Sadoff Iron & Metal, headquartered in Fond du Lac, Wisconsin, has announced it will reopen its recycling center in Oshkosh and will offer electronics recycling in all eight Sadoff facilities throughout Wisconsin and Nebraska.
“Sadoff strives to position itself as the customer’s preferred choice when it comes to recycling,” says Jason Lasky, vice president of Sadoff Iron & Metal. “By making these changes, we continue to ensure excellent service and value to our customers, encourage responsible waste management at all our locations, and remain the trusted choice in recycling in northeast Wisconsin.”
Sadoff Iron & Metal reports that its Oshkosh scrap metal recycling center will reopen Monday, Aug. 10, 2015. The company’s return to Oshkosh once again gives community members the choice to recycle scrap metal and other accepted recyclable materials, the company says in a press release.
The Oshkosh facility will feature the city’s first drive-through scrap recycling service, the company says. Size permitting, vehicles will be able to drive through the entire building, offering protection from the elements during transactions, Sadoff says. Larger vehicles that are over the facility’s size limit, such as semitrucks, must use the truck scale in the Oshkosh recycling yard, the company adds.
Customers will receive instant visual weight verification or scale readouts of their materials to ensure accuracy, according to the company .
The facility, located at 36 E. 10th Ave. in Oshkosh, will be open weekly from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday through Friday, and from 8 a.m. to noon on Saturdays.
For questions regarding the reopened facility and what materials are accepted for recycling, customers can call the Oshkosh recycling center at 920-232-7373.
The company also has announced that it will accept electronics for recycling at all of its recycling centers. With the reopening of the recycling center in Oshkosh this month, all eight Sadoff facilities will now accept electronics for recycling.
Accepted items include computers, cellphones, memory chips, keyboards, circuit boards, hard drives and power cords.
Most items can be recycled for financial compensation, but a few have no value or involve a disposal fee, the company says. A disposal fee of 35 cents per pound is charged to recycle televisions.
Sadoff says its “CO+Efficient Program” confirms any information on recycled electronics is never compromised and will not be seen after disposal.
More information on financial reimbursement and accepted electronics is available from Sadoff's main office in Fond du Lac at 920-921-2070.
The company also has reported that its Berlin, Wisconsin, Recycling Center is offering new operating hours. The facility, at 478 E. Huron St., is open weekly from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday-Thursday, 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Fridays and 8 a.m. to noon Saturdays.
Information on the Berlin recycling center is available by calling 920-361-1450 or visiting www.sadoff.com.
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