The Seattle City Council has approved a zero-waste strategy to increase recycling, reduce waste and upgrade the city's transfer stations.
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The plan is the result of more than 18 months of work led by Council Member Richard Conlin, chair of the Environment, Emergency Management and Utilities (EEMU) Committee, on how to improve recycling, reduce waste and avoid building a third transfer station in the Georgetown neighborhood.
The zero-waste strategy's main components include:
* Plans to increase the recycling of construction and demolition debris;
* The implementation of a new program in 2009 that will provide all single-family residences with food waste pickup for composting;
* The renovation of two existing transfer stations for improved recycling;
* By December 2007, Seattle Public Utilities will recommend whether to ban or discourage through taxation non-compostable plastic shopping bags and polystyrene food containers;
* A $100,000 annual Waste Reduction/Recycling Matching Fund for community recycling initiatives; and
* A cap on the amount of material Seattle will send to landfills--440,000 tons per year, which equals the amount of material disposed of in 2006.
More information is available at www.seattle.gov.




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