Olmsted Township PRINT

COMMUNITY WEBSITE
Township: (440)235-3051
Service Department: (440)235-1011

Republic Services provides weekly curbside recycling for township residents. Combine cups (aluminum, paper and some plastic), cans, cardboard, cartons, glass, paper and boxes plus plastic bottles, jugs and tubs loose (unbagged) in the provided wheeled cart. Recycling is processed at Republic Services Lorain County Resource Recovery Complex in Oberlin. 

See the list below for recycling and collection programs in Olmsted Township.

 
In home Recycling
 
Other Recycling
 
Proper Disposal
 
Landfill
Dispose of Cartons Right in Olmsted Township

Olmsted Township has curbside recycling of cartons. There is also a drop-off at the township service garage on the first Saturday, second Wednesday and fourth Wednesday of the month. Items must be empty, clean and dry. Discard cap and flatten.

7924 Fitch Road, Olmsted Township

Some communities can recycle cartons in a curbside recycling program. Cartons are a packaging for food and beverage products you purchase at the grocery store including milk, juice, soup and broth plus wine cartons.

Cartons should be empty, clean and dry before recycling. Discard the cap in the trash, flatten the carton and place in your curbside recycling.

 

Which recycling processors can accept cartons?

Residents with recycling processed by Republic Services and Rumpke Waste & Recycling can include cartons in their curbside recycling.

 

Currently, Kimble Companies and WM do not accept cartons.

About Cartons
Cartons refer to a type of packaging for food and beverage products you purchase at the grocery store. They are easy to recognize and available in two types—shelf-stable and refrigerated. Shelf-stable cartons, which can be found on shelves in grocery stores, contain juice, milk, soy milk, soup and broth, and wine. Refrigerated cartons include milk, juice, cream and egg substitutes. These cartons can be found in the chilled sections of grocery stores. 

Cartons are mainly made from paper in the form of paperboard, as well as thin layers of polyethylene (plastic) and/or aluminum. Shelf-stable cartons contain on average 74% paper, 22% polyethylene and 4% aluminum. Refrigerated cartons contain about 80% paper and 20% polyethylene. What you may see as wax on a carton is actually a thin layer of polyethylene (plastic). These layers can be peeled apart for recycling -- cartons are not difficult to recycle as long as the right systems are in place to do so.

The paper fiber contained in cartons is extremely valuable and useful to make new products. The area of the country you live in (and the local mill) determines what your cartons will become. Some mills recycle cartons into tissues, while others use the paper fibers to make office paper. In some cases, they are even being used as one of the materials for wall boards manufacturing. 

Tetra Pak is carton packaging for food and beverages. See details.

Visit the Carton Council for more information.

---

Looking to recycle, donate or dispose of other items? Use the dark blue 'What Do I Do With?' search bar at the top of every page of this website. Allow location services or use the city drop-down to find opportunities in your local area.