Our main waste separation categories are Reuse, Recycling, Compost, Trash, and Electronic and Hazardous Waste Recycling. So please, know before you throw! Check out the A to Z search feature from CSWD.

Where to Find the Proper Bin

  • Trash & Recycling: Each building on campus contains a trash, recycling, and compost bin station
  • Electronic Waste: Blue collection tubes found in Lakeside stairwell (ground floor, behind the door to the left when facing the main entrance), IDX Fireside Lounge, MIC entrance, CCM Mail Center (near printer), Ireland upper entrance, and Freeman 2nd floor stairwell or the small brown buckets found in each residence hall main lounge/hallway
  • Compost: Found in dining area, all academic buildings, and residence halls with kitchens

What goes where?

Choose a category below to learn more.

REUSE / DONATE BLUE BIN RECYCLING SPECIAL/HAZARDOUS WASTE RECYCLING COMPOST
  • Bikes
  • Books
  • Computers
  • Office & School Supplies
  • Packing Materials
  • Surplus Furniture
  • Clothing, etc. to Donate/Consign
  • Cans & Bottles
  • Cardboard & Boxboard
  • Confidential/ Shredded Paper
  • Glass
  • Junk Mail
  • Office paper, Newspapers & Magazines
  • Batteries
  • Small Electronics “E-Waste”
  • Fluorescent Bulbs
  • Toner/Laser/InkJet Cartridges
  • K-Cups
  • Food Waste
  • Napkins
  • Paper Towels
  • Coffee Filters
  • Wooden Coffee Stir Sticks
  • Bikes

    Have a bike you no longer want? Contact our Office of Transportation and they’ll gladly assist in repurposing the bike. Bikes can also be donated to Old Spokes Home.

    Books

    We collect books of all types (text books, popular reading, etc.). We partner with the library to keep current text books as part of our Pay It Forward effort to share relevant books with students who can use them. We send the rest to Better World Books. Used books that fall into the category of popular reading may be appropriate to donate to Chauncey’s Book Sale. All proceeds go to support Chauncey’s Cupboard. Contact Beth Dietrich for information about donations.

    Computers

    For college-owned equipment, ChampSupport repurposes older – but still functioning – machines, either within the Champlain community or with a partnering organization. If the machine no longer functions, ChampSupport will recycle it via Good Point Recycling, just place a ChampSupport Ticket for the computer to be picked up and brought to Rowell Annex. For large items that won’t fit on a cart, please place a facilities request for the item to be moved to Rowell Annex. Personal computers can be taken to ReSource on Pine Street.

    Packing Materials

    Styrofoam peanuts, bubble wrap, etc. can be brought to the Mail Center.

    Surplus Furniture

    Put in a facilities request to have furniture you no longer need picked up. Furniture is managed centrally by Campus Operations. Please contact Kate Cronin if you are in need of something.

    Clothing

    Have clothing, shoes, or accessories to donate? Bring them to Chauncey’s Closet in The Gallery.

    Miscellaneous

  • Champlain has an “All-in-One” Recycling program where primary recyclables (paper, plastic, glass, and tin) can all go into one bin. They are sorted out down the road at the Materials Recovery Facility. See CSWD’s web site for the latest information on what can be recycled in the standard blue-bins.  Where do materials go after the MRF? Markets shift frequently, with some materials staying in the state (glass) and other materials heading to other parts of the country or the world.

    Junk Mail

    Receiving snail mail you don’t need, such as credit card offers or catalogs? Use DMA Choice and/or CatalogChoice to take yourself off of many mailing lists.

    Confidential / Shredded Paper

    Departments must make their own arrangements for shredding confidential papers to safeguard the security of confidential information. If your office shreds paper on site, please leave shredded paper in clear plastic bags and place them next to the recycling bins in your central recycling collection area. This helps to minimize mess and litter from the little bits of paper that tend to blow around outside and at the recycling facility. The shredded paper will get recycled. There are SecureShred boxes in several locations on campus (Skiff Hall, Perry Hall, Lakeside).

    Food and Beverage Containers

    The following food and beverage containers can be recycled in the bins throughout all buildings on campus.

    Please Recycle Please DO NOT Recycle
    • Glass bottles and jars (food and beverage only; all colors)
    • Steel, metal, or “tin” cans
    • Aluminum cans (soda, beer, etc)
    • Aluminum foil and pie plates
    • Plastic bottles and jugs (All Numbers)
    • Plastic Dairy tubs (yogurt, cottage cheese, margarine, etc.)
    • Clear plastic hinged “take out” containers
    • Hard Plastic Frozen-Food Trays
    • Plastic containers that are more than 2″ on any 2 sides.
    • Plastic flower pots
    • Plastic lids that are larger than 2″ in diameter
    • Plastic caps that are ON the bottle
    • EMPTY ALL LIQUIDS
    • RINSE ALL ITEMS CLEAN
    • LABELS ARE OKAY
    • Small plastic caps or lids, unless they are ON the bottle
    • “Bio-degradable” or PLA-plastic
    • Glass light bulbs, dishes, ceramics or drinking glasses.
    • Plastic utensils, cups or plates
    • Plastic bags or “film” plastics
    • Styrofoam cups or plates.
    • Plastic toys or household items
    • Motor oil containers (discard as trash)

    Cardboard & Boxboard

    Cardboard boxes must be emptied, flattened, and placed next to the recycling bins inside buildings. Custodial staff will bring boxes to designated cardboard dumpsters located outside.

    Please Recycle Please DO NOT Recycle
    • Corrugated cardboard—has the “wavy” layers inside
    • Pizza boxes are okay, as long as they are not greasy.
    • Soda cartons.
    • 6-pack, 12-pack, or 24-pack boxes
    • Wax coated boxes, such as broccoli boxes.
    • “Yellow” cardboard
    • Pizza crust, food, napkins
    • Excessive packing tape or duct tape
    • Plastic utensils

    Glass

    Food-grade glass bottles and jars that held food or beverages can be recycled in the same bin along with plastic bottles and metal cans.

    Please Recycle Please DO NOT Recycle
    • Glass bottles (e.g., beverage, juice bottles)
    • Glass jars (e.g., spaghetti sauce, peanut butter jars)
    • EMPTY ALL LIQUIDS AND FOODS
    • REMOVE CAPS AND LIDS
    • LABELS ARE OKAY
    • Pyrex or high-temperature glass
    • Laboratory glass
    • Plate glass, mirror, or window glass.
    • Light bulbs
    • Broken glass

    Office Paper, Newspapers and Magazines

    Many types of paper can be recycled together. Put these materials in any recycling bin found throughout all buildings on campus.

    Please Recycle Please DO NOT Recycle
    • Newspapers
    • Glossy Magazines and Catalogs
    • Computer/Copier Paper
    • Writing Paper
    • Envelopes (Windows okay)
    • Opened “Junk Mail”
    • Brochures
    • Manila Folders
    • Staples are okay
    • Paper face masks
    • Tissues, Kleenex or paper towels
    • Photographs or resin-coated papers
    • NCR or “carbonless” paper
    • Plastic transparencies or film
    • Food or candy wrappers
    • Paper cups, plates or any paper that has come in direct contact with food or the human body!
    • Rubber Bands or large metal clips
    • Pendaflex Folders
    • Carbon Paper

     

     

     

  • Batteries

    Batteries are found in numerous electronic devices, cell phones, MP3 players, laptops, computers, watches, cameras, etc. Batteries may contain any of several heavy metals, including mercury, lead, nickel, zinc or cadmium. They may also include corrosive liquids (sulfuric acid) or reactive metals (lithium).

    For this reason, batteries on the Champlain campus should not be put in the regular trash or recycle bins. Please place batteries in the blue E-Waste Collection tubes found in IDX Fireside Lounge, MIC entrance, Ireland upper entrance, CCM Mail Center (near printer), Lakeside stairwell (ground floor, behind the door to the left when facing the main entrance), or bring to the ChampSupport office in Rowell Annex.

    See this slide deck for more details. 

    Small Electronics / “E-Waste”

    “E-waste” is used to describe all the spent supplies and obsolete accessories associated with computers and electronics. E-Waste includes storage devices, CDs, floppy disks, hard drives, Zip disks, cell phones, iPods, cables, cords, parts of circuit boards, video tapes, PDAs, etc.

    Please don’t throw your E-Waste in the regular garbage or recycling bins. Keep these materials separate so we can recycle valuable resources, keep hazardous materials out of the landfill and ensure protection of privacy since the recycling company shreds the electronic media we send them. Please place small electronics in the blue E-Waste Collection tubes found in IDX Fireside Lounge, MIC entrance, Ireland upper entrance, CCM Mail Center (near printer), Lakeside stairwell (ground floor, behind the door to the left when facing the main entrance), the brown marked containers in res halls, or bring to the ChampSupport office in Rowell Annex. If you have E-Waste that doesn’t fit in the collection bins, call ChampSupport at (802) 860-2710. For large items that won’t fit on a cart, please place a facilities request for the item to be moved to Rowell Annex.

    • Printer cartridges
    • Any handheld electronic devices: pagers, cell phones, PDAs, iPods, etc.
    • Batteries & chargers
    • Related cords, cables, etc.

    If items contain confidential data, bring them to the ChampSupport office in Rowell Annex.

    See this slide deck for more details.

    Fluorescent Bulbs

    Compact Fluorescent Bulbs (CFLs) contain mercury. If your bulb no longer works, wrap bulbs in a manner to minimize risk of breakage and put in a facilities request to have Physical Plant pick it up. For students in the residence halls: have your RA contact Physical Plant to have it picked up.

    If a fluorescent light bulb breaks, do not use a vacuum cleaner to clean it up. Wear disposable rubber gloves, if available. Carefully scoop up the fragments and the mercury (white) powder with stiff paper or cardboard. Wipe the area clean with a damp paper towel or disposable wet wipe. Sticky tape (such as duct tape) can be used to pick up small pieces and the powder. Place all parts of the broken fluorescent bulb, towels and tape in a clear plastic bag. Wash your hands afterward.

    Toner, Laser, Ink Jet Cartridges

    If you have toner, laser, or inkjet cartridges that you cannot send back to be refilled (often an option for many of our large copiers, so check here if Symquest will take them back) you can either drop them off in the 2nd floor mailroom at Lakeside or the ChampSupport office in Rowell Annex. You can also bring them to Staples on Rt. 2/Main Street to be recycled. Learn more information about the recycling program at Staples.

  • Many people ask what to do about K-cups. Here are a couple of options:

    1. Use refillable cups such as these.
    2. Send them to be recycled through the Grounds to Grow On program. Champlain’s Office of Institutional Advancement currently supports the recycling boxes found in Lakeside and Admissions supports the boxes in Perry Hall.
    3. Better yet… don’t use them!

    See this article by Sustainable America for more information.

  • Composting is a process that takes organic waste, such as food scraps and yard waste, and turns it into a nutrient-rich soil. Food waste is collected each day by our waste hauler, Casella, for composting at area biodigesters.  However, formerly ‘compostable’ cups, plates, and containers are no longer accepted.

    Food Waste

    Food waste is collected in most academic buildings as well as residential halls with kitchens.

    DO Compost Do NOT Compost
    • Fruit & Vegetable Peels
    • Any Food Leftovers
    • Coffee Grinds & Filters
    • Tea Bags (remove any staples)
    • Meat Scraps & Bones
    • Dairy & Cheese Products
    • Noodles & Pasta
    • Paper towels and napkins - only if they DO NOT contain body fluids or chemicals of any kind
    • Wooden or bamboo stirrers, toothpicks (no plastic frills), chopsticks
    • Certified, clearly labeled compostable bags used for lining food scrap containers
    • Newspaper and untreated paper bags used to line food scrap containers
    • Dishes or Silverware
    • Plastic Coffee Creamers or Stirrers
    • Styrofoam Cups
    • Plastic Bags or Saran Wrap
    • Food Wrappers
    • “Compostable” plates and cups
  • As for what gets sent to the landfill (located in Coventry, VT), it is basically anything that cannot be reused, recycled, or composted (from bubblegum to plastic wrap to styrofoam). There are a number of items that are not on the lists above that can be reused, recycled, or composted—so contact us if you have a question. Our goal is to really limit what we send to that big hole in the ground!

    Still Unsure? Contact us with your questions.

Need signage?

Need a bin or labels/signage for existing bins? Contact us, or print out your own here (all 8.5 x 11, pdfs):

TRASH RECYCLE COMPOST