PaintCare, Portland, Ore., has launched a program throughout Oregon to help manage post-consumer paint. A variety of retailers throughout the state will serve as a network of paint collection sites where consumers and contractors can take their unused paint to be transported from the collection sites to processors for recycling, re-use, energy recovery and proper disposal of the collected paint. According to the nonprofit association, the new program is environmentally sound and cost effective.
“The collection sites will make it convenient for consumers and contractors to dispose of their unused paint all in an effort to be environmentally responsible,” says Alison Keane, Esq., counsel, government affairs, for the American Coatings Association, (ACA). “By the end of the year there will be over 90 collection sites for Oregonians to use.”
Additional Oregon-based collection sites will be phased into the program throughout the year.
The collection will be aided through the participation of independent retailers, various hardware stores and paint manufacturers such as Miller Paint, Rodda Paint and Sherwin Williams. The locations will be collecting leftover consumer and contractor latex and oil-based paint.
PaintCare is a nonprofit association established to manage the Oregon Paint Stewardship Program, which oversees the reuse, recycling and proper disposal of leftover paint. More information and a list of the Oregon Collection Sites are available at www.paintcare.org.
Sponsored Content
SENNEBOGEN 340G telehandler improves the view in Macon County, NC
An elevated cab is one of several features improving operational efficiency at the Macon County Solid Waste Management agency in North Carolina. When it comes to waste management, efficiency, safety and reliability are priorities driving decisions from day one, according to staff members of the Macon County Solid Waste Management Department in western North Carolina. The agency operates a recycling plant in a facility originally designed to bale incoming materials. More recently, the building has undergone significant transformations centered around one machine: a SENNEBOGEN telehandler (telescopic handler).
Sponsored Content
SENNEBOGEN 340G telehandler improves the view in Macon County, NC
An elevated cab is one of several features improving operational efficiency at the Macon County Solid Waste Management agency in North Carolina. When it comes to waste management, efficiency, safety and reliability are priorities driving decisions from day one, according to staff members of the Macon County Solid Waste Management Department in western North Carolina. The agency operates a recycling plant in a facility originally designed to bale incoming materials. More recently, the building has undergone significant transformations centered around one machine: a SENNEBOGEN telehandler (telescopic handler).
Sponsored Content
SENNEBOGEN 340G telehandler improves the view in Macon County, NC
An elevated cab is one of several features improving operational efficiency at the Macon County Solid Waste Management agency in North Carolina. When it comes to waste management, efficiency, safety and reliability are priorities driving decisions from day one, according to staff members of the Macon County Solid Waste Management Department in western North Carolina. The agency operates a recycling plant in a facility originally designed to bale incoming materials. More recently, the building has undergone significant transformations centered around one machine: a SENNEBOGEN telehandler (telescopic handler).
Sponsored Content
SENNEBOGEN 340G telehandler improves the view in Macon County, NC
An elevated cab is one of several features improving operational efficiency at the Macon County Solid Waste Management agency in North Carolina. When it comes to waste management, efficiency, safety and reliability are priorities driving decisions from day one, according to staff members of the Macon County Solid Waste Management Department in western North Carolina. The agency operates a recycling plant in a facility originally designed to bale incoming materials. More recently, the building has undergone significant transformations centered around one machine: a SENNEBOGEN telehandler (telescopic handler).
Sponsored Content
SENNEBOGEN 340G telehandler improves the view in Macon County, NC
An elevated cab is one of several features improving operational efficiency at the Macon County Solid Waste Management agency in North Carolina. When it comes to waste management, efficiency, safety and reliability are priorities driving decisions from day one, according to staff members of the Macon County Solid Waste Management Department in western North Carolina. The agency operates a recycling plant in a facility originally designed to bale incoming materials. More recently, the building has undergone significant transformations centered around one machine: a SENNEBOGEN telehandler (telescopic handler).
Get curated news on YOUR industry.
Enter your email to receive our newsletters.
Latest from Recycling Today
- ReMA lobbies for shredder wear parts tariff exclusion
- Dow, Gruppo Fiori develop recycling pathway for automotive polyurethane foam
- Ascend produces recycled lithium carbonate from used LIBs
- RecycLiCo acquires building to serve as corporate HQ, operational hub
- EZVIZ partners with Plastic Bank
- Radius, under new ownership, replaces CEO
- SMS in Illinois sells assets to equity investor
- Mayr-Melnhof reports earnings growth so far in 2025