PEI

Changes coming to fall waste pickup on Prince Edward Island

That old lawn furniture or the dirty foam cooler you’ve been waiting to get rid of will be picked up curbside on a different schedule this fall on Prince Edward Island.

Leave your fall cleanup items out beside your black cart on garbage day in November

Shelves, drawers, tables and other waste at the curb under trees in fall.
'Whenever you put your waste cart out during the month of November, you also put your fall cleanup items out at that same time,' IWMC's Heather Myers said of the change. (Laura Meader/CBC)

That old lawn furniture or dirty foam cooler you've been waiting to get rid of will be picked up curbside on a different schedule on Prince Edward Island this fall. 

Island Waste Management Corporation is changing its fall cleanup process and will now pick up excess waste on regular black cart curbside collection days during November. 

"Whenever you put your waste cart out during the month of November, you also put your fall cleanup items out at that same time," says Heather Myers, IWMC's disposal manager. 

"The collection driver will come around and he will pick up the fall cleanup waste items with the cart material."

In past years, excess household waste was picked up curbside in the fall the same week residents put out their green carts for compost collection. But IWMC drivers were then required to make two trips, and Myers said the small amount of fall cleanup waste wasn't worth the extra trip.  

"We were finding there was not a lot of waste being put curbside, so it was a lot of driving for the collection contractors to go out and do all their routes a second time only to pick up a very little bit of material," she said. "So we thought it would make more sense not to have the trucks make that wasted trip around the Island." 

The change means Islanders will have two separate weeks in November to get their waste to the curb instead of just one week, as used to be the case. There will still be two weeks to get excess yard debris out next to the green compost bins. 

Because it's just yard debris, we can dump it outside in the yard on the asphalt pad and store it there, and then just use it little by little through the composting process as it's needed.— Heather Myers, Island Waste Management Corporation

IWMC's website says excess waste for fall pickup should be put out curbside by 7 a.m. on regular waste cart collection days, either in clear plastic bags or rigid containers, or bundled together. IWMC will not accept solid-colour bags or blue bags.

The excess-waste limit of two containers or items is waived for waste collection during fall cleanup, but trash items must weigh less than 50 pounds and measure under four feet in any dimension. Larger material can be cut, bundled and tied.

Paper bags filled with yard waste lined up at the curb.
IWMC is also asking Islanders not to fill their compost bins with yard debris this fall. (Jane Robertson/CBC)

'It's a challenge'

Myers also issued a plea regarding yard debris like leaves and branches: Don't fill up your green cart with it. 

"When the carts are all full like that, it's a challenge for the collection driver to complete their route during that day cause they have that extra volume they're collecting," she said.  

Instead, put excess yard debris in separate containers beside your green compost bin so that IWMC can keep it separate and gradually add it into their compost "recipe" at their facility in Brookfield. 

"Because it's just yard debris, we can dump it outside in the yard on the asphalt pad and store it there, and then just use it little by little through the composting process as it's needed," Myers explained.

Corrections

  • A previous version of this story included barbecues in a list of items that one might leave outside on a waste collection day. Barbecues can be broken down and left for curbside collection on regular blue bag days.
    Nov 04, 2024 11:19 AM AT

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Sara Fraser

Web Journalist

Sara has worked with CBC News in P.E.I. since 1988, starting with television and radio before moving to the digital news team. She grew up on the Island and has a journalism degree from the University of King's College in Halifax. Reach her by email at sara.fraser@cbc.ca.

With files from Jackie Sharkey