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Recycling is a good thing to do, but what is
even better than recycling, is
PREVENTING the
waste in the first place!
Below is a listing of helpful basic waste prevention tips,
but remember, reducing what you buy, use and
dispose of is always the better
route to take!
Reduce
Paper Use
-
Use both sides of
the page. Draft reports can be
printed on the back of paper that has been
used once. Set aside such paper for printers
and copy machines.
-
Make double–sided
photocopies. Reports can be copied on
both sides of the page.
-
Print only the
number of copies necessary. Limit the
distribution of correspondence and reports
to only those who really need hard copies.
-
Route one hard
copy to several readers.
-
Use email or
bulletin boards for sending and receiving
information.
-
Accept papers
with minor handwritten corrections for
internal documents.
-
Set printers and
copiers to default to double sided copies.
Reduce
Packaging and
Shipping Materials
- Eliminate
unnecessary layers of packaging.
- Ask
suppliers to take back pallets or switch to
more durable pallets that can be re–used.
- Investigate
other reusable packaging, such as boxes.
- Re–use
received boxes and packaging for outgoing
shipments.
- Shred or
crumple waste paper for use as packing
material.
Use Less — Re–Use
More
-
Use or manufacture
minimal or reusable packaging. For
example: re–use packing material, use less
packaging, and ship merchandise in
returnable/reusable containers.
-
Use and maintain
durable equipment and supplies. High
quality, long–lasting supplies and equipment
that can be repaired easily mean fewer
discards. Durable items stay out of the
waste stream longer, offsetting higher
initial costs.
-
Re–use products and
supplies. Use durable, reusable
products rather than single–use materials. A
one–time investment for reusable items ends
the frequently expensive cycle of discarding
and reordering.
-
Use supplies and
materials more efficiently. Change
company policies and operations to increase
efficiency, reduce waste, and conserve
materials. Set up a re–use area where
employees can take unneeded supplies rather
than throwing them away and encourage staff
to "shop" there.
-
Exchange, sell, or
give away unneeded goods for re–use.
Donate excess food, used furniture, and
other materials to local organizations such
as homeless shelters or charities.
-
Reduce unwanted or
multiple copy mail. Get off unwanted
mailing lists, and share subscriptions to
professional magazines.
No more junk mail.
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