By
KEVIN PROFT/ecoRI News staff
Image courtesy of Beach Environmental Awareness Campaign Hawai'i Visit B.E.A.C.H. at www.b-e-a-c-h.org for great environmental articles |
For everyone else,
the question of whether to recycle these small items is just plain annoying.
Regardless of how you categorize yourself, the information below should boost
your recycling IQ.
Plastic
caps from plastic containers. Plastic containers usually
come with a plastic top. Contrary to popular belief, the plastic cap can be
recycled as long as it’s reattached to the plastic container from which it
came. Examples: water bottle, peanut butter jar, Dunkin’ Donuts iced-coffee cup
and sour cream container.
Plastic
caps from Tetra-Pak boxes. Tetra-Paks include milk
boxes, juice boxes, and broth and stock boxes. They often come with small
screw-off plastic caps. Those caps can be recycled as long as they are
reattached to the Tetra-Pak.
Metal
caps from glass jars. The top can be recycled as long as
it’s placed in the recycling bin separate from the jar. Examples: tops from
pasta sauce jars, jam jars, Ball canning jars (rings and discs).
Metal
bottle caps from glass bottles. Small metal bottle caps
can no longer be placed in your recycling bin loose. They fall through the
spaces in between conveyor belts at the Central Landfill’s recycling facility
and cause mechanical problems. However, these bottle caps can be recycled.
Place these bottle caps in an aluminum soup can until it is half full. Then,
crimp the top of the can so that the bottle caps are trapped. Toss the crimped
can in the recycling bin. Examples: beer bottle caps, soda bottle caps, Snapple
bottle caps, wine bottle caps and olive oil bottle caps.
Metal
discs from aluminum cans. Whether an aluminum can
has a pop-top or requires a can opener, the resulting metal piece can be
recycled. It’s best to leave the disc slightly hanging and folded down into the
can, but if it is detached it can still be placed in the recycling bin.
Examples: soup can, tomato sauce can, cat food can, Ball canning jar disc. Metal
lids are fine for recycling. You can either leave a bit of the lid attached and
bend it into the can, or plop them down in the can’s bottom and give the can a
little pinch.
Straws should be placed in the trash bin.
And remember, always empty the food or drink from your container
before recycling. If you have access to a sink, give it a quick rinse.
For more
information, click here.