As Tennessee landfills are reaching their limits, a new nationwide report ranks Tennessee as 48th in overall recycling of packaging and other materials. The “50 States of Recycling” report was released in December by Eunomia Research & Consulting and Ball Corporation, providing a state-by-state, comprehensive assessment of common packaging materials using data on generation, recycling, and disposal rates from across all 50 US States.

State legislation is being considered by lawmakers to improve recycling and ease Tennessee’s landfill crisis. The Tennessee Waste Reduction and Recycling Act (SB0573/HB0550) was introduced by State Senator Heidi Campbell to reduce litter, reduce the strain on local landfills, increase recycling, and create local jobs in Tennessee. The bill will establish a Producer Responsibility Organization (PRO) to implement strategies to increase recycling and reduce the amount of packaging that ends up in our landfills or as litter in Tennessee communities.

The PRO includes those who created the packaging as part of the solution. “We urgently need to solve Tennessee’s trash and litter crisis,” says Jeffrey Barrie, CEO of Tennessee Environmental Council. “We fully support this legislation that promises to create local jobs in Tennessee’s recycling sector while tackling our dwindling landfill space head-on.” Approximately $162 million worth of recyclable materials are being buried in Tennessee landfills every year, according to the “50 States of Recycling” report. Recycling those materials would add up to 7,700 jobs and add up to $420 million annually in additional wages for Tennesseans, according to the report.

To read the full story, visit https://www.elizabethton.com/2024/01/18/state-legislation-seeks-to-improve-recycling-create-jobs-solve-regional-solid-waste-crisis/.
Author: Elizabethton Star

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