CSWD Monthly NewsFlash

Website: https://cswd.net/?utm_source=FL%20CSWD%20NewsFlash%201116&utm_campaign=2016-Oct%20NewsFlash%20Version%20A&utm_medium=email

It’s officially fall. The leaves know it – they’re already glowing with a Crayola box of color and launching themselves from the treetops to your yards.

There are several options for disposing of leaves and yard and garden debris. Note: Limits, specs, and fees may apply. Please call ahead! 

Leaves & yard debris includes non-woody leaf, garden, and yard trimmings. No twigs, branches, plastic bags, rocks, sod, trash, or pumpkins.
Woody debris includes branches, logs, clean stumps, as well as clean lumber. NO wood that has been painted, stained, treated, or glued. NO dirt, rocks, etc.
CSWD Drop-Off Centers
Williston is the only DOC that allows use of dumping mechanisms for leaves.
Leaves and non-woody yard debris
 is accepted — in a separate pile from woody debris — at no charge at all locations (Burlington, Essex, Hinesburg, Milton, Richmond, South Burlington, and Williston). Special hours for leaves only at Essex & South Burlington: Sunday, Nov. 6 & 13, 8 am – 4 pm 
Woody debris (branches, logs, clean stumps) accepted — in a separate pile from leaves & yard debris — at all DOCs except Burlington and Hinesburg.

Got pumpkins? If they’re free of artificial decorations, paints, and all types of candles and wax, please put them in the compost bins at the DOC. If they do have artificial decorations, their fate is the landfill. If you have a large quantity,of pumpkins without artificial decorations, please bring them directly to Green Mountain Compost (see below) 

(1042 Redmond Rd., Williston)
Leaves and non-woody yard debris only!

Mon-Sat 8-4 through Nov. 14. Winter hours begin Nov. 15: Mon-Fri 8-4.
Special Sunday hours for leaves only: Nov. 6 & 13, 8 am – 4 pm
Dumping mechanisms allowed.

(111 Intervale Rd., Burlington):

Up to 6 cubic yards. Dumping mechanisms allowed.
Leaves and non-woody yard debris are accepted — in a separate pile from woody debris.
Tue, Thur, Fri, Sat 8 am – 4 pm
Winter hours begin Nov. 14: Open Tue-Fri 8 am – 12 pm; Sat 8 am – 4 pm
Burlington curbside leaf pick-up is on your recycling day during the week of November 16. Leaves will be picked up only if they are in compostable paper bags. NO woody debris, rocks, soil, pumpkins, trash, etc. This service is provided by Burlington Public Works (863-9094) for residents. Not available for condominiums, apartment complexes, or commercial properties.
Colchester residents may bring leaves and yard debris to Airport Park (off Colchester Point Road in the Malletts Bay area) Saturday and Sunday, Nov. 5 & 6, 8 am – 4 pm. Leaves may be loose or in compostable paper bags. NO woody debris, rocks, soil, pumpkins, trash, etc.
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A season of gratitude

Thanksgiving is a day for filling our hearts with gratitude and focusing anew on the gifts that ebb and flow through our lives: the food that sustains us, the shelter that protects us, the friends and family who warm our hearts.

Practical packaging
(thanks to Tom Page)

It’s also a time to appreciate Yankee practicality that Mother Nature wields all around us every day. Focusing on the food that sustains us, take a fresh look at the raw ingredients that make up your meal. Each is a gift, ingeniously wrapped and protected. The really brilliant part is that, once removed, that peeling, rind, trimming, and bone serve as the raw ingredients for making compost — which, in turn, grows more food! Brilliant.

If you’re compost-curious, you’ll find that it’s pretty easy: Just like recycling, instead of tossing your scraps into the trash, you toss it into its own container, and then either take it out to a backyard compost bin or bring those scraps to any CSWD Drop-Off Center or to Green Mountain Compost in Williston. W

e’ll give you all the info and support you need to make it work for you, plus containers to collect it in!

When food scraps wind up in the landfill, it can take decades for them to break down in that airless tomb. We’ve all heard how important it is to be concerned about our carbon footprint. Well, as food slowly decomposes in a landfill, it releases methane, a greenhouse gas about 20 times more potent than carbon dioxide. Some landfills have methane collection systems that turn that gas into energy, but none capture 100%, and even systems that do capture the gas frequently burn it off with open flares instead of converting it to energy.

Any way you slice it, keeping food scraps out of the landfill is a step closer to nature’s original design, where nothing is wasted. Now that’s Yankee practicality.

Go ahead — give it a try. We’re here to help!
Call (802) 872-8111  —  Email info@cswd.net  — Visit cswd.net/

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How to keep your holiday bounty out of the landfill
For many people, November is the gateway month to the holiday season and there’s never enough time, there’s always too much traffic, and the most convenient solutions usually turn out to be the most wasteful — leaving what’s left of your New Year’s resolutions in tatters.
Relax. You don’t have to increase your landfill legacy while you’re out running around getting ready for the holidays. Take a deeeeep breath. Now let it out. You’ve got this.

1. Need to grab a bite while you’re out? Use your patronage as a force for good! There are many restaurants and businesses that are fighting food waste by composting their food scraps. For a list of them, visit this website and show them your gratitude by popping in for a meal:  https://cswd.net/business/businesses-fighting-food-waste/

2. Throw an easy-peasy, waste-free dinner party. Here’s how:
– Use reusable dinnerware. After all, the best gossip happens in the kitchen during communal dishwashing sessions.
– If you use disposable plates, bowls, or cups, make sure they’re recyclable or compostable.
Here are the recycling rules:
     # Used paper plates, bowls, and cups are NOT recyclable. All paper cups — used or unused — are coated with plastic, making all cups non-recyclable. When used, food and beverages soak in, contaminating them, rendering them non-recyclable.
# Plastic cups, bowls, and plates are recyclable only if rinsed clean. That means NO stuck-on food.
# Utensils of any kind or material are NOT recyclable. Period.
Here are the composting rules:
     # Uncoated paper plates and bowls are compostable along with any leftover food and scraps.
# Cups, coated paper plates and bowls, and plastic foodware (including utensils) are compostable only if they or the package they come in states that they are “BPI Certified” or “ASTM certified for compostability.”
# You have a plan for setting up separate containers for trash, recyclables and compostables. If you go to all the trouble to use compostable products, and you don’t have a place for people to put them, they (and your good intentions) will end up in the trash or, worse, mixed in with recyclables.
# Find out more about compostable products at the
Green Mountain Compost compostable products web page.
# See? It’s much easier to just use reusable dinnerware! If you don’t have enough on hand, go buy some for very little money at a reuse store like the ReSource Household Goods shop in Burlington, Habitat for Humanity’s ReStore in Williston, or Goodwill in Williston or South Burlington. Then donate them back when you’re done! Find these and other reuse options on CSWD’s reuse and donations web page

3. Food scraps are a valuable resource — treat ’em that way!
# When you’re preparing your meals, simply toss the rinds, peels, fats, bones, coffee grounds, and even paper towels into a food scrap collection container (any container with a tight lid will do). Easy-peasy tip: Line the bottom of the bucket with a scrap of newspaper or a paper towel to make dumping easier.
# When you’re done eating, scrape your plates into that same container.
# The next time you’re out running errands, bring along the container and dump it off at any CSWD Drop-Off Center or Green Mountain Compost in Williston.

4. Here are some handy food storage ideas that can save you some real dough. Check out

CSWD’s Reducing Food Waste web page for a slew of helpful resources. There’s definitely something for everyone there!
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Food and recycling don’t mix
For a product or material to be recyclable, there needs to be someone out in the global commodities market who wants to buy that material and use it to manufacture new product. Buyers let us know what types of material they want and what condition it has to be in for them to accept it — and none of them want food residue on the  plastic, paper, or metal recyclables they buy.

That’s why it’s important to empty and rinse plastic and metal cans, bottles, and tubs clean before putting them in your recycling bin. Paper or cardboard — including paper liners used with boxes of cereal, cracker, etc. — contaminated with food residue, or grease stains is a big recycling no-no.

We use the money we make from selling recyclables to fund recycling programs. If we are paid less for our loads because of too much contamination, or if we have to pay to send food-contaminated recyclables to the landfill rather than to market, that’s less funding for programs that serve you. Plus, food contamination makes the job and working environment much harder for the 20+ workers who sort your cans, bottles, jugs, and paper at our recycling facility.

Phoebe’s rinsing technique

(thanks to fsamuels)

Easy-rinse tip: If you have a hard-to-rinse jar of peanut butter, mayo, etc., and you don’t have a professional like Phoebe around to take care of it, just fill the jar with rinse water from your dishes, let it sit in the sink for a few minutes, and you’ll find it much easier to swish out that remaining food, or tuck that jar into your dishwasher if you have room. Add a stainless-steel scrubbie to your kitchen clean-up arsenal and you’ll find it much easier to clean out those containers!

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Wanna fight food waste?
Shrink Your FOOD-Print!

We’ve all heard of how important it is to shrink your carbon footprint. One way to do it is to shrink your FOOD-Print! Pop into the info open-house hosted by the FOOD-Print Initiatives Group and learn about saving money, reducing food waste, and helping our planet.

WHEN: Tuesday, November 15, 5:30-6:30 p.m.
WHERE: Hinesburg Town Hall (10632 VT Rt. 116)

Did you know that about 25% of the food that Americans buy ends up in the trash?
That adds up to roughly $1,600 a year from the average food budget, wasted. Once it’s in the landfill, food becomes just another valuable resource gone to waste and generating harmful greenhouse gasses.

Stop by the FOOD-Print event and learn easy tips to help you shop smarter, prep and store food smarter, maximize your savings, start backyard or drop-off composting, and reduce your waste next to nothing. You’ll learn how to be a food-waste detective by finding clues in your own FOOD-Print!

Reducing food waste is a great way to express gratitude for your bounty — and now is a great time to start some new zero-waste Thanksgiving traditions. For more information and ideas visit cswd.net/reduce-and-reuse/reducing-food-waste/.

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It’s boat clean-out time! Here’s what to do with expired marine flares:

As boating season draws to a close, it’s time to think about preparing your vessel for a long winter’s nap. For Vermont residents looking for safe disposal options for expired marine flares, you can now bring them to the Environmental Depot, CSWD’s hazardous waste collection facility in South Burlington.
The Depot will accept marine flares at no charge from residents of any Vermont town. Flares and other hazardous materials are NOT accepted at CSWD Drop-Off Centers. The flares collected at the Depot are picked up for final disposal by the Vermont State Police Bomb Squad.

Businesses with flares must contact Vermont State Police Bomb Squad for disposal (https://vsp.vermont.gov/ or 802-244-8781). Residents may contact them as well for more information about their flare disposal program.

The Environmental Depot is CSWD’s hazardous waste collection and processing facility, located at 1011 Airport Parkway in South Burlington.
Open Wednesday through Friday, 8-2; Saturday 8-3:30.