Well, even Boxing Day has come and gone, but what to do with all those boxes?
Store-to-door carriers and Canada Post have just finished their busiest time of year, delivering all those cardboard containers full of gifts; now it’s the recycler’s turn to get cracking.Start your day with a roundup of B.C.-focused news and opinion delivered straight to your inbox at 7 a.m., Monday to Friday.By clicking on the sign up button you consent to receive the above newsletter from Postmedia Network Inc.
“We ensure packaging and paper product is collected from households and recycling depots, sorted, and responsibly managed and recycled,” she said via email.Article content There are 183 B.C. communities participating in Recycle B.C.’s collection program, she said, and more are serviced by Recycle B.C.’s recycling depots.Cardboard is easy to identify and sort, it’s manufactured in high volumes and there’s a ready market for it.
Those empty boxes you took out to the recycling bin after the gift-opening frenzy wound down is the beginning the journey.
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