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The North Transfer Station, also known as the North Recycling and Disposal Station, is a municipal waste collection and distribution facility in Seattle, Washington, United States. It is located in the Wallingford neighborhood near Gas Works Park and is one of two transfer stations managed by Seattle Public Utilities .
The City of Seattle launched Find It, Fix It in 2013 for Android and iOS phones to let citizens report potholes, graffiti, and other problems they observe to the city. [1] The app did not support Windows Phone , making it inaccessible to Microsoft employees in the city who used the company's then-supported mobile operating system.
(The Center Square) – Seattle Public Utilities is continuing to accept glass recycling collection despite recent setbacks to the local glass recycling industry. The Seattle region’s major ...
No more tossing your expired batteries in the trash—you will have to take them to Seattle Public Utilities sites on the north or south side of town, schedule a $5 pickup with the city, or use a ...
From the city's founding through the 1880s, Seattle's water was provided by several private companies. In a July 8, 1889, election, [4] barely a month after the Great Seattle Fire (June 6, 1889) gave a dramatic illustration of the limitations of the city's water supply, Seattle's citizens voted 1,875 to 51 to acquire and operate their own water ...
The Stanolind Recycling Plant was in operation as early 1947. [32] Another early recycling mill was Waste Techniques, built in Conshohocken, Pennsylvania in 1972. [citation needed] Waste Techniques was sold to Frank Keel in 1978, and resold to BFI in 1981. Woodbury, New Jersey, was the first city in the United States to mandate recycling. [33]
Here are ENV's instructions for Oahu residents who will miss a pickup :—For neighborhoods on the three-cart collection system, if your refuse collection (gray cart ) falls on the holidays, the ...
Curbside solid waste, recycling, and composting pickup is outsourced by Seattle Public Utilities to Waste Management, Inc and Recology. Non-garbage waste is processed by other companies; [354] since 2015, curbside collection of food waste for composting in Seattle has been mandatory to offer to all households. [355]