Hobo - As of June 29, 2012 with the passing of AB341 and Senate Bill 1018, any California business that generates 4 cubic yards or more of commercial solid waste per week, to have a recycling program that diverts increasing percentage of waste into recycling and away from land fills. With a state wide goal of 75% of commercial waste to be recycled by 2020.
A business has four options:
1. Self-haul
2. Subscribe to a hauler
3. Arrange for a pickup of recyclable materials
4. Subscribe to a recycling serevice
The law requires each local municipality to establish a landfill diversion program for all commercial solid waste. So each local area implements how and what needs to be recycled. This makes this law very hard to enforce and with very little consistency in what needs to be recycled, two neighboring cities can have completely different programs. New laws are going to be passed that will start standardizing the requirements very soon!
For me it is simple, recycle the waste when possible as it is very expensive to haul it all to a landfill and those cost just keep getting more expensive. For example one of my newest accounts was paying a trash company to remove 80 to 200 cubic yards of trash a week. With 50 to 80% of that being cardboard, CRV,
E-waste, and mixed metals. So did we need a law? No, sure does provide opportunities to save/make money if you know how and who to sell a little bit of scrap material to (just need get into the trash in a big way).
Cardboard and paper makes up more than 50% of all commercial waste, so to get the other better paying scrap one needs to handle it all!
Bookmarks