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Make sure you recycle right
Here are some handy recycling tips:
Empty, Clean and Loose
All containers need to be empty, clean and loose in the bin (not bagged). All lids must be put in the rubbish.
Look for the Triangle
Plastic bottles and containers have a plastic code, usually on the bottom inside a triangle. This code tells us the type of plastic it is and whether or not it can be recycled. We can only accept plastic types 1, 2 and 5.
Paper and Cardboard
Paper and cardboard needs to be flat not crumpled up and must be clean with no food or food-staining. We can accept clean and empty pizza boxes in the recycling. Those with oil or food on the cardboard can go in your organics bin, worm farm or compost, otherwise put them in the rubbish.
Coffee Cups are a No-No
Take-away coffee cups and lids cannot be recycled.
To ensure your bin gets emptied and to avoid contamination of recycling:
Keep items loose
Don’t squash bottles, tins or cans
Put all lids in the rubbish
Make sure everything is clean
Repeated contamination may result in withdrawal of your kerbside collection service.
Size Does Matter
We can’t take any paper smaller than a standard envelope, lids from any containers, or plastic containers smaller than a yoghurt pottle. We also can’t take containers that are larger than 3 litres.
Clothing or bedding, appliances or tools, toys, polystyrene, machine parts, soft plastics, and more…
None of these can be processed so don’t put them in your recycling bin. If you have any reusable items, drop them off to a charity or our Southbrook resource recovery park. Mobile phones, scrap metal, whiteware and clean polystyrene packaging can also be dropped off for free at Southbrook. Soft plastics can be taken to a shop with Soft Plastics Recycling.
Rubbish is Rubbish!
Rubbish, including nappies, plastic strapping, food scraps must go in the rubbish bin.
We can’t accept:
Plastics numbered 3, 4, 6 & 7
No containers larger than 3L or smaller than 150ml
Soft plastics or any plastic you can scrunch into a ball
Takeaway cups and liquid cartons
Paper smaller than an envelope
Compostable items
Clothes and toys
Nappies
Polystyrene
Pans and foils
Window glass, crockery & light bulbs
Batteries
General rubbish or food.