastic.Also look for eco-friendly or nontoxic cleaners.Purchasing recycled content items closes the loop of recycling.
Each spring, the Town of Bethlehem holds a household hazardous waste
(HHW) and computer recycling collection day. Residents can bring unwanted paints,
thinners, and solvents, unused pesticides and lawn chemicals, as well as
properly bagged asbestos, used florescent tubes, and outdated computers and
their components. Each fall an electronic collection
day is held. The town offers residents the
opportunity to dispose of old and outdated electronics such as computers and
computer parts, televisions, VCRs, cell phones and telephones. All
unusable electronics collected will be recycled in an environmentally safe
manner. Computers found to be serviceable will be donated locally for
minor repairs and redistributed for further use. Cell phones will be given
to an area emergency program. People turning in old cell phones are asked
to keep the battery on the phone and include the charger, if available; attach
the charger to the phone with a rubber band. Both of these special collections are held at the
Highway Department Garage Facility (address listed above).
Household Hazardous Waste and Computer Recycling Collection
Day will take place on Saturday, May 3, 2008, 8:00am to 1:00pm at the Town
Highway Garage, 74 Elm Avenue East, Selkirk.
Residents who attend this program must bring proof of
residency such as a driver’s license or current tax bill.Please make sure all lids are secure and cans and bottles or containers
are in boxes to prevent spills.Do
not smoke near chemicals or leave these products in a hot, unventilated vehicle
for an extended period of time.
For your safety please remain in your vehicle.Workers will unload the wastes.See
the Spring Cleanup Brochure for complete instructions.
The town has a Donating Reusables Brochure listing
organizations that welcome donations of good reusable appliances, furniture,
clothing, books, toys, eyeglasses and hearing aids. Copies of the
brochure are available at all town facilities or by clicking
here.
Proper disposal of home “sharps” (needles, syringes, and lancets) is available through
St. Peter's Hospital (525-1163), Albany County Nursing Home (869-2231
x240) or Albany Medical Center (262-8000).
For up-to-date recycling and waste reduction information,
watch for articles and advertisements in the Spotlight and News Herald
newspapers and on TV Channel 18, Bethlehem’s public access cable station.
Bring your old computers and electronics out of the closet and
basement. The opportunity to do the right thing with this equipment is
approaching. How about the VCR or television or telephone that doesn't
work anymore?
Many items contain heavy metals such as lead, cadmium and mercury (for
instance, see the article, below, regarding compact fluorescent
light bulbs). They should be handled properly and not disposed in a landfill.
Town of Bethlehem residents and pre-registered businesses can bring their obsolete electronics to the
Highway Garage, 74 Elm Avenue East, Selkirk, NY on Friday, September 26, 2008 between
8:00 a.m. and 3:00 p.m. and Saturday, September 27, 2008 from 8:00 a.m. to 12:00
noon. Items that are acceptable include computers and all their parts,
VCRs, televisions, cell phones and telephones. All cell phones will be donated for
emergency services. Do not bring stereo speakers, vacuums, lights or other
electric items. If you are unsure of any of your items, please contact the
Recycling Coordinator. If you cannot wait for the Fall Electronic Recycling
Program or the Spring Household Hazardous Waste Days, please
see the article, below, on how to recycle your electronics.
All electronics determined to be unusable will be disposed of in an
environmentally safe manner. Computers that can be serviced will have the
hard drive data destroyed and the repaired computer will be redistributed for
further use. The electronic vendor hired for this program will also
refurbish radios and televisions that can still be used. 97 % of all
non-repairable electronics will be recycled.Cell phones will be donated to area emergency programs.
Those turning in used cell phones are asked to keep the battery in the phone and
include the charger. Please attach the charger to the phone with a rubber
band. Cell phone recycling is also ongoing. Cell phones with their batteries
and chargers can be dropped off during business hours at the Highway Department
or in the box at the information desk in front of the Town Clerk's Office.
Businesses in the Town of Bethlehem may participate in this electronic
recycling program, too. They must pre-register due to regulations and quantities
they may wish to turn in for recycling. Please call 439-4955, extension
1510, Monday
through Friday from 8:00 a.m. to 12:00 noon, to pre-register or for all other
inquiries.
Before throwing out reusable items, first check with your local day care
facilities, schools, churches and hospitals. They may need books,
magazines, games, toys, furniture, flower pots, clothing or have a thrift shop that supports their
programs through sales.
All donated clothing should be in current season, clean, and not torn. Many organizations do not have large storage areas but are happy to receive your
donations. Please call ahead.
Furniture and appliances must be undamaged and in working condition. Padded items and mattresses must be clean and not torn, with no holes.
Check with your
municipality for proper disposal of broken furniture and non-working appliances.
Additional Information for Reusable Items
Cotton towels and cotton clothing - stained, torn cotton items make great
rags for home, the local gas station mechanic or the Bethlehem Highway
Department
Eye glasses - Bethlehem Lions Club collects eye and sun glasses for
reuse. Deposit metal and plastic framed glasses in boxes located in the Town Hall,
Town Library, Key Banks, Trustco, Charter One, Bank of America, Cohoes
Savings Banks, DiNapoli, Hughes and Buenau's Opticians. The Bethlehem
Lions Club also accepts hearing aids.
Hearing aids - will be refurbished and reused if sent in a padded box or bag
to Hear Now, 9745 East Hampden Avenue, Denver, CO 80231. Include
your name and address to receive a letter of acknowledgement for tax
purposes. The Bethlehem Lions Club also accepts hearing aids.
Shoe Exchange (if one wears two different sized shoes) - instead of
discarding the odd sized shoe, why not investigate The One Shoe Crew, 86 Clavela
Avenue, Sacramento, CA 95828. This organization attempts to match up
persons who need different sized left and right shoes. Another alternative
is the National Odd Shoe Exchange, Phoenix, AZ, their telephone number is
602-841-6691.
Styrofoam (PS) peanuts - check with local mail order businesses or Mail
Boxes, Etc. listed in the telephone book. Call the Recycling Coordinator
for alternatives in town.
Greeting cards - Shiny, glossy cards can be recycled with magazines and catalogs.
Non-shiny cards and envelopes are recycled with office/home/copy paper. Metallic cards or cards with glitter on them cannot be recycled.
For more
information on other ways to "recycle" greeting cards, see below.
Old Flags - deposit in special boxes at Town Hall, the Library, and after
3:00 p.m. at the American Legion Post on West Poplar Drive, Delmar, for proper
disposal.
Yarn, Embroidery thread, and other craft materials - craft and quilt clubs,
art classes at schools, senior projects and scout troops may need these items
for projects.
Household batteries - put lithium, rechargeable (nickel-cadmium),
button, lithium ion, mercury, cadmium and sealed lead acid batteries in boxes at
Town Hall, Elm Avenue Park, Highway Department in Selkirk, Rupert Road landfill,
Radio Shack stores, Quality Photo and various Post Offices. All alkaline
batteries can go in the trash.
Plastic six-pack rings - recycle in special boxes located at the Town
Hall, Elm Avenue Park and the Highway Department in Selkirk.
Records, tapes, and discs - look under the yellow page headline in the
telephone book for Buying, Trading and Selling Used Audio Tapes, Records, and
Discs. They must be free of scratches and not warped.
Second hand stores - listed in the yellow pages of the telephone book, see
Additional sources for selling or donating reusable clothing and furniture.
For locations, telephone numbers, and items accepted at local organizations,
please click here.
RECYCLING INSTRUCTIONS REQUIRED BY HAULERS* FOR PLACING RECYCLABLES AND TRASH CURBSIDE
Instructions and haulers are subject to change due to
changing rules, regulations, permits, and recycling facilities acceptance of
items. The haulers mentioned here have permits to recycle and pick up
trash in the Town of Bethlehem.
DEFINITIONS AND DESCRIPTIONS
Do not use plastic bags unless instructed by hauler.
Commingled is bottles and cans mixed together.
Paperboard/boxboard is the single layer cardboard of cereal, cracker, tissue, and shoe
boxes.Freezer boxes are NOT acceptable.
All Cardboard MUST be flattened to save space in the hauler’s truck.
Robert Wright Disposal, Inc.
439-3376
All Recyclables are picked up weekly along with the trash on the scheduled day.
Newspaper (in paper bag) next to brown recycling bin
Bottles and cans commingled loose in brown recycling bin
Corrugated Cardboard (triple layer) must be empty and flattened and placed under or
near recycling bin. Cut large cardboard into 3’ x 3’ pieces to fit in truck. Include
excess paper bags with cardboard.
Magazines and catalogs bundled with string, or placed in paper bag with the newspaper
Mixed office paper and junk mail in a clear plastic bag (tied shut) or in paper bag with newspaper
TRASH CONTAINER must be placed on the opposite side of the driveway from the
recycling bin and all the recyclables
Allied Waste Services of N. America, Inc.
785-7030
Recyclables should be put out on scheduled day: commingled bottles and cans one week and
paper items the next week. Trash is collected weekly.A calendar is
provided to each customer.
Bottles and cans commingled loose in blue recycling bin
Newspapers, kraft paper bags, magazines, office paper, junk mail, paperboard,
telephone books and clean, dry milk and juice cartons commingled in a second
recycling bin
Corrugated cardboard emptied, flattened, cut to 2’ by 2’ size and placed near the
paper recycling bin
County Waste & Recycling Service, Inc.
877-7007
All recyclables should be placed curbside next to trash on scheduled day. Recycling is picked up every other week. Trash is picked up weekly.A calendar is
provided to each customer.
Plastic and glass bottles, metal cans and wax coated milk and juice cartons are to be
commingled loose in recycling bin
Mix paper items in second recycling bin:newspapers,
magazines, catalogs, telephone books and boxboard (cereal boxes and the like)
Corrugated cardboard, empty, flattened and stacked next to paper goods
*PERMITTED HAULER REQUIREMENTS
Compliance with all mandatory residential and commercial recycling criteria.
Submission of mandatory quarterly recycling report forms.
Hours of Collection:
Commercial stops5:00 AM – 6:00 PMMonday – Saturday
Residential stops 6:00 AM – 6:00 PM Monday – Saturday
Your hauler MIGHT pick up bulky items.Bulky items include refrigerators, washers, dryers, furniture, and tires,
for example. You must call hauler to arrange a pickup.Often there is an extra fee for these extra items.Many bulky items are accepted at the Rupert Road Transfer
Station.
Staples recently unveiled a program
to recycle used computers and other office technology.Although they are targeting businesses this
service is also for the general public.All brands of computer monitors, laptops, printers, faxes and all-in-one
copiers will be accepted at any U.S. Staples store, for a fee of $10 per large
items.Staples is working with Amandi
Services, one of the country’s most experienced electronics recyclers, who
recycles the equipment according to standards set by the U.S Environmental
Protection Agency (EPA). (The Town of Bethlehem is holding a full
electronic collection on September 26 & 27, 2008, see article
above.)
Stapes also recycles used ink and
toner cartridges in the Recycle for Education Program. Donations from the
cartridges will go to your designated school.
Cell phones, PDAs, pagers, digital
cameras and chargers are recycled through their nonprofit partner Collective
Good, who refurbishes or recycles these items and donates a portion of the
proceeds to charity.The Town of
Bethlehem accepts cell phones at Town Hall and Highway Garage.
Rechargeable Batteries are also
accepted at Staples for recycling with the Rechargeable Battery Recycling
Corporation.Radio Shack and the
Town of Bethlehem accept rechargeable batteries also.
CFL light bulbs save energy and last longer.The
claim is that they use 2/3 less energy than standard incandescent bulbs and last
up to 10 times longer, with an average life span of 5 years.
However, did you know that the CFL light bulbs contain trace elements of mercury?Mercury was used in history to cure ills, process felt fiber, fill teeth,
make thermometers, medical equipment, and light bulbs work better.Today mercury is being phased out in medicine, dentistry and other
applications, because it has been discovered that mercury is toxic.
The Town of Bethlehem accepts spent fluorescent and compact fluorescent
light bulbs and old thermometers at the Bethlehem Highway Garage daily during
normal working hours, 7:00am to 4:30pm. or at Town Hall where a box is located
near the Town Clerk's office; please note, this box is for spent compact
fluorescent light (CFL) bulbs only.We also accept these items during household hazardous waste programs.Please keep them in a box or bag or their original container.These items are categorized as “universal waste” which allows the
Town to accept these items at all times.
Check out the following links for information such as the amount of mercury
emitted from using a standard incandescent light bulb vs. CFLs, precautions one
can take, recycling and cleanup if a CFL breaks.
TEXTILES/CLOTHING AND FOOTWEAR CAN BE REUSED, RECYCLED
A person generates about 35 pounds of textile/clothing waste per
year. Textiles include clothing, sheets, towels and other fabrics. This
textile waste represents 4.5 percent of the entire residential waste
stream.
Fortunately, each year, Americans reuse or recycle 2.5 billion pounds of
textiles. Every ton of recycled textile waste creates two person days
of semi-skilled labor. Textile recyclers, who also recycle scraps from
textile manufacturers, export 61 percent of their products, thus reducing the
U.S. trade deficit.
Here are several ways to recycle your textile waste.
Clean wearable clothing and footwear can be recycled in bins located at the Elm Avenue
Park 'n’ Ride, the Rupert Road Transfer Station and appropriately marked
green bins at various businesses throughout the town. Shoes should be tied together if there is a pair.
Throw un-wearable footwear in the trash. Please put clean and dry clothing in plastic bags
and tie shut. Put the filled bags into the bins. If left
outside the bins, rain and snow will cause the clothing to get wet and be
thrown away. Acceptable items include clothing, shoes, purses, belts,
hats, sheets, blankets, and towels. Do not include pillows, mattresses,
foam stuffing,
toys and household goods.
Ripped and torn cotton tee shirts, old towels, and old sheets that are not
good enough to pass along, can be reused as rags in the Town Highway Garage,
local mechanics shop or even in the home mechanics garage. They also make great
rags in the home for dusting and cleaning.
Refer to the
Donating Reusables Brochure (click here) to locate organizations that may accept
your good furniture, mattresses, toys, and other household goods. Or pick up a
copy of the brochure at the Town Hall, Town Park or Highway Garage.The brochure also lists the Town’s special recycling events.
Please do not donate your “trash” to organizations, especially the Salvation
Army. Examples are the old dimpled, scratched cooking pots, outdated
decorations, old stuffed or broken toys, textbooks and encyclopedias over 10
years old (which makes them outdated), old pillows, or broken appliances and
furniture. Organizations do not have time to fix damaged or broken
items. They become trash at the organization’s expense. Please throw out or recycle, damaged and outdated items.
Fact: all metal items and many paper goods can be recycled. Call
the recycling coordinator and find out how: 439-4955, extension 1510, Monday to Friday, 8am to 12 noon.
Recycling one pound of steel saves enough energy to light a 60 watt light bulb for 26 hours.
Recycling steel saves 40% of water used to make steel from ores, reduces air pollution by 86%
and reduces water pollution by 76%.
ALUMINUM
Recycling aluminum reduces energy use by 90%, enough to run a
television for 3 hours.
Recycling aluminum reduces air pollution by 95%.
PAPER
Every ton of paper recycled saves 17 trees and 380 gallons of oil.
Recycling paper reduces air pollution by 74%, water pollution by 35%.
GLASS
Glass is 100% recyclable and also extends furnace life and reduces energy costs.
Recycling one glass bottle saves enough energy to light a 100 watt bulb for 4 hours.
Recycling a ton of glass saves the equivalent of nine gallons of fuel oil.
PLASTIC
PET bottles are actually a form of polyester, which makes it easy to recycle bottles into
t-shirts, fleece, sweaters and socks.
HDPE Bottles can be remade into traffic cones, fencing, plastic wood, and other items.
Plastic makes up 8% of our trash by weight, but is 24% of the volume.
A plastic bottle can take 500 years to decompose.
COMPOSTING
Yard waste makes up approximately 20% of the waste stream.
Food waste makes up approximately 9% of the waste stream.
Composting improves the soil, prevents fertilizer runoff,
and reduces disposal costs and discards.
REDUCING, REUSING, RECYCLING AND COMPOSTING SAVES……
Energy, landfill space, natural resources and makes less
pollution than if raw materials are used.
Visit the New York State Department of Environmental
Conservation’s recycling web site for more information on Reduction, Reuse,
Recycling, Composting and the Environment at http://www.nyrecycles.org
Cleaning out old cards or books can be either emotional or backbreaking, but the task is
inevitable.
Textbooks, over 10 years old, are outdated according to the experts.
As a demonstration, note how fast the world has changed in technology, science, and
medicine. The exception to outdated is historical books, first editions and
signed books. These books may have an intrinsic value that would make it worth one’s
while to seek out a used book buyer rather than tossing away.
The
Town of Bethlehem has a soft cover book recycling bin at the Rupert Road
Transfer Station in South Bethlehem. A
hard cover book can become a coverless soft cover book when one removes the
cover. Bend the front and back
covers the wrong way. The inner pages will bulge out so that they can be torn or
cut out of the hard cover. Once
this is accomplished, the book is acceptable for recycling with soft cover books
at the Rupert Road Transfer Station. Throw the hard covers into the trash.
If you are clearing out a large number of textbooks or encyclopedias, please call
the recycling coordinator at 439-4955, extension 1510 for a recycling alternative.
Greeting cards arrive throughout the year and we often have saved too
many. Shiny, glossy cards can be recycled with magazines and catalogs.
Non-shiny cards and envelopes are recycled with office/home/copy paper.
Holiday greeting cards are often too pretty to recycle and
one may wish to reuse rather than recycle.Here are two options for reusing holiday card fronts.The first option is to reuse the card fronts as gift tags for holiday
presents.Yes, they will be bigger
than the tags one buys yet they will be both pretty and unique on the package.Some card tags may even substitute as a bow or ribbon.Use light-colored background cards so you can write a message
on the front of your tag or a darker card to write the message on the back.
A second option is to use the card front as a postcard.On the back there will be room to write an address and your message.Use them as invitations to your holiday party. Send them to friends as a
greeting another year. Don’t forget to add the stamp before mailing.
St. Jude's Ranch for
Children will once again be accepting all occasion used greeting cards in
the Summer of 2008. Please check
their web site for more information.
To purchase any of the finished cards, call 1-800-492-3562.
The Town of Bethlehem was among three government entities to be honored with
a 2003 Governor's Waste Reduction and Recycling Program Achievement of
Excellence Award. The other honorees were the Town of Amherst in Erie
County and Chautauqua County.
State Department of Environmental Conservation Commissioner Erin Crotty
presented the award on October 21 at the 14th annual Recycling Conference held
in Albany. Recycling Coordinator Sharon Fisher accepted the award on
behalf of the town.
The award was established to recognize the efforts of businesses, nonprofit
organizations, municipalities, environmental groups, and individuals who reduce
solid waste through the use of source reduction, reuse, or recycling programs.
In a letter to Supervisor Sheila Fuller, Governor George E. Pataki
wrote: "The Town of Bethlehem has achieved excellence in diverting
waste from disposal by implementing waste reduction and recycling
initiatives. Your commitment to waste reduction and recycling goals is
commendable and serves as an exemplary model for others to follow."
Between the years 1995 and 2000, Bethlehem's reduction and recycling
diversion rates grew from 16 percent to 50 percent. The town's Compost
Facility, the annual Household Hazardous Waste Collection days, and fall
Electronics Collection days contributed greatly to the increase.
Town of Bethlehem: 445 Delaware Avenue, Delmar, NY 12054 Ph: 518.439.4955
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