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Recycling Alternatives

View alternatives to curbside recycling below for a comprehensive appfroach to waste reduction

As a more comprehensive approach to waste reduction, the City of Simpsonville encourages residents to continue recycling in addition to reducing and reusing. For information and resources about waste reduction and sustainability, visit the below links:

Tips for Simply Sustainable Reducing
Tips for Simply Sustainable Reusing
Tips for Simply Sustainable Recycling

Single vs Dual-stream Recycling

Electronic Recycling

These items are banned from the Twin Chimneys Landfill and must be recycled.  Banned items include:

  • desktop, tower, or laptop computers
  • tablets
  • printing devices
  • computer peripheral devices
  • keyboards
  • televisions (any technology)
  • fax machines
  • photocopiers
  • VCRs
  • stereos
  • home and office phones
  • cell phones
  • consumer electronics
  • microwaves

The City does not collect banned items at curbside.  These must be dropped off at the Public Works facility at 110 Woodside Park Drive or at a proper electronic scrap disposal facility.  You can drop off electronic scrap at Public Works M-F, 7:30 am – 4:00 pm, except on Holidays (Click Here for Holiday Schedule)

Exception:  Televisions greater than 50″ diagonal screen size or large console cabinet televisions may be picked up by the City at curbside by appointment only.  Contact Public Works at 967-9531 to schedule pickup of these items.

These items are not accepted for e-scrap:  

  • smoke alarms and detectors
  • fire alarms and detectors
  • dehumidifiers
  • large appliances (i.e. refrigerators, ranges/ovens, washers/dryers)

These items will continue to be collected at curbside by our junk truck.

Residential electronic scrap may also be dropped off at any of the Greenville County convenience centers. They are open Tuesday – Saturday, 7:00 am – 6:00 pm. Commercial e-scrap can be taken to the Twin Chimney’s Landfill.

Please Note:  These electronics MAY NOT be taken apart for the purpose of recycling except by certified recyclers!

Used Re-chargeable Batteries and Cellphones Recycling:

We accept used rechargeable batteries and cellphones for recycling.  Bring these items to Public Works, 110 Woodside Park Drive, M-F, 7:30 am – 4:00 pm. Items accepted:

  • Rechargeable batteries each weighing less than 11 lbs.
  • Nickel Cadmium (Ni-Cd)
  • Nickel Metal Hydride (Ni-MH)
  • Lithium Ion (Li-ion)
  • Nickel Zinc (Ni-Zn)
  • Small sealed Lead Acid (SSLA/Pb)
  • Cellphones (and their batteries) – regardless of size, make, model, or age

We will not accept non-rechargeable or wet-cell batteries!

For more information, visit SCDHEC.

Simpsonville Curbside Recycling Discontinued: Learn More

Local Recyclables Drop-off Centers

1. Why did the City end curbside recycling starting in September?

The City of Simpsonville discontinued curbside recycling due to its increasing costs and proven ineffectiveness and availability of alternative options for a more comprehensive approach to sustainability.

2. Did the City hold any public meetings about the discontinuation of curbside recycling?

Yes. Simpsonville City Council discussed the discontinuation of curbside recycling at the Committee of the Whole meeting in March. The Greenville Journal and Greenville News published articles and Fox Carolina aired a story about the potential policy change. The City has published the 2021 meeting schedule for City Council on the City Council webpage. Simpsonville residents and business owners can sign up to participate in the Citizen Comments portion of Council meetings by arriving at least 15 minutes early to meetings.

3. How expensive for taxpayers is curbside recycling? 

To continue curbside recycling, taxpayers would pay about $110,000 per year, which includes $50,000 for personnel and $60,000 for disposal. First-year costs would add an additional $436,000 to pay for trucks and cans.

4. Why are the costs for curbside recycling increasing?

The City pays Pratt Industries upwards of $5,000 per month, or about $60,000 per year, to accept recyclables. Pratt once paid the City around $3,000-$5,000 for recyclables but started charging for the service in December 2019 at a rate of $25/ton. That rate increased to $45/ton four months later, and now the rate stands at $65/ton, a 160 percent increase from the initial rate. There is no guaranteed maximum rate for Pratt to accept recyclables. When China enacted its National Sword Policy1 of refusing to accept any more recyclables from the U.S. due to what the Chinese government said was contamination, the recycling industry entered its current crisis. Recycling is less profitable than it once was, and processing recyclables has become an added expense for waste management companies, which past those costs onto cities like Simpsonville.

5. How ineffective is curbside recycling? 

Curbside recycling is considered single-stream recycling, which involves placing all recyclables in one bin pickup. An estimated 25 percent2 of recyclable material in single-stream recycling ends up in landfills due to contamination, according to the National Waste & Recycling Association. While single-stream recycling can be convenient for residents, the practice increases the likelihood of contamination, which is the cited issue by China for banning U.S. recyclables. Single-stream recycling also makes sorting recyclables difficult when materials are mixed together and plastics are co-mingled3.

6. How effective is dual-stream recycling?

Dual-stream recycling involves the collection of recyclables at one location, such as a residence, and transfer of said recyclables to a second location, such as a recycling drop-off center. Because most recycling drop-off locations require the public to separate their materials, the recyclables are sorted more properly and are less contaminated since more attention has to be paid to each item4.  

7. Should I continue placing my recyclables on the curbside for pickup?

Because recycling is a personal decision, the choice to continue recycling is yours. If you wish to continue using curbside recycling, you may put your recyclables in the provided recycling can at the curbside until September. Be sure you know how to properly sort and clean recyclables to ensure as much recyclable material as possible avoids the landfill. Visit the Greenville County recycling webpage for more information on local recycling.

8. Where are the nearest recycling drop-off locations to Simpsonville?

9. Who owns the recycling containers at the drop-off locations?

Greenville County operates the recycling drop-off locations and therefore owns the containers.

10. Do recyclables taken to recycling drop-off centers end up in the landfill, too?

Because dual-stream recycling requires recyclers to properly sort and handle each item, fewer recyclables are contaminated and less trash is co-mingled with recyclables, thereby resulting in fewer recyclables ending up in landfills. Dual-stream recycling results in reduced contamination, better quality materials and better market access5.

11. Will the new way of recycling in Simpsonville require extra effort?

For residents who choose to continue recycling by dropping recyclables off at recycling centers, recycling will require extra effort. However, the City of Simpsonville and Public Works Department believe the vast majority of recyclers in Simpsonville believe enough in recycling to make the extra effort to continue protecting the environment. Instead of special trips to recycling centers, drivers can stop by a location while running errands or on their way to another destination.

12. Are there alternative options to residents’ transporting their recyclables to recycling centers themselves? 

There are private recycling and recycling pickup companies in Greenville County that you can consult.

13. Are there alternative options to recycling?

Yes! Reducing and reusing are way more effective than recycling at reducing waste and positively impacting the environment6. Reducing and reusing improve waste reduction by preventing pollution resulting from obtaining raw materials; saving energy; reducing greenhouse gas emissions; saving money; reducing the amount of waste that will need to be properly recycled or sent to landfills and incinerators and allowing products to be used to their fullest extent. Visit the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency webpage on reducing waste for more information: Reduce, Reuse, Recycle.

1SWANA Report: National Sword Impact & SolutionsPiling Up: How China’s Ban on Importing Waste Has Stalled Global Recycling

2The Era of Easy Recycling May Be Coming to an End

3Are curbside recycling programs really effective?

4Taking sides on single- or dual-stream recycling

5Dual Stream vs. Single Stream Recycling

6Reducing and Reusing Basics

 

 

  • Public Works Department at 110 Woodside Park Drive, Simpsonville 29681
  • Conestee Park at 840 Mauldin Road, Mauldin 29607
  • Greenville County Drop-off Sites
  • Simpsonville Residential Waste & Recycling Center, 517 Hipps Road, Simpsonville, S.C. 29680

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