ALLENTOWN AWARDED 2012 RECYCLING GRANT
The City of Allentown will receive nearly $280,000 in a Recycling Program Performance Grant from the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection. The grant reflects the more than 21,500 tons of residential and commercial materials recycled by city residents and businesses in 2012.
Performance grants from the state are based on the type and weight of materials recycled from residential, commercial and drop-off recycling programs. The grant award letter from the state cites the city’s “exemplary efforts.”
“The residents of Allentown and our business community have been enthusiastic participants in the recycling program,” said Mayor Ed Pawlowski. “We have recycled an additional 1,500 tons of material over our 2011 total.”
Pennsylvania Act 101 mandates curbside recycling in the state’s larger municipalities (population over 10,000) and offers grants to be applied toward recycling program sustainability and enhancements.
“We are able to provide quality services and programs to our residents and businesses as a result of these grants,” said Ann Saurman, Manager of the Bureau of Recycling and Solid Waste. “This particular grant is based 100 percent on performance. I am very grateful to all our residents, businesses and schools for their outstanding participation.”
Allentown offers curbside recycling of newspaper, cardboard, paperboard, magazines, catalogs, mail, phone books and all types of white and colored paper; plastic bottles, jars, tubs and containers marked with numbers #1 through #7; glass bottles and jars (clear, brown and green); aluminum cans, foil and pie plates; steel cans; yard waste; and appliances and large metal items. The city also offers city residents recycling of electronic devices.
The city’s recycling programs reach all 36,500 households and some 413 businesses that participate in a once a week city curbside collection program.
The goals of the Act are to reduce Pennsylvania’s municipal waste generation; recycle at least 35% of waste generated; procure and use recycled and recyclable materials in state governmental agencies; and educate the public as to the benefits of recycling and waste reduction. Recycling is a billion dollar industry in Pennsylvania, generating significant economic and environmental benefits.
The city’s recycling program has won awards from the Pennsylvania DEP, the U.S. Conference of Mayors, the National Recycling Coalition, the Solid Waste Association of North America, the Professional Recyclers of Pennsylvania,
Keystone Chapter of the Solid Waste Association of North America and the Pennsylvania Waste Industries Association.
For more information on recycling programs in the city, call the Bureau of Recycling and Solid Waste at 610-437-8729, or visit the bureau website at www.allentownrecycles.org.
September 25, 2014
For Additional Information Please Contact:
Mike Moore
Communications Coordinator
Ann Saurman
Manager, Bureau of Recycling & Solid Waste