Bins (Correct Use)
Your red-lidded house hold waste bin
What should I put in the bin?
Yes
- Food waste you are not composting
- Plastic bags
- Plastic wrapping
- Food soiled paper and cardboard
- Nappies
- Foam packaging
No
- Car batteries
- Paints and chemicals (liquid wastes)
- Soil and rocks
- Building materials
- Gas bottles
- Recyclables
- Hot ash
- Vegetation
- Tree stumps
Remember: Avoid, reduce, reuse, recycle
Helpful hints to reduce your waste:
- Only dispose of items that cannot be reused or recycled.
- Buy items that are not over-packaged or buy in bulk.
- When shopping, choose items that come packaged in recyclable material.
- Take reusable bags for shopping.
- Start a worm farm or compost bin.
Placing your bins out for collection
To ensure your bins are easily and safely collected, please follow these bin placement rules:
- Place your bins out the night before collection day.
- Bin handles must face your house, so the bin’s lid opens to the street.
- Place bins one metre apart. If they are too close together the truck’s ‘arm’ cannot pick up the bins.
- Make sure all bin lids are closed, otherwise material can spill during collection.
- Do not put extra bags or bundles next to or on top of your bins. They will not be collected.
- Do not place bins close to trees or cars. This makes collection difficult and/or dangerous.
- Please note bins are not to be stored permanently on the nature strip.
- A weight restriction of 60kg applies to all bins.
Your blue-lidded paper recycling bin
What should I put in the bin?
Yes
- Newspaper
- Office paper and envelopes
- Magazines
- Egg cartons
- Clean cardboard
- Milk carton (cardboard)
- Telephone Books
- Clean pizza boxes
No
- Nappies
- Facial tissues
- Waxed cardboard (waxed fruit boxes)
- Plastic bags
- Food soiled paper and cardboard