FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE                                                                   

Contact:            Lindsey Sampson, Lee County Solid Waste Division
                          (941) 338-3302
   

PLEASE RECYCLE!!
COUNTY MAKES MASSIVE APPEAL TO CUSTOMERS

FORT MYERS, Fla. (October 31, 2002) – More than 100,000 Lee County households will be receiving door hangers with recycling information over the next three weeks in an effort to boost the amount of recycled materials.

The door hangers will reach residents in unincorporated Lee County, the cities of Cape Coral and Bonita Springs, and the Town of Fort Myers Beach.  The garbage hauling companies working for Lee County and Cape Coral will distribute the information from Nov. 3 through Nov. 20.  The flyers are in both English and Spanish.

The effort is aimed at encouraging people who do not recycle to recycle, and reminding those who do recycle about the different kinds of items that can be recycled.

Solid Waste assessments increased slightly this year not because of increased rates, but because residents, per household, are generating more garbage.

Over the last three years, per household waste generation has increased from 1 tons annually to 1.3 tons – a 30 percent increase.  This trend is particularly disturbing because Lee County’s household recycling rate has only slightly increased.

Lee County is appealing to citizens to make full use of the recycling program.  A reduction in the amount of household waste disposed of can only be achieved by keeping recyclable materials out of your household garbage.  This strategy makes sense for taxpayers from a financial standpoint and also supports our resources and environment.

Paper, aluminum, metal, glass and plastics (#1-7 on the bottom, including bleach bottles) can be recycled.  Within those categories, such things as magazines and catalogs, flattened corrugated cardboard, all of the newspaper, brown paper grocery bags, telephone books, computer and office paper, junk mail (including envelopes), shredded papers, clean pizza boxes (no crusts), soda and beer cans, clean foil and pie pans, metal food cans, empty aerosol cans, and bottles and jars (green, clear and brown) can be recycled.

“We want to stress the need to increase cardboard, magazines and miscellaneous paper (junk mail, etc.) in the recycling stream because these materials are too often being placed in the garbage,” says county Solid Waste Director Lindsey Sampson.

REMEMBER,

MORE RECYCLING + LESS GARBAGE = CHEAPER GARBAGE BILLS