The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Curbside recycling of glass ends July 1

- By Amanda C. Coyne Amanda.Coyne@ajc.com

Gwinnett County will no longer accept glass recycling starting July 1.

The county board of commission­ers renewed recycling hauler agreements for curbside recycling in December. Those included the eliminatio­n of glass recycling as of July, according to county spokesman Joe Sorenson. Alerts about the change in service should arrive in customers’ mailboxes this billing cycle.

It has been increasing­ly difficult for the county’s recycling haulers to collect and handle glass, and they requested the eliminatio­n of glass recycling, Sorenson said. Residents should dispose of glass in the trash once the change is enacted, according to the county.

Laura Hernandez, leader of Gwinnett Recycles, disagrees with the move to eliminate glass recycling, saying there are no good alternativ­e ways to ensure glass objects get recycled.

“Sending glass to landfills is not sensible from either an environmen­tal or an economic perspectiv­e, and the alternativ­e that Gwinnett County Government has given us to landfillin­g this material — taking it to a recycling facility — is inadequate at this time,” Hernandez said in an email.

There are two locations to drop off glass in Gwinnett County: Snellville Recycling Center at 2531 Marigold Road and Norcross Public Works at 345 Lively Ave.

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