MSW/Bag Trash

MSW

Items banned from disposal in the State of Vermont

According to Vermont State Law (10 V.S.A. § 6621a), no person shall knowingly dispose of any of the following materials in  their household trash or in landfills:

  • Lead-acid batteries (1990)
  • Waste oil (1990)
  • "White goods," or large appliances... (1991)
  • Paint, oil-based and latex... (1991)
  • Tires (1992)
  • Nickel-cadmium batteries, small sealed lead-acid batteries, non-consumer mercuric oxide batteries (1992)
  • Mercury-added products (2007)
  • Electronic devices... (2011)
  • Mandated recyclables... (2015)
  • Leaf and yard debris, clean wood (2016)
  • Food residuals (2014-2020)

What You Can Do to Keep Vermont Clean

  1. DO NOT BURN TRASH. DO NOT DUMP TRASH in roadside ditches, swamps, abandoned quarries, or any open lands.
  2. REDUCE, REUSE, RECYCLE
  3. REDUCE the amount of waste you create by buying products with less packaging and buying items that last longer instead of disposable ones. REUSE the durable packaging you get (wash out that sour cream container and use it to put leftovers in). RECYCLE all the materials you can, like cardboard, newspapers, cans and bottles. Learn more about how to recycle in Vermont.
  4. TAKE YOUR TRASH TO THE TRANSFER STATION Instead of burning or illegally dumping your trash, take it to your local transfer station. It only takes a few minutes to jump in your car or truck and haul it there, and it's much better for you and everyone around you. Or call a local solid waste hauler to provide pick-up from your curb!
  5. SPREAD THE WORD! You can really help make a difference by letting your friends and neighbors know about the dangers of burning trash and the safe alternatives.