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What is Accepted

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What is Recyclable

What Do Recycling Drop-Off Centers Accept?

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There are 10 solid waste recycling drop-off convenience centers located across Macon County. These centers accept recyclable materials and personal HOUSEHOLD solid waste ONLY (defined as trash from kitchens, bathrooms, dens, etc. but NOT INCLUDING construction materials, hazardous wastes, liquid wastes or materials from commercial entities, even if located in a home).

These centers are located as listed in the navigation guide and are open for public use as indicated. Commercial wastes MUST be taken to the landfill in Franklin or to the transfer station in Highlands on Ridge Gap Road.

Aluminum cans Rinse
Steel food cans Rinse
Glass Bottles, sorted by color
(Only glass which has been previously used as a food or beverage
container may be recycled due to the potential for lead contamination. Absolutely no windowpanes or storm doors.)
Rinse, remove lids
#1 Plastic containers
(soda, water and other such personal sized drink containers
may not be labeled on the bottom as #1 plastic but are still #1 plastic.
Rinse, remove lids
#2 Plastic (clear/colored)
(Look on the bottom of the container to determine
of which number type the container is composed.)
Rinse, remove lids
Office paper, computer paper, etc. Clean, dry paper only
Cardboard (heavy corrugated only) Clean, dry cardboard only
Newspaper Clean, dry paper only
Brown paper bags Clean. dry bags only
Mixed paper
(magazines, window envelopes, TV Guides, phone books,
beer/soda containers, pizza boxes, etc.
Clean, dry paper only


NOTE: Bring all of your metal, refrigerators, freezers, air conditioners, sofas, old toilets, beds, and /or mattresses to the MSW Landfill, 1448 Lakeside Drive, Franklin to be recycled.

Take all construction and demolition materials (C & D) including but not limited to wood, sheet rock, shingles, roofing felt, etc. to the landfill in Franklin OR to the C & D Landfill in Highlands.

If you have questions regarding the Recycling Program in Macon County, or if you want or need to schedule a presentation or have a tour of the facilities, please contact Mr.Joel Ostroff, Recycling Coordinator, at 349-2252, fax 349-2185 or e-mail me at Jostroff@maconnc.org


recycle center photo What is Recyclable in Macon County?

Corrugated Cardboard: Please make certain that all packaging material is removed from the boxes and that no oily residues, food wastes, or significant quantities of paint are present. Flatten all boxes, if going to a drop-off center, before placing the cardboard in the designated trailer of recycling roll-off container. It is very important to clean out boxes because contaminants could be mistakenly baled and once these are discovered by the recycling business it could result in the load being rejected and revenue lost to the county.

Newspaper: Place newspapers in the designated gaylord boxes in the trailer or in the section of the recycling roll-off container. Please DO NOT throw magazines, junk mail or plastic bags in with the newspapers. It is very important not to throw or hide other things in with the newspapers as these are considered contaminants and makes the newspaper no longer recyclable.

Mixed Paper: ALL OTHER PAPER, magazines, junk mail, cereal and packaged food boxes, school papers, paper towel and toilet paper rolls, shredded office paper, telephone books, paperback and hardback books, etc. constitute mixed paper. Place all paper other than corrugated cardboard and newspapers in the appropriate container.

#1 Plastic (PET or PETE): The best way to determine if the plastic is #1 is by looking on the bottom of the container. If there is the number 1 inside of the triangle of chasing arrows then it is recyclable. Also, all soda bottles and water bottles are made of #1 plastic though they may not be marked. Baled PET is sold to a plastics recycler to become new drink containers, fleece material for cold weather clothing, microfiber for weaving and industrial strength carpets.

#2 Plastic (HDPE): Please rinse out the plastic containers and remove the lids. Since this plastic is used to make new milk and food containers this is a necessary sanitary requirement. The best way to determine if the plastic is #2 is by looking on the bottom of the container. If there is the number 2 inside of the triangle of chasing arrows then it is probably recyclable (there are exceptions to this rule). Milk containers are not typically stamped with the identifying number but are ALWAYS HDPE. Exceptions to the recyclable rule are: margarine tubs and microwave meal dishes as these have been sprayed with chemical that makes it easier to get the food out of the container (This makes the reprocessed plastic either too brittle to use or prevents the plastic form getting hard enough to use.) and motor oil and antifreeze bottles because they still have oil or antifreeze in them making them a toxic waste (Would you like to drink your next glass of milk from something containing motor oil or antifreeze?).

Glass - Green, Brown, Red, Clear and Blue: Pleases DO NOT MIX any of the colors in the containers for recycling, with the exceptions that blue glass goes with clear glass and red glass goes with brown glass. Only recycle glass bottles that have previously been used as a food and beverage container. All glass recycled by Macon County Solid Waste Management is used to make new food and drink bottles. Therefore, only glass which has previously been used as a food or beverage container may be recycled due to the risk of lead poisoning from other types of glass.

The following materials cannot be recycled by glass container plants and should never be mixed in with the glass:

Mirrors, Ceramic cups and plates, Bone China, Pottery of any kind, Clay flower pots, Crystal, Light Bulbs, Heart Resistant Ovenware, Drinking Glasses, and Automotive and Window Glass.

Mixing the above items in the glass renders the entire load (20 tons) unacceptable for recycling. There are many reasons for this. Some of these items contain lead or mercury or need up to 4 times higher heat to melt as well as the fact that some of these items are not glass.

Aluminum Cans: Please rinse and flatten the cans, if possible. Please do not put aluminum foil, pie pans, oven roaster pans and other similar items in with the aluminum cans. These items are actually made from the residue created by making aluminum cans and are not considered to be recyclable despite the aluminum in their name. Large aluminum items should be taken to the County landfill in Franklin or the transfer station in Highlands.

Steel Cans and Aerosol Cans: Please rinse the cans and remove any plastic lids before recycling. Metal lids are recyclable. Removal of labels is not necessary. Aerosol cans MUST BE EMPTY before being recycled. Larger steel items and white goods can be disposed of in the metal pile at the County landfill or at the transfer station in Highlands.

White Goods and All Other Metals: White goods include refrigerators, stoves, microwave ovens, washing machines, dryers, air conditioners, etc. These items, along with all other metal, can be recycled at the County landfill or at the transfer station in Highlands. When bringing refrigerators and air conditioners to the landfill, place these items in the designated area, behind the Recycling Processing Center (RPC), separate from the other metal items. This is necessary as they contain chlorinated fluorocarbons (HFC), better known as Freon, which must be removed safely before recycling the metal components.

Used Oil and Used Antifreeze: This material is considered to be toxic hazardous wastes and must be disposed of safely. Used oil and used antifreeze removed from vehicles by non-commercial sources may be disposed of safely at the Franklin landfill, the Highlands transfer station and at the following convenience centers: Otto, Scaly Mountain and Nantahala Junaluska. Place oil and/or antifreeze in the separate containers at the landfill, transfer station or convenience center EXCEPT at the Nantahala Junaluska Center. Nantahala will accept oil and antifreeze in closed labeled containers only.

Used Cooking Oil: This material may be recycled at either the landfill in Franklin or at the transfer station in Highlands. Pour the used cooking oil into the designated storage container at either site. Ask the attendant on duty to show you where the container is located.

Used Tires: Tires may be disposed of at the landfill in Franklin, the Transfer Station in Highlands, or at the convenience centers in Nantahala. Tires MUST be off of the wheel rims before they may be disposed of in the designated trailer or area. Old tire rims are recycled as used metal.

Used Car and Truck Batteries: Used lead-acid batteries may be left at the Franklin landfill, the Highlands transfer station, and at the convenience centers in Nantahala. Place the batteries in the designated location at each center.

Used Paint: Macon County Solid Waste Management is NOT permitted, per State statute, to accept WET liquid paint. If you have left over LATEX paint either find a means of using it up by painting something else or dry it out by leaving the lid off and exposing the paint to the air where rain will not get into the open can or add cat litter or some kind of absorbent such as oil-dry to dry up the paint residue. When the paint is dry, the can may be recycled in the metal pile at the landfill or at the transfer station in Highlands or may be disposed of as ordinary waste. Paint in plastic containers should be dried and dispose of as ordinary waste.

OIL-BASED PAINT MAY NOT BE DISPOSED OF IN THE LANDFILL. It is considered to be a toxic waste and is unacceptable in landfills. Use up the paint and then dispose of the metal can in the metal pile at the landfill or at the transfer station.

Rechargeable Batteries: All types of sealed rechargeable batteries, except for alkaline, batteries are being accepted for recycling at all of the convenience centers. Please give all of the batteries to the attendant for proper storage.

Printer Cartridges: We now accept all printer cartridges, from ink jet to laser units, at all of our convenience centers. Please give the cartridges to the attendant on duty for recycling.

Cell Phones and I pods: Used cell phones and i pods can be given to the attendant on duty at any of the convenience centers for recycling. The batteries MUST be in each unit recycled.

Backyard Composting and Grasscycling: should also be in your recycling efforts. If you need assistance in getting started or need general information please call the Macon County Solid Waste Department @ 349 – 2252 or Mr. Alan Durden of the County Agricultural Extension Service @ 349 -2049.

Pallets, Brush, Leaves, and Stumps: may be taken to the landfill in Franklin or to the transfer station in Highlands.

Please keep these items out of the trash containers: wood, furniture, mattresses, tires and liquids.

Recycling in Macon County serves many purposes. It is one of the easiest ways for citizens to fight global warming (climate change) as recycling uses less resources and significantly less energy.

Recycling conserves natural resources, saves energy, creates less pollution, saves our landfill space, and it puts money back into our general tax base income funds. The more we recycle the more money we generate. This will create less of a burden for us on taxes.

By volume, 80% of the waste generated is either recyclable or Compostable. To get an idea of how much waste you generate, figure how many days you have been alive. Remember, 365 days in a year and 366 days in a leap year. Take that number and multiply that by 5. This will tell you how many pounds of waste you have generated in your lifetime, based on a national average of 5 lbs. of waste generated per person per day.

The actual amount of waste generated for North Carolina is almost 6 lbs. per person per day, but we will use the national average. If you have any questions or comments please feel free to contact me, Joel Ostroff, Recycling Coordinator @ 349-2252 or by email @ jostroff@maconnc.org

Contact information
For additional information pertaining to the Macon County Landfill, Transfer Station, Recycling Processing Center, Convenience Centers and the Environmental Resource Center contact us:

Tele: (828) 349-2215
Fax: (828) 349-2185

Macon County Solid Waste Management
109 Sierra Drive Franklin, NC 28734

E-mail:
General Information Contact June Cassada at jcassada@maconnc.org

Related Links:

  1. Blue Ridge Parkway Geologic Resources Inventory
    www.2nature.nps.gov?geology/inventory
  2. Carolina Recycling Association
    www.cra-recycle.org
  3. CMRA
    www.cdrecycling.org
  4. Curbside Value Partnership
    www.recyclecurbside.org
  5. Division of Forest Resources
    www.dfr.state.nc.us
  6. Earth 911
    http://earth911.org
  7. Envirolink
    www.envirolink.org
  8. Environmental Protection Agency
    www.epa.gov
  9. EPEAT
    www.epeat.net
  10. GreenBiz
    www.greenbiz.com
  11. Keep America Beautiful
    www.KABspo.com
  12. Land of Sky Regional Council
    www.landofsky.org
  13. NC DENR Division of Coastal Management
    dcm2.enr.state.nc.us
  14. NC Wastetrader
    www.ncwastetrader.org
  15. North Carolina Department of Environment and Natural Resources
    www.enr.state.nc.us
  16. North Carolina Department of Transportation
    www.ncdot.org
  17. North Carolina Division of Pollution Prevention and Environmental Assistance
    www.p2pays.org
  18. North Carolina Division of Waste Management
    www.wastenotnc.org
  19. Office of Environmental Education
    www.eenorthcarolina.org
  20. One North Carolina Naturally
    www.onencnaturally.org
  21. Paper Industry Association Council
    http://paperrecycles.org
  22. Recycle It Now
    www.recycleitnow.net
  23. RE3
    www.RE3.org
  24. South Carolina Department of Health and Environmental Control
    www.sdhec.gov
  25. Triangle Air Awareness
    www.traingleairawareness.org

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