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Soft Plastic Compactor vs. Curbside Recycling: ...
Most people assume recycling works when something goes into the blue bin. But for soft plastics — items like grocery bags, mailers, bread bags, and bubble wrap — that assumption...
Soft plasticWaste management
Soft Plastic Compactor vs. Curbside Recycling: The Real Difference
Most people assume recycling works when something goes into the blue bin. But for soft plastics — items like grocery bags, mailers, bread bags, and bubble wrap — that assumption is almost always wrong. According to the EPA, Americans recycle under 10% of all plastic waste. Soft films are among the least recovered materials, largely because curbside systems were never designed to process them. However, soft plastics are recyclable. They’re just collected inefficiently. Clear Drop’s Soft Plastic Compactor (SPC) fixes this failure point. Here’s how. What Curbside Recycling Does — and Doesn’t Curbside recycling works well for bottles, cans, and rigid containers (PET #1 and HDPE #2). But soft plastics behave differently. They: Wrap around sorting machinery Cross-contaminate paper fiber Degrade the value of the recycling stream Are often landfilled, even when placed in a bin correctly Municipal data from New York City, Los Angeles, and San Francisco show that most U.S. curbside programs do not include plastic film in household collection. On top of that, curbside programs experience approximately 17% contamination, driven by improperly sorted materials, including film. This isn’t a failure of recycling but a mismatch between system design and material behavior. Accepted Curbside Materials Bottles (PET #1, HDPE #2) Rigid containers (#5 in some cities) Paper, cardboard, aluminum, steel Commonly Rejected Curbside Materials Grocery and retail bags Bread bags, bubble wrap, poly film Mailers and stretch wrap Snack and multilayer packaging So, how can you make sure your soft plastics actually get recycled? Let us introduce you to the Clear Drop Soft Plastic Compactor (SPC). How the Clear Drop SPC Works Unlike curbside collection, which mixes materials, the SPC collects only soft plastics, compressing them into a dense format optimized for recycling. How SPC Processes Material Clean, dry soft plastics are placed into the unit. Material is compressed into a compact block. Blocks are shipped directly to one of Clear Drop’s recycling partners. Plastic becomes post-consumer recycled resin for new products. This process bypasses the bottleneck that prevents curbside collection from recovering film and other soft plastics. In short, the SPC ensures that recycling happens. SPC vs. Curbside: A Measurable Difference Feature Clear Drop SPC Curbside recycling Soft plastics accepted ✓Yes Films, bags, wraps, mailers ×Rarely Mostly rejected Sorting required None: single feedstream Required: expensive, error-prone Contamination risk Low: clean, sealed Higher: mixed waste stream Material density High: compressed blocks Very low: fluffy, voluminous film End-market quality Pellet-ready feedstock Downgraded, often landfilled Storage efficiency Up to one month Overflows quickly Outcome certainty High: sent directly to recyclers Low: soft film recycling not guaranteed The difference is not the polymer. It’s the pathway from your kitchen to the recycler. Which Is Better for the Environment? Using post-consumer recycled resin significantly lowers environmental impact compared to virgin production, according to lifecycle analyses from the Association of Plastic Recyclers. This means that any solution that delivers clean, single-stream LDPE (low-density polyethylene) generates real circular value, unlike mixed curbside systems that lose soft plastic through contamination. It’s a simple but powerful concept: Recycling only matters when the material actually gets recycled. The SPC helps make this a reality while keeping more plastics out of landfills. Upgrade to a Recycling Process That Works If you want your soft plastics to become new products — not waste — your local curbside program can’t always guarantee it. Clear Drop’s SPC can, by making soft plastic collection and recycling practical, traceable, and scalable. Stop guessing and start recycling with certainty. Invest in a Clear Drop SPC today.
How Your Household Can Save Up to $240 a Year o...
Household trash bills are rarely questioned. Most people accept them as a fixed cost, just like any other utility. But in reality, a significant part of what households pay for...
DisposalKitchenSoft plasticWaste management
How Your Household Can Save Up to $240 a Year on Trash Costs
Household trash bills are rarely questioned. Most people accept them as a fixed cost, just like any other utility. But in reality, a significant part of what households pay for waste services is driven by volume, pickup frequency, and contamination. This article breaks down how trash bills are calculated, how sorting mistakes increase costs, and how tools like Clear Drop’s ZeroTrash® AI and Soft Plastic Compactor (SPC) can realistically reduce waste-related expenses. Transparency Disclaimer Trash service pricing varies widely by city, county, and provider. Not all households will see the same savings. The example below is an illustrative model, not a guarantee. The goal of this article is not to promise savings, but to explain the financial logic behind waste reduction and why reducing volume and mistakes can translate into lower costs over time. Average Household Waste and Trash Service Costs The average American household generates several pounds of waste per day. Municipal and private trash services typically charge based on bin size, pickup frequency, and additional fees for overflow or contamination. Many households pay roughly $20 to $35 per month, or $240–$420 per year, for basic trash service before any overage fees. Where Household Trash Costs Come From Most trash bills are not tied to weight. They are driven by space and logistics. Key cost drivers include: Size of the trash bin How often it’s collected Contamination penalties Inefficiencies caused by lightweight but bulky materials (especially plastics) Soft plastics are a major contributor to increased costs because they take up significant volume while adding very little weight. How ZeroTrash® AI Helps Reduce Sorting Mistakes Sorting mistakes increase costs in two ways: Recyclable materials end up in trash, increasing total volume. Contaminated recycling loads can trigger penalties or rejected pickups. ZeroTrash® AI helps households make better decisions at the moment waste is generated. By scanning packaging and identifying whether it qualifies as soft plastic, you can avoid defaulting to “just throwing it away.” Fewer sorting mistakes means less trash volume, cleaner recycling streams, and fewer unexpected service issues. How the Soft Plastic Compactor (SPC) Reduces Waste Volume Soft plastics are particularly problematic in your trash because they are lightweight, flexible, and extremely space-inefficient when loose. The Soft Plastic Compactor (SPC) addresses this issue by compressing soft plastics into dense, uniform forms. This allows households to fit more waste into the same bin, reduce overflow, and avoid upsizing trash containers. Volume reduction is where most financial impact occurs. A Cost-Saving Calculation (Illustrative Model) Below is a simplified, conservative example of how a household can save on trash costs. Assumptions Input Illustrative value Current trash cost $30/month ($360/year) Soft plastics share of bin volume ~20% to 30% Common issue Occasional overflow, overage fees, or bin upsizing due to volume With ZeroTrash® AI + SPC Soft plastic volume reduced by up to 80% via compaction; overall trash volume reduced by up to 25% Outcome Avoid larger bin or extra pickups Illustrative annual impact By avoiding a bin upgrade and overage fees of roughly $10 to $20 monthly, the household can expect to save around $120 to $240 per year. These numbers don’t require perfection, only consistency. What These Savings Depend On Actual savings depend on local pricing structures, household size, packaging habits, and how consistently the Clear Drop tools are used. In general, the biggest gains are typically seen in: Households with frequent deliveries Families with high consumption of packaged foods Pet owners Areas with strict volume-based pricing Getting Started With ZeroTrash® AI and the SPC Good news: getting started doesn’t require any major changes to your lifestyle, only in how you handle your waste. Follow these four quick steps: Scan packaging with ZeroTrash® AI. Separate accepted soft plastics. Compact them using the SPC. Store compacted materials cleanly and efficiently. Over time, reduced volume becomes noticeable, both in the bin and on your bill. Your Small Changes Can Make a Measurable Impact Saving money on trash is about addressing a few common inefficiencies, most notably wasted space. It doesn’t require any dramatic lifestyle shifts, especially when using Clear Drop’s efficient tools. By combining better identification with better preparation, households can reduce trash volume, lower service costs, and make waste decisions that are both financially and environmentally sound.
How ZeroTrash® AI Helps You Identify Soft Plast...
ZeroTrash® AI is designed to take the guesswork out of everyday waste decisions. Using a camera-based interface, the app analyzes packaging to help you determine whether an item is a...
DisposalSoft plasticWaste managementСorporate sustainability
How ZeroTrash® AI Helps You Identify Soft Plastics Correctly
ZeroTrash® AI is designed to take the guesswork out of everyday waste decisions. Using a camera-based interface, the app analyzes packaging to help you determine whether an item is a soft plastic, fits accepted resin types, and is suitable for soft plastic compaction. Instead of relying on symbols or vague recycling rules, you can quickly figure out what an item is and how to properly discard it. Receiving this type of immediate, item-specific feedback can significantly improve trash sorting and reduce contamination in the recycling process. How much soft plastic do we end up throwing away by mistake? Probably much more than you think. Keep reading to learn how to properly sort your plastics and keep them out of landfills. 15 Common Soft Plastics People Throw Away by Mistake Below are some of the most commonly mis-sorted soft plastic items found in household waste streams. 1. Chip Bags and Snack Wrappers Often assumed to be unrecyclable due to their shiny appearance, many snack wrappers contain layers of soft plastic that can be compacted when accepted by downstream processors. 2. Cheese and Deli Packaging Flexible cheese sleeves and deli wrap films are frequently discarded, even though they belong in the soft plastic category once emptied and cleaned. 3. Frozen Food Bags Frozen vegetable and fruit bags are a major source of soft plastic waste and are commonly thrown away because they look “too thick” to recycle. 4. Bread Bags One of the most recyclable soft plastic items, bread bags are still among the most frequently trashed. 5. Produce Bags Lightweight produce bags are often forgotten or knotted and discarded, despite being a core soft plastic. 6. Cereal Box Liners The plastic liners inside cereal boxes are rarely recognized as recyclable soft plastics. 7. Takeout and Delivery Packaging From inner wraps to plastic liners inside delivery bags, many of these materials are soft plastics hidden in plain sight. 8. Bubble Wrap Often reused, but just as often trashed, bubble wrap is a recyclable soft plastic when properly compacted. 9. Plastic Film from Paper Products The plastic wrap around paper towels, toilet paper, and tissues is a common soft plastic item people overlook. 10. Dry Cleaning Bags Large, thin plastic films from dry cleaning are frequently misidentified and discarded. 11. Pet Food Bags Many pet food bags include soft plastic layers that people assume are non-recyclable. 12. Plastic Overwrap from Multipacks Shrink-style overwraps around multi-item products are rarely sorted correctly. 13. Shrink Wrap Clear or tinted shrink films are widely used in retail packaging and commonly trashed. 14. Packaging from Online Orders Mailer liners, air pillows, and inner plastic films from packaging add up quickly. 15. Soft Plastic Pouches Stand-up pouches and refill packs are increasingly common and often thrown away due to their shape and structure. Why Proper Sorting and Compaction Matter for Recycling Soft plastics are lightweight and easily contaminated. When incorrectly sorted, they can jam recycling equipment, lower material recovery rates, and increase processing costs. According to research from materials recovery organizations, pre-sorted, compacted soft plastics have a significantly higher chance of being successfully recycled into secondary products. Correct sorting at the household level directly improves the economics and feasibility of recycling downstream. Environmental Impact of Correct Soft Plastic Recycling at Home Soft plastics that are handled correctly can reduce landfill volume, decrease plastic leakage into ecosystems, and lower the demand for virgin plastic production. One of the most immediate ways you can reduce your plastic footprint is by improving your household’s plastic collection, especially for flexible packaging. Small, consistent actions at home scale into meaningful environmental outcomes. So, how can you ensure your plastic gets recycled properly? First, scan the item using ZeroTrash® AI, then add it to your Clear Drop Soft Plastic Compactor (SPC). How To Get Started With ZeroTrash® AI and the Soft Plastic Compactor (SPC) Getting started is intentionally simple. Use ZeroTrash® AI to scan everyday packaging, and follow the app’s guidance for sorting. Once an item is identified as a suitable soft plastic, the next step is proper preparation. What the SPC helps households do Compress soft plastics into dense, manageable forms Reduce storage volume Keep materials clean and consolidated Prepare plastics for real recycling pathways Compaction is critical because loose soft plastics are difficult to handle, transport, and process at scale. Together, ZeroTrash® AI and the SPC form a practical system for reducing soft plastic waste confusion at home. Making Soft Plastic Recycling Simple and Clear Soft plastic recycling doesn’t fail because people don’t care — it’s because the system is too often unclear. By combining clear identification (ZeroTrash® AI) with practical preparation (SPC), you can finally make informed decisions without memorizing rules or second-guessing every package. The result is not about perfection but making real, tangible progress.
Why CES 2026 Shifted the Conversation Around Ho...
CES has always been a place for bold ideas and ambitious visions. But this year, we noticed a subtle yet important change in how household waste was discussed. The conversations...
CompostOrganic wasteSoft plasticWaste managementСorporate sustainability
Why CES 2026 Shifted the Conversation Around Household Waste
CES has always been a place for bold ideas and ambitious visions. But this year, we noticed a subtle yet important change in how household waste was discussed. The conversations were no longer centered on experimental prototypes or distant sustainability promises. Instead, they focused on complete, workable systems that could realistically fit into daily life. The questions were practical and specific: How does this work at home? What happens next? Where does the material actually go? We at Clear Drop experienced this shift directly through in-depth discussions at our booth and across meetings. People were both curious and analytical. They wanted to understand the full path, from a decision made in the kitchen to a verified recycling or composting outcome. To us, it felt like the beginnings of a quiet yet powerful turning point, where household waste management stops being treated as an abstract challenge and starts actually being addressed with integrated, solvable systems. Recognition at CES 2026: Why It Matters At CES 2026, Clear Drop received two notable recognitions: Best of CES 2026 — Sustainability Best in Show 2026 — The Kitch These acknowledgments reflect growing industry recognition that soft plastic waste is a serious, unresolved challenge, and that addressing it requires complete systems rather than isolated efforts. This recognition helps shift the attention toward practical, household-level solutions that can scale. Media Interest and Industry Conversations Coverage from outlets including CNET, Engadget, Lifehacker, Mashable, Morning Brew, Plastics News, Waste360, housedigest, the kitchn and others focused less on novelty and innovation and more on feasibility and reliability. Conversations centered on real-world implementation, scalability, costs, verification, and ensuring that materials don’t end up in landfills. What the Market Is Finally Ready To Acknowledge Soft plastic waste has long existed in a gray zone of recycling. Grocery bags, wrappers, films, and flexible packaging often fall outside curbside programs, clog sorting equipment, or get rejected entirely. While collection efforts exist on paper, end-to-end processing rarely follows through in practice. This gap is often framed as a user problem: People are confused or choose to simply not participate Now, however, more people are recognizing that this issue is structural, not behavioral. Consumer fatigue with vague green messaging has accelerated this realization. People are increasingly skeptical of initiatives that rely on perfect sorting behavior or municipal overhauls that may never come. The market is now ready for solutions that close the loop — systems that work within real household constraints and deliver reliable outcomes without requiring constant effort or guesswork. From Promises to Systems: What Resonated Most at CES It wasn’t any single piece of technology that stood out most at CES 2026, but the interest in systems that removed uncertainty. People gravitated toward solutions that provided clarity across the entire мwaste management process, from identifying what to throw out where, how to sort it all at home, and how to ensure that materials would be processed and recycled as intended. This end-to-end logic directly addresses what many experience as “guessing fatigue” — the frustration of never being quite sure whether something is recyclable, compostable, or destined for the landfill. When the flow is transparent and verifiable, people start to feel like their efforts are no longer just aspirational, but actually making a difference. The best part is, when the system is simplified and streamlined, those efforts don’t require any extra work. A Complete Household Waste System in Practice Clear Drop’s system is designed around how people actually interact with waste at home. It consists of three interconnected components that work together to simplify decisions, reduce friction, and enable real recycling and composting outcomes. ZeroTrash® AI: Offering clarity at the first decision point Sorting decisions usually happen in seconds, often under uncertainty. ZeroTrash® AI helps users identify the material they’re discarding and how it should be handled. You simply scan the packaging to learn how to dispose of it properly. With ZeroTrash® AI, you can remove ambiguity, reduce mental load, and prevent errors before they happen. Soft Plastic Compactor (SPC): Making recycling physically possible Soft plastics are lightweight but voluminous, making them difficult to store and transport. The Soft Plastic Compactor (SPC) addresses this obstacle by compressing bags, wrappers, and films into dense, uniform bricks using controlled heat and pressure. A month’s worth of household soft plastic waste can be reduced to a compact block about the size of a shoebox. This process dramatically reduces volume, eliminates mess and odors, and prepares materials in a form that verified recycling partners can actually process. The SPC is designed for everyday household use and is already being adopted by small businesses that are turning an unmanageable waste stream into a stable, shippable resource. Organics Collector (OC): Separating food waste cleanly Food waste presents its own challenges, including odors, pests, and hygiene concerns. The Organics Collector (OC) enables clean, consistent separation of food scraps, keeping organics out of the general trash stream. By controlling smells and leaks, it removes one of the biggest psychological barriers to daily composting and supports cleaner downstream processing. Together, these components form a user-centered loop that involves clear identification and effective preparation to achieve verifiable results. CES in Context: A Broader Industry Shift Several CES sessions reinforced this direction. In discussions led by Corie Barry (CEO of Best Buy) and Michael Kassan (CEO of 3C Ventures), a clear theme emerged: Modern systems are no longer about transactions or channels, but long-term relationships built on trust. In this model, technology works best when it fades into the background, quietly enabling confidence, consistency, and ease. This philosophy closely aligns with Clear Drop’s approach to waste. We believe in building infrastructure that supports daily habits without demanding constant attention or heroic effort. What This Signals for the Future of Circular Living Circular living shouldn’t solely rely on individual discipline. As CES 2026 made clear, the future lies in systems that handle complexity behind the scenes, reduce decision fatigue, and support people where they already are. When tools are designed around real behavior and frustrations — such as time constraints, uncertainty, and limited attention — sustainable habits become repeatable rather than exceptional. Real change comes with consistency. Moving Forward Without the Hype CES 2026 marked a meaningful milestone for us at Clear Drop, but it’s hardly an endpoint. The work ahead — learning from our users, refining our products, and scaling what already works — will be subtler but just as meaningful. Clear Drop will continue to focus on workable systems that actually follow through on their promises. The conversation around household waste is evolving — and so are the tools that support it. Now we keep going. Thank you for being a part of our journey.
How to Compost in an Apartment (Without Annoyin...
Many people still believe composting requires a yard. In reality, modern indoor composting works even in a 400 sq ft studio — clean, fast, and odor-free when managed correctly. Start...
CompostKitchenOrganic wasteWaste management
How to Compost in an Apartment (Without Annoying Your Neighbors or Your Landlord)
Many people still believe composting requires a yard. In reality, modern indoor composting works even in a 400 sq ft studio — clean, fast, and odor-free when managed correctly. Start with clean collection — before composting begins The Clear Drop Organics Collector keeps food waste odor-free and organized from the first moment — built for apartments and compact kitchens. See the Organics Collector → 1/3 of U.S. household waste is organic and could be composted instead of decomposing in landfills 400 ft² is enough space for effective indoor composting — no yard, no outdoor bins required 24–48h is all it takes with an electric composter to turn food scraps into usable output 3 proven indoor composting methods that actually work for apartment renters in 2025 Source: U.S. EPA — Composting at Home Below are the three indoor composting methods urban renters actually use in 2025, and how to choose the one that fits your space, routine, and maintenance tolerance. The 3 Real Ways to Compost Indoors in 2025 Method How it works Time to output Smell level Space needed Best for Vermicomposting Red worms break down food scraps biologically 2–4 months Very low (if balanced) Small bin under sink Hands-on, low-tech users Electric Composter Heat + grinding accelerate decomposition 24–48 hours Odorless with carbon filter Countertop appliance Fast, low-effort composting Bokashi Anaerobic fermentation using inoculated bran ~2 weeks + curing Mild pickle smell when opened 5-gallon bucket footprint All-food composting without worms References: Cornell University Vermicomposting · Oregon State Extension Bokashi Guide · Electric composting research (ScienceDirect) Pros and Cons (Real-World Usability) Method Advantages Limitations Typical cost Vermicomposting Low cost, rich worm castings, no electricity Slower process, requires worm care $40–150 Electric Composter Fastest option, low odor, handles cooked food Higher upfront price, uses electricity $299–549 Bokashi Accepts meat, dairy, citrus; compact footprint Requires soil or finishing bin $60–120 Every method works. The best system is the one you will actually maintain. What Works Best in Small Apartments (2024–2025 User Reports) Best for beginners: Electric Composter Almost no maintenance Reduces waste volume by ~70–90% No fruit flies or odor with carbon filtration Fits easily in compact kitchens Best budget option with high-quality soil: Worm Bin Very low operating cost Produces castings and compost tea for plants Best for full-diet waste (meat & dairy): Bokashi Handles all food types Compact and pest-resistant Requires a finishing step in soil Small-Space Composting Tips Freeze food scraps to eliminate odor and pests Add cardboard, coco coir, or biochar for moisture balance Use a 2–4 liter freezer bin for daily convenience Balcony planters work well for finishing Bokashi Electric composters are the cleanest entry point Already composting — but still generating organic waste? Composting handles food scraps, but what about the food waste collected before it reaches your bin? The Clear Drop Organics Collector (OC) is designed for exactly that: odor-free, structured collection of organic waste at home — so nothing ends up in the trash by default. It's the missing first step before composting kicks in. Composting by State: Local Programs for Apartment Renters Indoor composting methods work anywhere. But depending on where you live, you may also have access to a municipal drop-off or curbside organics program. Here is what renters can use in the most active states. California California has mandatory organics collection under SB 1383. Since January 2022, all residents — including apartment renters — are required by law to separate food scraps from trash. Building management must provide organics collection service. If your building does not have a green bin program, you can file an anonymous complaint via CalRecycle. What this means for renters California is the most advanced state for apartment composting. Green bins accept all food scraps, food-soiled paper, and yard trimmings. If your landlord has not set up a program, they are out of compliance and you have legal recourse. What's accepted: All food scraps including meat, dairy, and bones; food-soiled paper; yard trimmings Who's responsible: Your property manager is legally required to provide containers and tenant education No program in your building: Self-hauling to a local composting facility is also allowed under the law Find your local program: CalRecycle Organics Collection New York City Curbside composting became mandatory citywide in October 2024 under Local Law 85 of 2023. All NYC residential buildings must participate, and DSNY collects organics weekly on each building's recycling day. Enforcement with fines is active for larger buildings. What this means for renters Buildings with 4 or more units must provide a designated storage area with labeled compost bins. Fines go to building owners, not tenants. Pickup accepts everything including meat, bones, dairy, and food-soiled paper. Smart Composting Bin drop-off kiosks are also available across all five boroughs. What's accepted: All food scraps, food-soiled paper, leaf and yard waste Pickup day: Same as your recycling day, every week Drop-off option: Smart Composting Bins are located throughout the city — find the nearest one at nyc.gov/dsny No bin in your building: Buildings with 4 or more units are legally required to provide one — contact your landlord or file a complaint with 311 New Jersey New Jersey does not have a statewide composting mandate, but several cities and counties run active drop-off and pickup programs, particularly in the northern part of the state. Coverage from private services is strong across Bergen, Morris, Essex, Union, and Hudson counties. Options for NJ renters Hoboken offers free drop-off at 4 locations after a short online registration. Jersey City runs a municipal drop-off program citywide. Princeton expanded to 10 drop-off stations. Private curbside pickup services cover most of the state for residents who want a door-side option. Hoboken: Free drop-off at 4 city sites after online registration — hobokennj.gov/resources/compost Jersey City: Municipal drop-off program — jerseycitynj.gov Bergen County: Neighborhood Compost — curbside pickup for apartments — neighborhoodcompost.com Morris, Essex, Union counties: Java's Compost — drop-off network and curbside pickup — javascompost.com Florida Florida has no statewide composting law, but a growing network of private services and city programs covers renters across the state. Orlando runs city-managed drop-off stations and offers free compost bins for residents. O-Town Compost expanded in 2025 to serve Orlando, Tampa, St. Petersburg, Gainesville, and surrounding areas. Options for FL renters The most practical option for most Florida apartment renters is a private pickup subscription or a community drop-off point. In areas without local service, indoor composting with a worm bin or bokashi bucket is the most reliable approach. Orlando: City-run drop-off locations plus free backyard compost bins for residents — check orlando.gov for current sites Central FL, Tampa, St. Pete: O-Town Compost — residential and multi-family pickup — o-towncompost.com Southwest FL: Naples Compost — residential curbside pickup in the Naples and Fort Myers area No service nearby: A worm bin or bokashi system is the most practical indoor option in areas without local programs Georgia Georgia has no statewide mandate, but Atlanta has an active drop-off program through CompostNow funded by a USDA grant, and Athens-Clarke County runs a well-established food scraps program with five 24/7 drop-off locations. Private curbside pickup is available across metro Atlanta. Options for GA renters Atlanta renters can sign up for the free city drop-off program through CompostNow and receive drop-off location details by email. The Athens program accepts food scraps around the clock at multiple sites including UGA campus locations. Atlanta: Free CompostNow drop-off program (USDA-funded, city partnership) — compostnow.org/atlanta Athens: 24/7 food scraps drop-off at 5 sites including CHaRM and UGA campuses — accgov.com Metro Atlanta curbside: CompostNow residential pickup service — compostnow.org Other Georgia counties: The University of Georgia Extension offers composting resources and Master Composter classes statewide Keep organic waste out of your trash — before it reaches the compost bin The Clear Drop Organics Collector makes daily food waste separation clean, odor-free, and effortless — designed for apartments and compact kitchens. See the Organics Collector →