4 minute read

News

Next Article
Screens

Screens

CRV Buyback Returning to Humboldt

By Iridian Casarez

Advertisement

iridian@northcoastjournal.com

Get ready to fi nally have a chance to redeem your California Refund Value deposits, Humboldt. Hambro Recycling of Crescent City is opening a CRV buyback center in Arcata in the next few months.

“We’ve been looking at [opening a CRV buyback center] for a while. You know, there wasn’t really any movement in Humboldt. We’ve been having a lot of Humboldt people up here visiting us at our recycling center. We wanted to make it easier for them to recycle,” says Randy Scott, vice president and general manager of Hambro Recycling. “It isn’t a decision we made lightly. We just started crunching the numbers and put it together and thought we could do it. You know, giving all the folks in Humboldt the opportunity to stay home and recycle.”

Humboldt County has been without a CRV buyback recycling center for almost a year after its last CRV recycling center at the Humboldt Waste Management’s Eureka Recycling Center became so overwhelmed with hundreds of people who wanted their deposits back it created a hazard o Broadway. The center ultimately closed its CRV redemption services because it was operating at a loss due to the high costs of transporting material to market, handling material and the low value of commodities. (The Eureka Recycling Center is still open and accepting recyclable materials, like mixed plastics, corrugated cardboard, mixed glass, clean scrap metal, appliances and e-waste.)

Without a designated CRV buyback center, by law it was up to grocery stores and retailers to refund the 5 to 10 cent deposits back to customers, however, most Humboldt County retailers didn’t, choosing instead to pay fi nes, due to issues with transportation costs, handing the materials and storage, while other grocery stores limited the number of cans and bottles and days they accepted materials.

Since then, some Humboldt County residents with loads of recyclables have traveled two hours away to Hambro’s Recycling in Crescent City to get their deposits back. Scott says employees have even gotten to know the Humboldt regulars who bring their CRV recyclables to their facility.

Scott says that they were able to “crunch the numbers” and found that they could a ord to open a new CRV buyback center due in part to the fact that Hambro Recycling owns its own fl eet of trucks to transport materials to Anderson, California.

The highest cost of running a CRV buyback center in rural areas is transportation — buying or hiring a truck that can transport materials to market hundreds of miles away.

“We have our own trucks, so we control the transportation,” Scott says. “The processor in Anderson will take mix loads, so once we have a full load of plastics, aluminum and glass, we can ship it. So there’s no wait to build a load of each di erent material. That has also helped us at the Crescent City facility and it will at the Arcata one.”

The opening of the Arcata certifi ed CRV buyback center on South G Street near Redwood Curtain Brewing Co. will create a relief for grocers and retailers in a convenience zone (a 3-mile radius in which the epicenter is a grocery store). If there is a CRV buyback center within the convenience zone, grocers and retailers in that specifi c area are exempt from o ering in-store CRV buyback services as the zone is considered “served.”

Scott hopes to open the Arcata center within 90 days. The company is just waiting to receive the required permits from the city and the California Coastal Commission, hire the right crew and, of course, obtain their certifi cation from CalRecycle.

“I’m feeling great and excited and looking forward to helping the people from Humboldt,” Scott says. “We’ve developed a method of inspecting and weighing and processing, and the sta I have up here is excellent and we run a very e cient center. And we expect to do that the same way in Humboldt. We know there will be a tsunami, so to speak, and we’ll be prepared for that.”

Scott has heard the stories of when the Eureka Recycling Center was overwhelmed and says he plans on fully sta ng the center with an all-hands-on-deck approach and estimates the property can hold 30 cars o the road, which will help keep the line moving.

“We know it’s going to be a big rush, a high demand. We’re confi dent that we could handle it,” he says.

Hambro Recycling in Crescent City. Courtesy of Randy Scott

● Iridian Casarez (she/her) is a Journal sta writer. Reach her at 442-1400, extension 317, or iridian@ northcoastjournal.com. Follow her on Twitter @iridiancasarez.

Cutten Realty

Coldwell Banker Cutten Realty Property Management handles hundreds of listings in Eureka, Arcata, and throughout Humboldt County.

Suzanne Tibbles

Property Manager | Realtor® 3943 Walnut Dr., Suite B, Eureka cuttenrentals.com Lic. #01388859

OPEN: M-F 9 AM-5 PM PHONE: (707) 445-8822 FAX: (707) 442-2391

REFINANCE NOW Rates are very LOW!

Bob@HumboldtMortgage.net (707) 445-3027

2037 Harrison Ave., Eureka

Thanks for voting us Best Auto Body Shop five years in a row!

NORTH COAST JOURNAL

949 West Del Norte Street, Eureka 443-7769 • qualitybodyworks.com

This article is from: