Local Focus

Recycling Profile: Rapid City, SD

February 15, 2013

Rapid City’s curbside recycling program does not accept any paper products, but it is still an advanced program for a city of its size.

Background

Rapid City recycling Recycling Profile: Rapid City, SDRapid City (pop. 69,200) is leading the recycling charge in South Dakota. The state’s second-largest city, and the economic hub of the Black Hills region, Rapid City is home to a straightforward, no-frills single-stream curbside recycling program. While the curbside program does not accept any paper products, it is still an advanced program for a city of this size.

Materials recycled

Paper
Note: Paper is not collected for recycling at curbside. Paper products in curbside refuse are composted at the Rapid City MRF. Newspapers and corrugated cardboard can be dropped off at select locations (see below).

Plastics
Plastic items with a recycling triangle on the body are accepted, including milk jugs, detergent jugs, soda bottles, water bottles, hair care bottles, food containers, empty paint containers, drained oil containers and more.

Metals
Including aluminum cans, aluminum bottles, hairspray cans, shaving cream cans, spray starch cans, steel cans, empty paint cans and empty aerosol cans.

Glass
Including all glass bottles and jars (no lids).

Frequency

Curbside recycling pick-up occurs on a weekly basis, same day as trash. Carts must be placed curbside at least 4 feet from any obstructions by 7 a.m. day of pick-up. A collection map and a schedule are available online.

Other programs

Rapid City operates three drop-off recycling locations that accept newspapers (including inserts and flyers), corrugated cardboard (flattened; no waxy cardboard, paperboard or pizza boxes) and curbside recyclables.

  • Fitzgerald Stadium parking lot (Sheridan Lake Road across from Sioux Park)
  • West Boulevard North (Anamosa Street and West I-190 service road)
  • Fairmont Boulevard (Robbinsdale Park west of Highway 79)

Yard waste, including grass clippings, tree branches (under 6 feet in length and 4 inches in diameter) and organic materials, is collected at the curb from April through November each year. Yard waste must be secured in a biodegradable paper yard waste bag.

Christmas trees are also picked up on a seasonal basis.

South Dakota Democracy in Action has created a digital “recycling booklet” available for download that details what Rapid City residents can do to properly dispose all kinds of other recyclables, including e-waste, automotive wastes, appliances, batteries, eyeglasses, drugs/pharmaceuticals, household hazardous waste, pesticides/herbicides, plastic bags, paper products, building materials, metals and biohazard wastes.

More information

Visit the Rapid City Solid Waste Operations website for more recycling program info.

1-800-RECYCLING

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3 Responses to “Recycling Profile: Rapid City, SD”

  1. Roxana Nader

    February 22nd, 2013

    Dear editor:
    I agree with your opinions about recycling, in my opinion I think it is important to use recycling as a means to a better life in our world. Because we have many things where we can get a dual use and really never do, and prefer to think that have no other function.

    I I like the idea of the program “Rapid City”. I think it’s important to have many places like this because people can carry materials where they can make better use.

    Thank you
    Sincerely: Roxana Nader from Tijuana, Mexico.

  2. David Chandler

    March 10th, 2013

    Why will they not include paper???

  3. Si Robins

    March 11th, 2013

    David,

    I believe it is a budgetary issue for the city of Rapid City. They cannot afford to offer paper recycling at this time, and have instead chosen to focus on plastics, metals and glass, which might afford them higher recycling returns.

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