Monday 2 July 2012

Trash Costs Us All Cash - But Landfill Compaction Helps Reduce the Volume of Landfills

In this article the author explains how leaving litter degrades not only the environment, but also those that do the littering.


Landfill compaction equipment is part of the answer, so that when the rubbish gets to the landfill it is efficiently crushed under the specially designed compactor wheels, and increases the density of the waste in the landfill. In this way landfill compactorsdo a great deall to keep our world tidy, but few realise this or give their operators a second thought. Read the article, which we have copied below and we hope you will then understand this bettter: 



Garbage is big business. In fact, the money spent
on "picking up" garbage left behind in public places
such as parks, beaches, and forest land would pay
for highway repairs, and benefit schools all over the
country. America the Beautiful is fast becoming one
of unprecedented garbage problems. Trash from
car windows, in recreational places with garbage cans,
but somehow the trash misses and lands anywhere but
in the facilities provided, is still paid for with tax dollars.




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Personal integrity is judged by more than the person
themselves. It is also in the immediate surroundings of
that individual. If you live with trash strewn all over your
living area, then well, basically you need to clean up
more than your back yard. Self-esteem reaches beyond
who we are to our priorities. Something as simple as
tossing that Mickey D's wrapper and cup right out the
window displays a disregard for the highway used by
millions of others, but also for the workers who have to
clean it up. Their energy and pay check could be used
in other vital areas to benefit mankind in ways that picking
up after you just doesn't "cut" it.


Forest lands are modern day garbage dumps. During the
summer months, the scars on the land are not quite as
visible, but come winter with the leaves down and trees
bare, the degradation of humanity is glaring. Abandoned
cars, kitchen appliances, and yes, even baby diapers that
just aren't "biodegrading" fast enough are not views that
are displayed on travel brochures. Known as a
"throw away society", America was also known as America
the Beautiful. Scenic places and tranquil lakes are now
plastic bag and water and pop bottle havens. Clean-up
is more than a volunteer and community activitiy, it is
expensive and time-consuming. Tax dollars are used
and those who care enough to use trash barrels and con-
tainers still pay just as much from their pay checks as those
who toss and abuse and just don't care.


If the environment doesn't tear at your heart, then maybe
your wallet will. Small steps such as garbage disposal could
mean the difference between more community activities and
better education, but it's your choice. The next time you
roll down that window and toss, look in the back seat where
your child is. Their future costs money and would you rather
pay the salary to someone to clean up your disrespect or
see that your child gets the best in a school or sport activity?
It's your call - but the heap is getting bigger.


Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Arleen_Kaptur
Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/660015

Sunday 1 July 2012

Why Use Biodegradable Trash Bags?

In this article you will find a description of Biodegradable trash bags, their chractertics and advantages. We hope you find this to be an intersresting article to help you choose the type of rubbish storage you will use. Please click the link at the bottom of the articles for more information:



Biodegradable trash bags are a good way to do your part to keep massive amounts of garbage out of our landfills. The fact of the matter is that we all throw things out, and when you add up the amount of garbage per person, it adds up to a huge pile of garbage. Our landfills are filling up faster than we can find space to throw out our garbage, so it is important to help out by (a) throwing less out and (b) using bags that break down in our landfills.




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Not many people are using biodegradable trash bags. Most are not even aware of their existence and this is because they are fairly new on the market. Once you are aware of their existence, though, there is no good reason not to use them. They are no more expensive than regular garbage bags and they break down in the landfill at a much faster rate than regular garbage bags.


There are three main types of biodegradable bags available:


1. Oxo - meaning the plastic will break down when exposed to oxygen;
2. Bio - meaning the plastic breaks down into CO2 and water when it is exposed to UV light, moisture, heat and microorganisms;
3. Degradable - means it can be broken down


The process behind the biodegradation is two fold. First the plastic is oxidized, then micro organisms consume the plastic leaving behind "refuse" which is a reusable biomass which is both environmentally friendly and does not contain harmful toxins. All products that biodegrade find their way into our waterways and our earth, so we need to take care with what we dispose of and how we dispose of it.


No one is certain how long it takes for a regular trash bag to break down, but estimates are over 1,000 years! We haven't been using them long enough to know for sure. We certainly do not want to leave a legacy of massive piles of plastic bags behind for future generations, so it is good to think now of that possibility.


This is why using biodegradable trash bags is not only sensible but prudent. If you cannot locate these types of bags in your local supermarket, the next best choice is to order them from an online store. They are no more expensive than regular plastic bags and you can be certain that you are doing your part to be green whenever you throw away trash.



Elysse Biaca has been writing articles on a wide range of topics. Composting is important to reducing your carbon footprints, visit Elysse's latest post on using the eco-friendly?Biodegradable Trash Bags and compostable trash bags plus a great deal more.

Saturday 13 August 2011

Cream seems to sold new way to pick up garbage - SouthtownStar

Lauren FitzPatrick Sun-Times Media August 12, 2011 10:20 PM  Emanuel Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel said Friday that garbage collection change of a ward-by-Ward system on a grid plan not a done deal, but he pushes it as a way to save about $60 million per year.




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The mayor said Chicago's $225 per tonne cost pick up rubbish among the most expensive in the country, with other major cities, spending is closer to $135 per tonne. "We have not settled it, but I'm going to consider a way to do some things, so that the city of Chicago one of the the most expensive not..." "Waste services in the country," he said.


Several influential aldermen said Emanuel is convinced that a grid system could mean huge savings on garbage collection.


The Mayor has promised to close a 636 million US-dollar deficit in the city budget without raising taxes. It does of Ward costs more, but prefer chieftains of this system, because they say that allowing them, in order to better consultants respond last month Emanuel trash in connection with Beschwerden.Im asked to develop a system household junk to collect, which created a "fair workload for drivers", Ward regardless of borders.


"But even if the garbage collection system changes, Superintendent Ward resident problems would treat, remain said Emanuel."Ward (Superintendent), nor is any system that we look at, because they are a backbone of delivering the service remain, "he said." "But I have (on) some issues, we have not changed in 60 years: we can do it cheaper, better and more effectively?"


Emanuel said.Streamlining is garbage pickup under the cost-saving ideas that Emanuel the Administration intends to save money. His transport Commissioner presented on Thursday a mechanical "pothole killer", is that a hole can fill in 60 seconds with a small crew.


"Building permits before online went, shaving days of the process."I the city of Chicago appears to want in the 21st century, "said Emanuel." "At all levels of Government, our system is in decades-old policy that we have upgraded for the 21st century, not solid."© 2011 Sun-Times Media, LLC. All rights reserved. This material may be not copied or distributed without permission. More information on reprint and permissions, see http://www.suntimesreprints.com/. Order a reprint of this article to order, click here.


View the original article here

Friday 24 June 2011

Home Trash in London Ontario Goes to the W12A Landfill


When residents of an area do renovation, new construction, and spring cleaning they add many loads of garbage to the regular household trash. Cities of any size at all have historically developed methods of hauling away the regular stream of junk and disposing of it in the most environmentally-friendly way possible. Garbage used to be burned or thrown in the rivers which proved to be the major cause of local pollution of the air and water. This is the story of the W12A landfill that is the destination for trucks performing St. Thomas, Kitchener, Waterloo, Stratford, Cambridge, and London Ontario trash removal to compact the non-recyclable garbage and compress it into a landfill site.

Cities like London Ontario must do their trash removal and disposal in such a way as to conform to guidelines set out in the Environmental Assessment Act, Environmental Protection Act, and the Ontario Water Resources Act. The W12A landfill was opened in 1977 and is still evolving in order to handle three to four million more tons of residential and business rubbish in addition to the six million tons already deposited. The site covers 147 hectares, with 107 hectares being used to accommodate the quarter of a million annual tons of city waste from the 100 waste removal trucks that make their rounds collecting everything the city can throw at them.

Science has helped in the management of all this waste; older people will remember a time when the small rivers where dad used to fish as a child had been turned into lifeless toxic streams of undrinkable water caused by both direct dumping and leaching through the soil. Leachate collection piping and storm water management ponds are now used to prevent further environmental damage. The same approach has been taken to cause less damage to the air; decomposing garbage creates methane, a flammable gas which is 21 times more powerful than carbon dioxide as an agent of global warming, so the methane is burned in a large flare to get rid of the foul smell and to turn the methane into a less damaging carbon dioxide form.

The Blue Box Program of 1990 began to impress upon householders the need for separating and recycling trash. Can, plastic bottles, cardboard, paper, and packaging materials can go out in the Blue Box. Large appliances and other recyclables shouldn't take up valuable space in a landfill so they are picked up by either city trucks or private junk removal services. If a homeowner starts to plan major home improvements that require trashing materials like tiling, wood, scrap metal, bricks, flooring, shingles, and other substances ripped out from the house, a private company would provide dumpster rental and pick up to get the trash to the right destination.

When you see pictures of landfill sites, you may notice that they sit high up on a man-made plateau; this helps to trap the sound from the heavy machinery used to compact and move the garbage around, since earth transmits sound waves less efficiently than through the air. The landfills are also ringed with litter fences to keep bits of trash from blowing into inhabited areas. You may find grass-covered berms along the perimeter to improve the look of the landfill. Soil is spread over the layers of garbage to reduce the smells.

Various depots have been set up to drop off selected types of trash. By recycling old tires, glass, cans, and other categorized materials, the population of London Ontario has reduced their total annual garbage from 420 kilograms in 1987 to 247 kilograms in 2007. With further advances in garbage management, there may be a day when pollution is only a distasteful memory of the past.








SEO consultant Pat Boardman writes this in respect to the junk removal company JUNKchasers who provide waste removal services for residences and businesses in the area around London Ontario including Kitchener, Waterloo, Stratford, Cambridge, St. Thomas, Brantford, and Woodstock Ontario.


Tuesday 21 June 2011

Talking Trash - The History and Future of The Stuff We Don't Want

Since people arrived on the Earth, we have had to find a way to dispose of unwanted materials. Garbage has been here since the beginning of time and it will be here in the end of time. Effective waste containment began with a lesson learned the hard way and continues to evolve today with the increase in recycling efforts.




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For the first 1300 years or so, waste management was pretty simple. Like a child told to clean his room, whatever our forefathers couldn't burn they hid by either burying it or throwing in the sea. Apparently, they also just threw it on the ground...wherever.


Fast forward many mounds of waste later to 1350 and the "black plague." After 25 million people from all over Europe fell victim to this deadly disease in just five years, scholars figured out that widespread unsanitary waste conditions were a contributing factor. Thus, the trash can and the garbage man came into being.


In modern day society, a good waste container is something no one can live without. The goal of any trash can is to effectively control contamination and foul odor. Over the years, a wide variety garbage bins and trash containers have developed with each type perfectly suited for its specific purpose. You may be familiar with covered and uncovered garbage containers and the step-on and foot opening waste cans which have facilitated disposing of refuse in a hygienic and touch free manner. This innovation has been especially important for the medical community in controlling the spread of germs.


With thousands of models from kitchen trash bins for residential use and large heavy-duty outdoor trash receptacles for commercial use, finding a waste container to meet your needs has never been easier. From wood to stainless steel containers and from plastic to fire-retardant fiber glass waste receptacles, this king of cleaning products offers something for everyone. Special features found on some of these janitorial products include easy-lift; rust and rodent resistance; rolling ability; Slim Jim design for tight spaces; ability to withstand extreme weather; easy-to-clean; impact and crack resistant design; Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) compliance; quiet, slow-close lids and more. In addition to complimentary products like liners and trash bags, there is also a variety of accessories for trash cans like wheeled dolly attachments for added mobility.


Most recently, the increase in recycling has given birth to a wide variety of recycling containers. There are also combination recycling stations that have separate sections for plastic, paper and regular trash. Some lids have cut our shapes so only the designated material, like a water bottle can be inserted. This prevents cross-contamination with food and other waste.


Between government recycling mandates and increased awareness of the environmental benefit and cost savings of recycling, perhaps one day all trash cans will be integrated recycling centers. The less landfill waste we generate the higher probability we can keep that pesky Black Plaque where it belongs - in the past.


Buy discount trash cans and garbage cans including wholesale outdoor trash receptacles on sale today at CleanItSupply.com.

Monday 20 June 2011

Where Does All Your Trash Go?

On average, Americans produce about 1,600 pounds (726 kg) of garbage per person per year. To cut down all that trash, make sure that you are following the three Rs: reduce, reuse and recycle.


What happens to the waste that garbage trucks collect? In the United States, most trash is taken to landfills. Other trash is transported to incinerators, where it is burned for energy.


LANDFILLS are sites that are carefully designed to prevent dangerous waste from escaping into the soil and getting into groundwater. A thick layer of clay or plastic separates the garbage from the ground, and every day workers add a layer of soil to cover the trash on top. Liquid waste, called leachate, is pumped to the surface, where it is treated and made safe.


Sadly, landfills are expensive and can be bad for the environment. Materials deposited in landfills often do not decompose quickly, and the waste releases harmful methane gas into the environment as it breaks down. Fact: Some landfills collect the methane gas produced from their trash, treat it and then sell it as fuel.




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burn garbage to create energy. The trash is put into the plants' incinerators, where it burns down to about 10% of its original volume. The energy created by this process heats water, which is turned into steam, which generates electricity. Because burning waste results in harmful CO2 gases, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) requires that waste-to-energy plants comply with certain rules abut capturing those emissions.


What Does Biodegradable Really Mean?


A biodegradable product has the ability to break down (decompose) safely, quickly and naturally. Many biodegradable products that are sent to landfills, however, do not decompose quickly, because there's too much trash there and not enough air.


Some of the least biodegradable products include: disposable diapers, aluminum cans (You can recycle these.), tin cans, plastic bags, film canisters, glass bottles (\You can recycle these too!) and styrofoam cups.


Tips to Reduce Trash


- Try not to buy more than you need.
- Avoid products with a lot of packaging.
- Try to fix broken items rather than immediately replacing them.
- Donate your old toys, clothes and furnitures to charity or community organizations.


A Waste-Wise City


Hamburg, Germany, provides a good example of what a city can do to decrease waste. The city has invested money in incinerators that have special filters to prevent harmful gases from escaping. The energy generated by the burning of trash is used to heat nearby homes. Ten years ago, Hamburg produced 1.6 million tons of waste and recycled less than 3% of it. Today, the city generates only 1.4 million tons and recycles nearly 60% of its waste.


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