Pennsylvanians generate 14.6 million tons of municipal waste every year -- more than 1 ton for every many, woman, and child in the Commonwealth.
Food waste, 12 percent; non-recyclable paper, 9.3 percent; corrugated cardboard, 8.4 percent; unpainted wood, 5.8 percent; plastic film, 5 percent;construction and demolition waste, 4.8 percent; mixed paper, 4.6 percent; newspaper, 4.2 percent; rigid plastic, 3.8 percent; textiles, 3.8 percent. (2003 data, Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection)
Based on 2002 disposal totals calculated by the Northeast Recycling Council, 27.4 percent of Pennsylvania's trash is recycled, 19.5 percent is incinerated, and 53 percent is managed in landfills.
A landfill is a scientifically engineered containment structure built into the ground. It’s designed to isolate solid waste from the surrounding environment, including groundwater, by means of a liner underneath, a covering of soil on top, and other protective systems. Modern landfills have nothing in common with the dumps of bygone days where people just heaped their trash into open holes. Read more at Landfill Design and Industry History.
Pennsylvania’s regulations for the location and design of landfills are the most stringent in the nation. Today’s disposal facilities employ the best available technology,are designed with redundant systems to prevent pollution, and are operated in a manner that minimizes litter, noise, and odors. Landfills employ rigorous quality-control and quality-assurance procedures and are scrutinized by perimeter groundwater monitoring wells and gas probes.
No. Pennsylvania annually generates approximately half a million tons of hazadous waste, most from industrial processes, according to the state Department of Environmental Protection.Hazardous waste includes manufacturing wastewater, solvents, sludge, acid, furnace dust, and other materials of a similar nature. This material does not go to solid waste landfills. It must go to specially permitted hazardous waste transfer, storage, and disposal facilities.
It’s a matter of perception. Waste-hauling trucks have often been singled out for special inspections, but the results of these inspections show that waste trucks have no moreviolations, on average, than all other trucks on Pennsylvania’s roads. Of course,even oneunsafe truck is one too many. PWIA joined with representatives of state government, local government, and waste haulers to support a law that helps improve the safe transport of waste and compliance with environmental regulations. Read more at Industry Issues – Transportation.







