Create a Website Account - Manage notification subscriptions, save form progress and more.
Bethlehem Recycles and Composts!
The Town of Bethlehem has a proud tradition of active participation by residents and local businesses in our award-winning recycling and composting programs. Please do your part to make sure to "Recycle Right" and help prevent contamination in the recycling and composting streams.
Why Recycle and Compost?
Recycling and Composting - which is the recycling of organics - are beneficial to our community, the environment and the economy. Recycling is also required by law for all businesses and residents. We have made good progress, but there is still a long way to go before reaching Town and State goals for recycling, especially for composting of food scraps.
What to Recycle and Compost?
For composting food scraps, please see our Compost page.
For recycling, certain items must be recycled by law, and there are a variety of other items that should be reused, recycled or composted. List of mandatory and recommended recyclables for all businesses and residents in the Town of Bethlehem.
How and Where to Recycle?
The private waste haulers in town now collect recyclable materials together in one single stream container.
Please follow the hauler’s instructions about what materials can be placed in that bin and how that should occur.
The Town’s Transfer Station remains a “dual stream” facility, where different categories of materials are separated by residents and businesses before recycling at the station. This allows for less contamination than with single stream, and can save on the Town's recycling costs or sometimes even provide revenue by material type.
Bethlehem’s Third Annual Spring Recycling Event Sees Record Attendance
805 households bring 50,730 pounds (over 25 tons) for reuse and recycling
The Town of Bethlehem’s third annual “Spring Recycle Fest” broke previous records with 805 households participating to drop of approximately 50,730 lbs (or more than 25 tons) of materials, which averages out to nearly 6 lbs. for every household in the entire Town! Over $2,000 in donations were also raised to support Bethlehem Central School District Environmental Programs.
The event was a collaboration between the Town of Bethlehem Recycling/Sanitation, Highway, and Senior Services Departments, Bethlehem Central School District Green Team, the Delmar Farmer's Market, Grassroot Givers, Up-Stitch, American Clothing Company, JGS Recycling, Cascade Recovery and 3N Document Destruction.
Residents can continue to donate clothing, footwear and other textiles for reuse or recycling throughout the year (such as linens, stuffed animals, loose fabric, backpacks, and even ripped, stained or damaged items like missing
buttons or a broken zipper—as long as they are not wet or contaminated) as part of “Re-Clothe NY,” a statewide campaign to promote clothing and textile recycling; visit www.nytextiles.org. Collection bins are located throughout Town, including the bins at the Elm Ave. CDTA Park and Ride, the Kenwood Avenue Municipal Parking Lot near Four Corners (next to Hughes Opticians), and the Town’s Rupert Road Transfer Station. Proceeds from these locations benefit the Town. There is an additional blue bin at the Bethlehem Central Middle School parking lot that benefits the school’s green initiatives.
Books: In addition to 7,560 lbs of books and cardboard gathered for recycling by Cascade Recovery, Grassroot Givers and volunteers sorted out three vanloads full of high quality titles with reuse value (estimated 3,000 lbs total).
Shredded documents for recycling: About 8,500 lbs of secure shredding was done on-site by 3N Document Destruction of Clifton Park. This material is baled and sent to a paper mill for recycling back into paper products, according to 3N co-owner Dave Neville.
Electronics, appliances and scrap metal: 21,606 lbs were collected for recycling by JGS Recycling of Waterford. Residents can continue to recycle electronics, appliances and scrap metal items (some fees apply) throughout the year at the Town’s Rupert Road Transfer Station.
NEW this year—sewing and knitting supplies: Up-Stitch, a new local nonprofit creative reuse organization, was overwhelmed with three carloads and a minivan full of sewing and knitting supply donations (estimated at 400 lbs total). For ongoing donation information, visit www.up-stitch.com.
For more information about Town of Bethlehem recycling visit www.townofbethlehem.org or contact Dan Rain, Recycling Coordinator: email recycle@townofbethlehem.org or call 518-439-4955 ext. 1510. For BCSD Green Team details visit www.bethlehemschools.org/bc-green-team/.
###