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Spokane County
Recycling Rate adjusted to 43% |
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OLYMPIA – The news on recycling is a mixed
bag. Although Washingtonians sent a total of 5.3 million tons of waste
to landfills last year, we recycled 43 percent of municipal waste. At
the same time, we had success diverting other materials, such as
construction and demolition debris, raising the total statewide
“recovery” of materials from 47 to 49 percent.
Standard recycling by households and
businesses in Washington held mostly steady, at 43 percent in 2006, down
just one percentage point from the year before, according to new numbers
compiled by the state Washington Department of Ecology (Ecology). That
accounts for more than 4 million tons of recycled material.
In addition to construction debris,
recovered materials included land-clearing debris, agricultural wastes
and other organic materials, tires, antifreeze, oil filters and paint.
Since these items are not part of the municipal waste stream (households
and businesses), they are not calculated into the state’s municipal
recycling rate.
“These numbers tell us people in Washington
are responsible about not sending garbage to a landfill where it can
harm the environment,” said Laurie Davies, acting manager for Ecology’s
Solid Waste Program. “But we need to think a lot more about not
creating waste in the first place. That means thinking about the
products we buy, how they’re made and packaged.”
Besides saving landfill space, waste
prevention and recycling also are important strategies for reducing
greenhouse gas emissions and conserving energy, Davies noted.
Washington’s recycling efforts for 2006 reduced greenhouse gas emissions
by more than 3 million tons or 1,000 pounds per person. This roughly
equates to removing 2.5 million passenger cars from the roadway each
year – over half the passenger cars in Washington.
From 2005 to 2006, Washington’s population
grew an estimated 1.9 percent, according to population forecasters with
the Office of Financial Management. In addition, the amount of garbage
produced by each person in the state coincidentally increased by 1.9
percent also in 2006. Combined with the population gain, each person’s
contribution to the amount of garbage produced was greater, causing the
total amount of waste to increase even more.
Washington residents produced an average of
8 pounds of waste per person each day in 2006, compared to 7.9 pounds a
day in 2005.
“Generating more waste is not a new trend,
but our agency is putting more thought and effort into how we can bring
these numbers down,” Davies said. “Citizens can pay attention to
purchasing decisions, especially during the holidays. Some practical
things people can do are choosing gifts that offer a service rather than
an item that might later be tossed, buying durable products that will
last and that use less packaging, and finding opportunities to reuse
materials whenever possible.”
Davies said Washington residents can also
make a difference by being mindful of waste they produce away from home
– when shopping or making food purchases. Workplaces can cut paper
waste by relying more on electronic documentation and using recycled
paper in copy machines and printers.
Other ways to reduce the amount of waste
being sent to landfills include composting food and yard waste, and
donating purchased items when finished using them.
A 1989 Washington state law established a
statewide recycling goal of 50 percent. By contrast, the latest reported
national average is 33 percent. The ultimate goal is not to produce the
waste in the first place, Davies said. |
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Spokane County Recycling
rates have been adjusted to 43%* for the year 2006 (equal
to WA State average). However,
the Spokane County Diversion rate remained the
same, 5 points below WA State average.
* Independent analysis determined the recycling rate to
be 40.88%. |
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Recycling |
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Diversion |
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Commodity |
Tons |
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Commodity |
Tons |
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Aluminum Cans |
1,442.49 |
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Anti-freeze |
474.89 |
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Container Glass |
4,538.77 |
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Ash, Sand and Dust - Asphalt |
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Corrugated Paper |
25,239.64 |
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Asphalt/Concrete |
135,723.63 |
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Electronics |
353.25 |
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Carpet or pad |
305.13 |
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Ferrous Metals |
78,018.11 |
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Composting Furnish |
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Fluorescent light bulbs |
43.91 |
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Construction & Demolition |
12,803.76 |
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Food Waste |
5,958.54 |
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Donated Food |
503.00 |
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Gypsum |
1,060.00 |
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Flat Glass |
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HDPE Plastics |
390.30 |
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Food Processing Waste |
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High Grade |
7,855.91 |
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Household Batteries |
70.79 |
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LDPE Plastics |
360.64 |
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Household Items - Reuse |
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MC-DB-Aseptic |
13.20 |
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Land clearing debris |
21,656.09 |
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Mixed Paper |
7,135.07 |
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LCD - Energy Recovery |
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Newspaper |
15,719.50 |
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Miscellaneous |
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Nonferrous Metals |
19,657.96 |
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Oil Filters |
40.75 |
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Other Recyclable Plastics |
33.11 |
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Other Petroleum Fuels |
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Other Rubber Materials |
33.00 |
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Paint |
373.00 |
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PET Bottles |
601.45 |
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Reused Building Material |
0.25 |
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Photographic Films |
63.77 |
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Roofing material |
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Textiles |
3,000.89 |
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Tires - baled |
43.35 |
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Tin Cans |
720.33 |
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Tires - energy recovery |
54.93 |
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Tires - recycled |
633.50 |
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Tires - reuse |
29.13 |
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Used Oil |
6,391.75 |
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Used Oil - Energy Recovery |
1,101.23 |
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Vehicle Batteries |
2,389.12 |
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Wood for Energy Recovery |
47,000.00 |
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White Goods |
4,564.00 |
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Yard Debris - Energy Recovery |
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Wood |
23,818.53 |
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Yard Debris |
48,774.00 |
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Total Diverted Materials |
220,179.93 |
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Total Recovery (Diversion + Recycling) |
455,527.67 |
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Total MSW Recycled |
258,810.74 |
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Total MSW Disposed |
340,533.39 |
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Total MSW Disposed |
340,533.39 |
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Other Waste Types Disposed |
243,212.02 |
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Total MSW Generated |
599,343.13 |
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Tires - disposed |
242.36 |
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MSW Recycling Rate |
43.18% |
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Total Solid Waste Disposed |
583,987.77 |
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Total Solid Waste Generated |
1,039,515.44 |
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Diversion Rate |
43.82% |
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