Dallas Apartments and Hotels Are Terrible at Recycling

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Kevin Dooley
It's really easy to recycle in Dallas if you live in a house. Just dump that unsorted mass of old newspapers, empty soda cans and milk cartons into a cavernous blue bin, drag it to the curb and let one the city's lumbering dump trucks haul it away.

For those who live in apartments -- nearly half of the city's population -- recycling is much, much harder. There's no blue bin, no city dump truck. The average apartment complex doesn't even offer recycling.

Apartments, along with offices, hotels and other businesses, are part of an enormous blind spot in Dallas' recycling efforts. Together, they generate about 83 percent of the garbage that goes into area landfills. Houses account for a mere 17 percent.

See also: Environmentalists to City: Your Long-Term Trash Plan is a Burning Pile of Garbage

That means, says Texas Campaign for the Environment's Zac Trahan, that "even if we had 100 percent recycling in single family homes in the city of Dallas, even if people were recycling every single piece of trash," the city would still be leaving behind a mountain of trash.

Trade groups -- the Apartment Association of Greater Dallas, the Hotel Association of North Texas, and the Building Owners and Managers Association in particular -- fought hard against attempts to include mandatory commercial recycling as part of the long-term garbage plan the city adopted last February. They did, however, agree to survey members to see just how many offered recycling.

The results, which have been sitting on a shelf at City Hall for the past several months, are uninspiring.

Office buildings do OK, with 84 percent offering recycling for a 21 percent "waste diversion" rate, about two-thirds that of the average Dallas home dweller. Hotels and apartments do worse, with 37 percent of apartment complexes and 61 percent of hotels offering recycling. Their waste-diversion numbers are even more paltry, 6 percent and 9 percent, respectively.

And it's important to note that these figures very likely overstate the amount of recycling that's going on, perhaps by a large degree. Fewer than a quarter of the buildings surveyed bothered to respond. It seems safe to assume that the three-quarters who ignored the survey are less likely to be environmental stewards.

The trade groups all say they're working to improve recycling among members. Hotel Association executive director Cecile Newberry Fernandez says her organization is forming "hotel working group" to improve recycling efforts and will host regular sustainability programs. Teresa Foster, head of the Building Owners and Managers Association, suggested her industry's diversion rate would likely be higher if the reams of paper shredded by law firms, medical offices, and other businesses was counted in the survey and said her group would work with smaller and mid-sized properties, who often say they're prohibited from recycling by space constraints. Kathy Carlton, government affairs director for the Apartment Association, says educational efforts are underway, with a goal of getting 50 percent of properties to offer recycling by the end of 2015.

Carlton says her group has settled on a logo. "Do the logo, and everything else follows from there," she says.

All three groups remain skeptical of a mandate. Carlton says she's optimistic that Dallas' apartment complexes can voluntarily increase recycling to the point that a mandatory ordinance would be superfluous.

"That's the goal. That's always the goal. It is always better when people are doing it voluntarily."

Trahan, who's been meeting quarterly with the city and the trade groups to discuss recycling, thinks voluntary efforts are doomed to fall short. He nods to incremental progress (e.g. getting businesses to cough up recycling data, then taking steps to improve) but says recycling mandates like ones already passed in Fort Worth, San Antonio and Austin are necessary for more significant improvement.

Send your story tips to the author, Eric Nicholson.

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24 comments
zactrahan
zactrahan

This isn't very complicated. Fort Worth and San Antonio have local ordinances that require apartment owners and managers to offer recycling for residents. Just like it's impossible to imagine operating a multi-family building with no trash service, they can't operate a building without recycling service either. There are no daunting problems with apartment recycling in Dallas that haven't been solved in other Texas cities. In fact, companies such as Amli or Lincoln Properties operate buildings in many various cities, some of which already require recycling. If they can do it there, they can do it here. If our neighbors in DFW and similar-sized cities in Texas and other states can enforce this as a local ordinance, so can we.

Sharon_Moreanus
Sharon_Moreanus topcommenter

Was just at Pelicans Landing in Bonita Springs.

In BS...most recycle. dedicated bike lanes. $80 fine for not yielding to pedestrians or bicycles.

Montemalone
Montemalone topcommenter

As a former property manager, I can tell you that just getting apartment dwellers to put their trash in the bin is hoping for an awful lot.

Forget about recycling. You'd have the idiots that would dump their cat boxes in the recycle bin and then the recyclers wouldn't pick it up, then you have to pay someone else to haul it to the dumpster so you can pay CDI to haul it  away. So you get to pay a recycler not to pick it up, and pay extra for regular waste removal.

schermbeck
schermbeck

"Do the logo, and everything else follows from there." Pretty much explains why things are so FUBAR'd.

MikeWestEast
MikeWestEast

We have recycling in our condo building.  It is no big deal.  It just takes people that are interested and willing to get in the face of people not following the rules, e.g., putting food items in recycling bins.  We don't save any money because we still need garbage pick ups and recyclers don't pay.  I suspect a combo of all four factors causes landlords to say skip it.

holmantx
holmantx topcommenter

Any comment on the recycling efforts by Central and South America, Africa, the Sub-Continent or Asia?

Would you like to compare and contrast the United States' environmentalism with the rest of the planet?

Just sayin'.  


Please compare DFW's recycling efforts with, say, 

Jakarta 26,746,000

Seoul–Incheon 22,868,000

Delhi 22,826,000

Shanghai 21,766,000

Manila (Metro Manila) 21,241,000

Lagos 21,000,000

Karachi 20,877,000

São Paulo 20,568,000

Mexico City (Valley of Mexico) 20,032,000

Beijing 18,241,000

Guangzhou–Foshan 17,681,000

Mumbai 17,307,000

Moscow 15,788,000

Greater Cairo 15,071,000

Kolkata14,630,000

Bangkok14,544,000

Dhaka 14,399,000

Buenos Aires 13,776,000

Tehran 13,309,000

Istanbul 12,919,000

Shenzhen 12,506,000

Rio de Janeiro11,616,000

Lima 9,400,000

Kinshasa 9,387,000

Tianjin 9,277,000

Chennai9,182,000

Bogotá9,009,000


I have been to many of these towns.  

you wouldn't believe it.

TheRuddSki
TheRuddSki topcommenter

@zactrahan

It's a bit unfair to compare Dallas to world-class cities in that respect.

TheRuddSki
TheRuddSki topcommenter

@Sharon_Moreanus

All the same in Sarasota/Lido, but $112.50 for failure to yield, so I go visit family in bonita when I want to terrorize pedestrians.

BTW, don't you just hate people who linger at the xwalk while you try to guess what they're gonna do?

domusplacet1
domusplacet1

@Montemalone And the trash companies charge more for recycling bins than the regular trash bins.

gm0622
gm0622

@Montemalone 26 yrs apt maintenance, the first item I got rid of was the recycle bin. not only did the tenants foul it, but the landscapers did as well.

kduble
kduble

@MikeWestEast  We have it in our condo, but every contractor's rules are different. Ours doesn't take glass, for example, so I have to walk the glass over to a nearby city blue bin which does.

kduble
kduble

@holmantx You miss the big picture. Recycling efforts in developing countries are often quite high because the poor scavenge landfills.

TheRuddSki
TheRuddSki topcommenter

@holmantx

Hell, just go to any city after socialists have held a march to demand something.

Like the recent marches demanding a cooler Earth.

Gaia looked down at the incredible mess they left (as usual), and said "fuck you, you ain't seen hot yet, ya filthy morons", and lo, the Earth shall fry like a veggie burger on the grill.

dsmithy3211
dsmithy3211

@holmantx Because THOSE are the cities we'd like to use as a benchmark?

Sharon_Moreanus
Sharon_Moreanus topcommenter

Idk...I'm at the beach or fishing usually.

No reason to get in a car and drive around.

Sharon_Moreanus
Sharon_Moreanus topcommenter

Red fish was delish.

Caught snook, shark, catfish, grouper,

ThePosterFormerlyKnownasPaul
ThePosterFormerlyKnownasPaul topcommenter

@TheRuddSki 

I wonder how they got to NY for the demonstration.

Surely it wasn't on vehicles powered by unicorn breath and tofu.


The trash left after the demonstration was just short of incredible.

kduble
kduble

@ThePosterFormerlyKnownasPaul  Surely you aren't thinking airliners flew that wouldn't have flown otherwise? Even if some elites flew in a private jet, don't you think they might have flown someplace else otherwise? You have to do better than that!

TheRuddSki
TheRuddSki topcommenter

@TPFKAP

They flew in on their self-esteem.

Sotiredofitall
Sotiredofitall topcommenter

@holmantx @dsmithy3211 Your statistics are a little misleading - note part about "no structured municipal recycling programs"


"Brazil's overall recycling rate (1%)[ is better than average, especially in larger cities such as Rio de Janeiro.  Overall, Brazilian recycling rates are fair, especially concerning papersteel and aluminum, despite the fact that there are no structured municipal recycling programs. Only 6.4% Brazilian Municipalities have official waste recycling programs .The recovery of recyclable material is largely left to waste pickers, who earn a living by collecting recyclables and selling them to private recycling companies."

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