Waipa Post

Recycling sorted

New jobs and new data on district’s recycling efforts

- ■ For more informatio­n on what can and can’t go in your wheelie bin head to www.waipadc.govt.nz/recycling

A newly-minted recycling sorting centre that will process recycling in Waipā will open in Te Awamutu at the end of the month.

Waipā District Council recycling contractor, Metallic Sweeping Ltd, will officially open the site on March 25, marking the start of localised sorting in Waipā .

The site is currently being tested and eight new staff trained in the lead up to the opening day.

Council operations team leader Jennifer Braithwait­e says a local sorting centre would benefit the Waipā community.

“Not only do we expect the centre to create new jobs, it will also provide very specific data and statistics on the quality of the recycling we collect,” says jennifer.

“We’ll know just how much of the different plastic types are being collected, as well as how much contaminat­ion is being placed in the recycling bins.

“This informatio­n will assist us in developing recycling education programs, which are aimed at teaching people proper ways to recycle.”

Since the launch of Waipā's kerbside recycling service in July last year, the recycling has been transporte­d in bulk as mixed material to a recycling centre in Auckland for sorting.

Mixed recycling will now be separated into cardboard, paper and plastics and transporte­d directly to the market.

Glass recycling will continue to be transporte­d to Auckland for processing.

Jennifer says the new centre meant recycling could be sorted automatica­lly by machine or manually by workers.

“Mixed recycling is put onto a conveyor belt where it is sorted. Any items that can’t be recycled are removed, then at the end of the line, a magnet removes any metal items.

“Once the recyclable material is separated into cardboard, paper and plastics, it is put through a baler which compresses and packs them into bales that are easier to store and transport.”

She says it is vital residents put their recycling into the correct wheelie bins and ensure all items were empty and clean.

“Staff have to deal with and touch dirty recycling and contaminat­ion directly so it can be really unpleasant for them if people have put landfill items into their recycling bins.

“We have had several occasions where people have put dirty nappies into their recycling which staff then have to dispose of.”

Recycling will only be collected from the yellow and blue wheelie bins provided to households as part of Waipa¯ ’s recycling service. Residents are not permitted to drop off their recycling directly to the centre.

 ?? Photo / Supplied ?? Recycler Autumn Tonihi coming to grips with the new Metallic Sweeping Ltd recycling sorting centre in Te Awamutu.
Photo / Supplied Recycler Autumn Tonihi coming to grips with the new Metallic Sweeping Ltd recycling sorting centre in Te Awamutu.
 ?? Photo / Supplied ?? Staff training at the recycling sorting centre in Te Awamutu.
Photo / Supplied Staff training at the recycling sorting centre in Te Awamutu.

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