Recycling
| Recycling benefits both the environment and the economy. The next time you recycle your plastic bottle, aluminum can, or newspaper, remember how you are part of the solution |
![]() If you notice the bin is full please call Miranda Cottrell in the Youth Resource Office at 303-655-2123 or Parks & Receation Admin. Office at 303-655-2049 DO NOT Call Gator Rubbish Removal |
| Don't Waste It - Respect It If you're helping our enviornment by recycling, then please don't turn your recyclables into trash by leaving items outside the bin and littering.
Thank you, Brighton Youth Commission |
| Littering is a violation of the law and punishable by up to one (1) year in jail or a $1,000 fine. |
| The Brighton Youth Commission has a new larger recycle bin for your use. The new bin is located at 1901 E. Bridge Street on the East side of the City Hall Annex Building |
| ADDITIONAL RECYCLE BINS ARE LOCATED AT: |
| Valley Bank.....................................30 N. 4th Ave., Brighton, CO Overland Trail Middle School.............455 N. 19th Ave., Brighton, CO Northeast Elementary......................1605 Longspeak St., Brighton, CO Town of Firestone............................151 Grant Ave., Firestone, CO (Firestone Town Hall) Town of Hudson..............................Located off Hickory Street between the town's lagoon property & Love's Truck Stop |
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| Welcome to Brighton's Youth Commission recycling website. On this website, you will find a wealth of information in such areas as the following:
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| All items listed below ARE acceptable materials PLEASE SEPARATE YOUR RECYCLABLES ACCORDING TO THE SECTIONS ON THE NEW BIN: CARDBOARD, PAPER (INCLUDES NEWSPAPER) AND PLASTIC & ALUMINUM (INCLUDES GLASS).
When in doubt, as a general rule if the opening of the container is smaller or equal to the base, it is okay to recycle. |
| Please rinse all items and discard lids, caps, and pumps for bottles. Labels are okay. Also, please make sure there are NO PLASTIC BAGS mixed in your recyclables. |
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| All items listed below are NOT acceptable materials
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Top Recycling Tips
Top Recycling Tips
Top Recycling Tips
- First things first, a little R & R & R
The aphorism is so tired it almost might seem like "reduce, reuse, recycle" should go without saying. But in fact, most of us have only really heard the last third of the phrase, and they're ranked in order of importance. Reducing the amount that we consume, and shifting our consumption to well-designed products and services, is the first step. Finding constructive uses for "waste" materials is next. And tossing it in the blue bin is last. (The garbage can is not on the list, for good reason.) Through a balance of these three principals you can easily see your landfill-destined waste dwindle fast. A good example of recycling is setting your empty water bottles in the bin on the curb. But by using a water filter and reusable container you can reduce or completely eliminate your need for disposable plastic bottles.
- Know what you can and can't recycle
Read up on the recycling rules for your area and make sure you don't send anything in that can't be processed. Each city has its own specifics, so try to follow those guidelines as best you can.
- Buy recycled
The essence of recycling is the cyclical movement of materials through the system, eliminating waste and the need to extract more virgin materials. Supporting recycling means feeding this loop by not only recycling, but also supporting recycled products. We can now find high recycled content in everything from printer paper to office chairs.
- Encourage an artist
If you know someone interested in making art from recycled materials, offer to provide supplies. Many school children need items like paper towel tubes for art projects. Older artists use everything from rubber bands to oven doors. If you know someone who teaches art classes, suggest that an emphasis be put on making art from trash. While you're at it, remind them to use recycled paper and biodegradable, earth-friendly glues, paints, and pencils whenever possible.
- Recycle your robots
Electronics recycling is becoming more common in many urban areas, battery recycling is ubiquitous (rechargeable batteries are ecologically sounder, but even they wear out after a while), and there are a number of non-profit organizations that will take computer parts and turn them into working computers for others. Companies like Ebay have also developed programs to help your electronics find new homes. Other groups will gladly recycle your cell phone or give it to a senior citizen, as even without a contract it can still make emergency calls. If you have a major appliance that doesn't work and you'd rather replace it than try to fix it, offer it to local repair shops, trade schools, or hobbyists to tinker with. Many cities now offer hazardous waste recycling days when they will take not only hazardous waste, but electronics.
- Anticipate recycling
In addition to buying recycled goods, keep a keen eye out for recyclable goods. Whenever you purchase something packaged, think about how you can reuse the packaging, return it to a shipping store for reuse, or try to otherwise recycle it. If you get something likely to run down or wear out over time, such as an electronic component, give preference to the model that can be easily upgraded or cannibalized for parts so that you don't have to junk the whole thing if one part breaks. Products that are impossibly fused together are often called "monstrous hybrids" and are, while often cheaper up front, frequently unfixable and unrecyclable.
- If you don't love something, let it go
Lots of charities welcome your donations. Groups like Freecycle and Recycler's Exchange exist to help you get rid of useful objects that you just don't want to make use of. If you're in a Craigslist city, make use of the "free stuff" section. Give away clothes that don't fit, the boxes you used in your last house move, or scented soaps that don't appeal to your sensibilities. Make it a rule in your house that nothing usable goes in the trash until you've given the community a fair shot at it.
- Become a waste-stream analyst
To better understand the kind of materials that enter and leave your home, office, or school, consider conducting a waste audit. Set a span of time like a week or a month, and separate your waste categories. Weigh the different kinds of material flows that go out the door (landfill waste, organic compost, aluminum, recyclable plastic, reusable material, etc.). Design a "material recovery" program that minimizes the amount going to the landfill. This is a great exercise to do with kids but can be very convincing to corporate higher-ups, too, especially since most companies pay to have their trash hauled away and can get money for recycled paper, containers, toner cartridges, corrugated cardboard, and such.
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RECYCLING FACTS AND BENEFITS
Everyone today has heard of how important it is to recycle, but what exactly is recycling and how beneficial is it really to us and the environment?
Recycling is the process of turning one products useful parts into a new product; this is done to conserve on the consumption of resources, energy and space used in landfills.
By recycling 1 plastic bottle not only saves anywhere from 100 to 1000 years in the landfill but also saves the environment from the emissions in producing new bottles as well as the oil used to produce that bottle.
For every 1 ton of plastic that is recycled we save the equivalent of 2 people's energy use for 1 year, the amount of water used by 1 person in 2 month's time and almost 2000 pounds of oil.
Approximately 60% of our rubbish thrown away today could be recycled. A survey was done and 9 out of 10 people surveyed said they would recycle more if it was easier.
Odd as it seems there are many people who do not realize that plastic bottles our water comes in is made out of oil. This is the same oil that is used to make gasoline. It's the same oil that is in such high demand and is not an unlimited resource. Today the most common products in cities recycling programs are paper products, cardboard, plastic, glass and aluminum.
| Taking Just A Moment Taking just a moment to put your newspaper, soda can and glass spaghetti jar in the recycling bin will save everyone years in environmental harm from production of new materials, over crowded landfills and the depletion of our natural resources. 4000 Years When we do not recycle at least our glass or aluminum we cost the earth in power usage, water and oil usage and landfill usage; glass takes up to 4000 years to decompose in a landfill yet can be recycled indefinitely. Earn Money Recycling can be done at home as well as in conjunction with city programs. Many scrap yards pay for scrap metal including the soda cans and soup cans we use every day. Be Creative Many useful items can be made from our everyday trash; the cardboard tubes left over from paper towel and toilet paper can make useful storage containers for our extra extension cords and prevents a tangled mess in the Christmas lights. If your going to throw these out don't just throw it in the rubbish bin, put it the recycling bin. Baby jars can become snow globes the kids can make and give as gifts, old Christmas cards can become new hand made cards and a glass or plastic bottle along with some clear oil and food coloring and a few other common household items can become a groovy lava lamp! The possibilities are endless and instructions can be found in books and on the internet. Start Today Recycling is a very environmentally green activity; however, there are ways that you can make it greener as well as building a strong beginning if you do not currently recycle. Spread The Word Share what you know. If you notice abundant trash in your neighborhood start spreading the word and your experience with recycling. The fact is many of our resources as well as our Earth is not renewable and we have to start taking control of our selves beginning with the world we live in. |
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Colorado Recycles - Visit site for more recycling locations, and additional recycling information



