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Ohio County Seeks to Profit from Cardboard Recycling

Article-Ohio County Seeks to Profit from Cardboard Recycling

Coronavirus Could Spark Cardboard Shortage in UK
The Coshocton-Fairfield-Licking-Perry Solid Waste District will add a second packer truck to boost cardboard recycling.

The Coshocton County, Ohio, Recycling and Litter Prevention seeks to add a second packer truck this summer. The truck will allow cardboard to go to a Columbus facility at a profit to the county.

Funding of $150,000 has been set aside in long-term planning by the Coshocton-Fairfield-Licking-Perry Solid Waste District.

County recycling locations now feature a second bin for corrugated cardboard. Boxes must be broken down and slid through a slot. Additionally, cardboard must be clean, meaning items like used pizza boxes with grease on the bottom would not be recyclable. Cereal boxes, tissue boxes, egg cartons and other such items are made of what is called paperboard and would be part of mixed recycling with plastics, aluminum and steel cans and paper.

Coshocton Tribune has more information:

A second packer truck for the Coshocton County recycling program will allow the county to make a profit on cardboard recycling, instead of paying for it.

Commissioners expect to get a second packer truck sometime this summer at a cost of about $150,000. Purchase of the truck was already factored into long term planning by the Coshocton-Fairfield-Licking-Perry Solid Waste District. The truck will primarily be used to take cardboard to a WestRock Recycling Center in Columbus. It will also serve as a backup to the main truck.

When the WestRock paper mill was open locally, the factory would take local cardboard for recycling at no charge. When the plant closed in 2015, corrugated cardboard started going to a Kimble Recycling and Disposal site in Dover. The county pays about $80 a ton now to drop-off the cardboard in Dover. Fees fluctuate, but currently the Columbus recycling site is paying about $40 a ton, as the company can use the cardboard to produce products.

Read the full article here.

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