By Camille Shelton on Wednesday, 18 June 2025
Category: Green Neighbors Activities

Going beyond the bin

by Linda Frederiksen, Composter Recycler Class of 2025  

Americans produce a lot of trash. In Clark County, residents generate about 1,614 pounds of landfilled waste per person per year, or around 4.4 pounds per day, according to a Regional Solid Waste System Study conducted in 2021. 

Where does all that material go?

In Clark County, waste is collected in curbside bins or containers at multifamily complexes and serviced by Waste Connections of Washington. The material enters a complex system of sorting, recycling, and landfill disposal. Garbage is hauled to the Finley Buttes Landfill in Boardman, Oregon. Some material is incinerated, a small portion is composted, and yet another portion enters a recycling stream.

What about all the waste that isn't accepted in the curbside recycling bins?

Instead of throwing food waste into the garbage, where it will be transported hundreds of miles to a landfill to generate harmful methane gas, what might we do with it instead?

How about fluorescent lights, rechargeable batteries, broken holiday lights, furniture, and other difficult-to-dispose items; can any of these things be recycled? And what about the ubiquitous plastic clamshells so much of our food now seems to be packaged inis there a better way to dispose of it than throwing it in the garbage? How do I generate less waste? 

How to go beyond the bin with local disposal options

The reality is there is no single solution to waste management. Instead, we have a hierarchy of disposal alternatives that include better ways to reduce, reuse, and recycle our mountains of stuff. Although these alternatives are often perceived as costly and confusing, there are free, accessible options!

Download the RecycleRight app (available on the Apple App Store and Google Play Store) or use the Recycling A-Z Directory to search materials, receive service alerts and calendar notifications about your waste services. 

​Plastics that are not accepted in the curbside bin

Foam 

Food scraps

Clothing and home furnishings

Batteries and electronics

Optional paid subscriptions

A more convenient, but also more expensive option, is to use a subscription specialty recycling service like RecyclePlus or Ridwell, which is for households located in limited-service areas. Subscription services collect foam and other select items at the doorstep for recycling.  

Top five tips for better home recycling

1. Get started


2. Set up a household recycling system in an accessible and convenient area like a garage, utility room, porch, or deck.

3. Designate specific containers for materials sorting, such as paper and cardboard, food grade glass, plastics, textiles, batteries and other categories of recyclables.

4. Gather, clean and sort items to be recycled as they are used. For example, rinse out plastics and cans, tape batteries, and collect plastic film separately.

5. Make it a habit. Before throwing anything away, use the Recycling A-Z Directory to identify how and where items can be reduced, reused, or recycled. Does doing better require more time/energy/thought/effort/preparation/planning? It does, without question. It's not easy being green. Does it have a small but positive impact on our community? Yes, it does. For the planet, isn't it the least we can do?