Halton Hills Newspapers

Independent & Free Press (Georgetown, ON), 19 Sep 2013, 20 V1 GEO GA 0919.pdf

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•T he I FP • H al to n H ill s •T hu rs da y, S ep te m be r 1 9, 2 01 3 20 The Regional Municipality of Halton Please contact us, as soon as possible, if you have any accessibility needs at Halton Region events or meetings. 19 20 09 13 Gary Carr Regional Chair Sep 24, 9:30 a.m. Health & Social Services Cttee. Sep 25, 9:30 a.m. Planning & Public Works Cttee. Sep 25, 1:30 p.m. Administration & Finance Cttee. Halton Regional Meeting Schedule Meetings can be viewed at www.halton.ca/meetings Blue Box GreenCart What rigid plastic packaging is accepted? Halton Region accepts the following rigid plastic packing in the Blue Box: The following items do NOT go in the Blue Box: plastic laundry baskets, plastic ���� ������ ������� ����� ������� ������� ������� ����� ������� ���� ���������� ��� garden hoses. If you can't reuse them, these items go in the garbage. Keep your neighbourhood clean Use Blue Boxes only. Recyclables in plastic bags, cardboard boxes, grocery bins, laundry baskets, milk crates, or garbage/recycling cans will not be collected. Do not put newspapers in plastic bags. Place acceptable materials loose in your Blue Box. Rinse all containers and ensure they are clean. Papers can be bundled and tied or placed loose, but no plastic bags. Tie corrugated cardboard in bundles no larger than 90 cm x 90 cm x 30 cm (3 ft x 3 ft x 1 ft) and place beside your Blue Box. Help reduce Blue Box litter by following these tips to keep your neighbourhood clean: � ������� ����� ������� ��� �������� ��� ������ ����� ������ ����� • Flatten cardboard. • Stack your Blue Boxes and place heavier items such as phone books and magazines on top of loose materials. Avoid windy weather during the night and put your Blue Box at the curb by 7 a.m. the morning of your collection day. � � � � What compostable papers are accepted? Halton Region accepts the following compostable papers in the GreenCart: Help reduce contamination ���� ���� ������������� �� ��� ���������� ��� ���� ������� ���� �� � ������ ������� that can be used in agricultural and landscaping projects. Following these tips will help reduce contamination: No produce bags.When cleaning out your fridge, please remember to empty food from plastic produce bags. The plastic bag goes in the garbage, and the old or leftover food goes in the GreenCart. No elastics. Please remove elastic bands from vegetables including broccoli, celery, green onions and asparagus. The elastic bands go in the garbage, and the old food goes in the GreenCart. No stickers. Please remove the sticker from fruit such as bananas, apples, pears and peaches. The stickers go in the garbage, and the fruit peels, cores and pits go in the GreenCart. No diapers. Please place diapers and sanitary products in the garbage. These materials do not compost, and result in compost that does not meet Ontario provincial quality guidelines and would have to be disposed of as waste. Paper towels, facial tissues, toilet paper rolls Waxed paper, parchment paper, meat paper Paper cups (plastic lids go in Blue Box) Paper plates, paper bowls Paper egg cartons, paper coffee take-out trays Paper egg To determine whether paper products are compostable and can go into the ��������� � ���� ���� � ���� �� ��� ����� ������� �� �������� �� ���� �� �� ����� �� visible plastic or metallic lining, it cannot go in the GreenCart. Black & clear plastic take-out containers Clear plastic "clam shell" containers Plastic plant pots & trays Plastic plates, cups & coffee cup lids No cutlery Single-serve plastic food containers �� ��� �� ���� Plastic bottles, tubs & lids Beverage, soap, cleaning bottles, caps go in garbage; cottage cheese, cream cheese, dips, margarine, yogurt tubs & lids; maximum size 4 litre (1 gallon) ������ � ������ �� ���������� ��������� ��������� ����������� �������� ������ �������� ��������� ��������� ����������� ������� ������ �� ��� �� ���� ����� ������ ������ ���� �� notify residents of emergencies by phoning affected households throughout Halton. Beginning in November, Halton ���� �� ��� �� ��� ���� �������������� �� ���� ������ �� �� �������� ��������� �������� �� �� ����� ���� ���� �� per cent of Halton residents with traditional land lines. This contributes to ensuring that Halton Region remains not only the safest region in Canada, but one of the most prepared. Learn more at www.halton.ca/beprepared.

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