Northeast Resource Recovery Association
1-800-223-0150 info@nrra.net
Mike Durfor – Executive Director
A Recycling Non-Profit
Working Together to Make Recycling Strong!
About Us
Working Together to Make Recycling Strong!
In 1981, four New Hampshire municipalities founded the Northeast
Resource Recovery Association, then called the New Hampshire
Resource Recovery Association, to provide a clearinghouse for current,
up-to-date information and a source of technical and marketing
assistance in the general areas of waste reduction and recycling.
RECYCLING 2016
* Waste Stream and Market Changes
* Industry Reactions
* Education Needs and Outreach
2016 R3 Mike Durfor
2016 R3 Mike Durfor
2016 R3 Mike Durfor
2016 R3 Mike Durfor
2016 R3 Mike Durfor
2016 R3 Mike Durfor
2016 R3 Mike Durfor
2016 R3 Mike Durfor
2016 R3 Mike Durfor
2016 R3 Mike Durfor
Single Stream Specifications:
RECYCLABLES shall be dry, loose, not bagged, and include only the following:
Aluminum food and beverage containers - empty Glass food and beverage containers – brown, clear, or green - empty
Ferrous (Iron) cans – empty PET plastic containers with the symbol #1 – with screw tops only -
empty
HDPE natural plastic containers with the symbol
#2 (milk and water bottles) – empty
HDPE pigmented plastic containers with the symbol #2 (detergent,
shampoo bottles, etc.) - empty
Plastics with symbols #3, #4, #5, #6, #7 – empty Newsprint
Old corrugated containers Magazines, glossy inserts and pamphlets
Catalogs Cereal boxes; detergent, gift and snack boxes
Telephone books Printer paper
Copier paper Mail
All other office paper without wax liners
RECYCLABLES do not include the following (“Non-Recyclables”):
Bagged materials (even if containing Recyclables) Microwave trays
Mirrors Window or auto glass
Light Bulbs Ceramics
Porcelain Plastics unnumbered
Plastic bags, expanded polystyrene Coat hangers
Glass cookware/bakeware Household items such as cooking pots, toasters, etc.
Flexible packaging and multi-laminated materials Wet fiber
Excluded Materials Fiber containing, or that has been in contact with, food debris
Any recyclable materials, or pieces of recyclable
materials, less than 2” in size in any dimension
Materials: (a) that contain chemical or other properties deleterious,
or capable of causing material damage, to any part of Company's
property, its personnel or the public; and/or (b) that may
materially impair the strength or the durability of the Company's
structures or equipment.
2016 R3 Mike Durfor
Orange County, N.C., which includes Chapel
Hill, was making about $500,000 a year by
selling its recyclables to a company called
Sonoco. But as commodity prices have
fallen, so, too, have the prices that Sonoco
can offer local governments. Starting this
month, Sonoco will not pay Orange County
anything for the mixed paper, plastics and
metals it collects
Last year, the city government in
Washington, D.C., paid Waste
Management $1.37 million to accept
the recyclables it collected from
residents. That represented a stark
reversal from 2011, when the
district earned $550,000 for sending
the company roughly the same
amount of material.
San Antonio made $305,000 from
collecting and selling 87,600 tons of
recycling last year. That was far less
than the $5.2 million the city made
in 2011, but it was better than the
alternative. Sending those
recyclables to landfill would have
cost San Antonio $2.1 million last
year.
And Waste Management, the biggest recycler in the
country, has reduced the number of recycling facilities it
operates to about 100, from 130, over the last two years,
resulting in the loss of 900 jobs.
Over the last three quarters, revenues from recycling
operations are down 16 percent from the same time a
year earlier, to $878 million from just over $1 billion.
“The recycling industry is being hit dramatically by falling
commodity and oil prices,” said Michael Taylor, vice
president for international trade at the Society of the
Plastics Industry. “A real fear now is that recycling rates
might go down. That would be a horrible situation.”
2016 R3 Mike Durfor
“The Reign of Recycling” By JOHN TIERNEY, October 3, 2015
If you live in the United States, you probably do some form of recycling. It’s likely that you
separate paper from plastic and glass and metal. You rinse the bottles and cans, and you
might put food scraps in a container destined for a composting facility. As you sort
everything into the right bins, you probably assume that recycling is helping your
community and protecting the environment. But is it? Are you in fact wasting your time?
In 1996, I wrote a long article for The New York Times Magazine arguing that the recycling
process as we carried it out was wasteful. I presented plenty of evidence that recycling
was costly and ineffectual, but its defenders said that it was unfair to rush to judgment.
Noting that the modern recycling movement had really just begun just a few years earlier,
they predicted it would flourish as the industry matured and the public learned how to
recycle properly.
Despite decades of exhortations and mandates, it’s still typically more expensive for
municipalities to recycle household waste than to send it to a landfill. Prices for recyclable
materials have plummeted because of lower oil prices and reduced demand for them
overseas. The slump has forced some recycling companies to shut plants and cancel plans
for new technologies. The mood is so gloomy that one industry veteran tried to cheer up
her colleagues this summer with an article in a trade journal titled, “Recycling Is Not
Dead!”
2016 R3 Mike Durfor
2016 R3 Mike Durfor
2016 R3 Mike Durfor
2016 R3 Mike Durfor
2016 R3 Mike Durfor
EXAMPLE # B:
1. CHARGES and INVOICING. Invoices will be sent on a monthly schedule and
payment is required within thirty (30) days from invoice date.
Term Acceptable Waste
Disposal
Charge Per Ton
Delivered to XXXX
Acceptable Recyclable
Materials Transportation
Charge Per Ton
Delivered to XXXX
Acceptable Recyclable
Materials Processing
Charge Per Ton
Delivered to XXXX
9/1/15– 6/30/16 $62.00 $35.00 $78.00
7/1/16– 6/30/17 $62.00 $35.50 $79.15
7/1/17– 6/30/18 $62.00 $36.00 $80.35
7/1/18– 6/30/19 $63.00 $37.85 $81.55
7/1/19– 6/30/20 $64.00 $38.45 $82.75
2016 R3 Mike Durfor
2016 R3 Mike Durfor
2016 R3 Mike Durfor
• Given the challenges ahead, the choices are difficult
and there are no guarantees.
• The best recommendation is to prepare for the
future by recognizing the long term essential need
for ……and value of ….recycling infrastructure.
• The only question left is whether your town owns its
own infrastructure and controls its destiny or if the
private sector steps up and charges market rates for
the commodities to move.
• The following is one example of a public facility
investment that are now paying dividends.
2016 R3 Mike Durfor
2016 R3 Mike Durfor
2016 R3 Mike Durfor
DOUBLE DOWN ON INFRASTRUCTURE
In Plaquemines Parish, just south of New
Orleans, Republic Services decided to double
the fees it charged the local government to
collect and process recyclables.
The cost was too high, and the parish said it
would end its recycling program at the end
of this month, only to reverse course after a
public outcry led by energetic seventh
graders.
2016 R3 Mike Durfor
MOM and NRRA Workshops
Working Together to Make Recycling Strong!
MOM - Members/Operations/Marketing meetings are held monthly.
In addition. NRRA conducts workshops and facility tours several times a
year that can be used for continuing education credits toward transfer facility
operator certifications and renewals.
2016 R3 Mike Durfor
2016 R3 Mike Durfor
2016 R3 Mike Durfor
But our planet and future
generations depend on it!

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2016 R3 Mike Durfor

  • 1. Northeast Resource Recovery Association 1-800-223-0150 info@nrra.net Mike Durfor – Executive Director A Recycling Non-Profit Working Together to Make Recycling Strong!
  • 2. About Us Working Together to Make Recycling Strong! In 1981, four New Hampshire municipalities founded the Northeast Resource Recovery Association, then called the New Hampshire Resource Recovery Association, to provide a clearinghouse for current, up-to-date information and a source of technical and marketing assistance in the general areas of waste reduction and recycling.
  • 3. RECYCLING 2016 * Waste Stream and Market Changes * Industry Reactions * Education Needs and Outreach
  • 14. Single Stream Specifications: RECYCLABLES shall be dry, loose, not bagged, and include only the following: Aluminum food and beverage containers - empty Glass food and beverage containers – brown, clear, or green - empty Ferrous (Iron) cans – empty PET plastic containers with the symbol #1 – with screw tops only - empty HDPE natural plastic containers with the symbol #2 (milk and water bottles) – empty HDPE pigmented plastic containers with the symbol #2 (detergent, shampoo bottles, etc.) - empty Plastics with symbols #3, #4, #5, #6, #7 – empty Newsprint Old corrugated containers Magazines, glossy inserts and pamphlets Catalogs Cereal boxes; detergent, gift and snack boxes Telephone books Printer paper Copier paper Mail All other office paper without wax liners RECYCLABLES do not include the following (“Non-Recyclables”): Bagged materials (even if containing Recyclables) Microwave trays Mirrors Window or auto glass Light Bulbs Ceramics Porcelain Plastics unnumbered Plastic bags, expanded polystyrene Coat hangers Glass cookware/bakeware Household items such as cooking pots, toasters, etc. Flexible packaging and multi-laminated materials Wet fiber Excluded Materials Fiber containing, or that has been in contact with, food debris Any recyclable materials, or pieces of recyclable materials, less than 2” in size in any dimension Materials: (a) that contain chemical or other properties deleterious, or capable of causing material damage, to any part of Company's property, its personnel or the public; and/or (b) that may materially impair the strength or the durability of the Company's structures or equipment.
  • 16. Orange County, N.C., which includes Chapel Hill, was making about $500,000 a year by selling its recyclables to a company called Sonoco. But as commodity prices have fallen, so, too, have the prices that Sonoco can offer local governments. Starting this month, Sonoco will not pay Orange County anything for the mixed paper, plastics and metals it collects
  • 17. Last year, the city government in Washington, D.C., paid Waste Management $1.37 million to accept the recyclables it collected from residents. That represented a stark reversal from 2011, when the district earned $550,000 for sending the company roughly the same amount of material.
  • 18. San Antonio made $305,000 from collecting and selling 87,600 tons of recycling last year. That was far less than the $5.2 million the city made in 2011, but it was better than the alternative. Sending those recyclables to landfill would have cost San Antonio $2.1 million last year.
  • 19. And Waste Management, the biggest recycler in the country, has reduced the number of recycling facilities it operates to about 100, from 130, over the last two years, resulting in the loss of 900 jobs. Over the last three quarters, revenues from recycling operations are down 16 percent from the same time a year earlier, to $878 million from just over $1 billion. “The recycling industry is being hit dramatically by falling commodity and oil prices,” said Michael Taylor, vice president for international trade at the Society of the Plastics Industry. “A real fear now is that recycling rates might go down. That would be a horrible situation.”
  • 21. “The Reign of Recycling” By JOHN TIERNEY, October 3, 2015 If you live in the United States, you probably do some form of recycling. It’s likely that you separate paper from plastic and glass and metal. You rinse the bottles and cans, and you might put food scraps in a container destined for a composting facility. As you sort everything into the right bins, you probably assume that recycling is helping your community and protecting the environment. But is it? Are you in fact wasting your time? In 1996, I wrote a long article for The New York Times Magazine arguing that the recycling process as we carried it out was wasteful. I presented plenty of evidence that recycling was costly and ineffectual, but its defenders said that it was unfair to rush to judgment. Noting that the modern recycling movement had really just begun just a few years earlier, they predicted it would flourish as the industry matured and the public learned how to recycle properly. Despite decades of exhortations and mandates, it’s still typically more expensive for municipalities to recycle household waste than to send it to a landfill. Prices for recyclable materials have plummeted because of lower oil prices and reduced demand for them overseas. The slump has forced some recycling companies to shut plants and cancel plans for new technologies. The mood is so gloomy that one industry veteran tried to cheer up her colleagues this summer with an article in a trade journal titled, “Recycling Is Not Dead!”
  • 27. EXAMPLE # B: 1. CHARGES and INVOICING. Invoices will be sent on a monthly schedule and payment is required within thirty (30) days from invoice date. Term Acceptable Waste Disposal Charge Per Ton Delivered to XXXX Acceptable Recyclable Materials Transportation Charge Per Ton Delivered to XXXX Acceptable Recyclable Materials Processing Charge Per Ton Delivered to XXXX 9/1/15– 6/30/16 $62.00 $35.00 $78.00 7/1/16– 6/30/17 $62.00 $35.50 $79.15 7/1/17– 6/30/18 $62.00 $36.00 $80.35 7/1/18– 6/30/19 $63.00 $37.85 $81.55 7/1/19– 6/30/20 $64.00 $38.45 $82.75
  • 31. • Given the challenges ahead, the choices are difficult and there are no guarantees. • The best recommendation is to prepare for the future by recognizing the long term essential need for ……and value of ….recycling infrastructure. • The only question left is whether your town owns its own infrastructure and controls its destiny or if the private sector steps up and charges market rates for the commodities to move. • The following is one example of a public facility investment that are now paying dividends.
  • 35. DOUBLE DOWN ON INFRASTRUCTURE
  • 36. In Plaquemines Parish, just south of New Orleans, Republic Services decided to double the fees it charged the local government to collect and process recyclables. The cost was too high, and the parish said it would end its recycling program at the end of this month, only to reverse course after a public outcry led by energetic seventh graders.
  • 38. MOM and NRRA Workshops Working Together to Make Recycling Strong! MOM - Members/Operations/Marketing meetings are held monthly. In addition. NRRA conducts workshops and facility tours several times a year that can be used for continuing education credits toward transfer facility operator certifications and renewals.
  • 42. But our planet and future generations depend on it!

Editor's Notes