Submitted by cowboy_dude_6 t3_10lc5pp in massachusetts
My city recently banned mattresses from dumpsters and other primary waste streams. On the surface this sounds like a great idea -- mattresses are mostly recyclable, so why not require that they are recycled? In my experience this doesn't work well in practice. The company the city contracts with only picks up from residences with regular curbside service, which I don't have, as I live in a larger complex. I don't have a car that fits the mattress, so I can't drop it off myself. What options remain? My choices were to call multiple private companies until I could find someone who picks up locally and then pay them $75 out of pocket to take it, or to just dump it somewhere where no one will see. Of course I chose the former, but how many people won't do the right thing in this situation? The incentives are clearly aligned against the responsible choice.
Now I know what you're thinking -- quit complaining, it's your waste so you pay for it. Fair. But why is doing the right thing for the environment always framed as a personal choice when it comes to regular people, while the public pays the price as corporations continue to dump their waste into the oceans with little consequence? It's the same with clean energy opt-ins and bottle deposits. As long as doing the right thing for the planet requires personal sacrifice by individuals, we will never have an effective solution. Change needs to be systemic. To this end I propose -- just make the damn mattress recycling program a free city service. It's really that simple.
-Horatio_Alger_Jr- t1_j5w2tbj wrote
>just make the damn mattress recycling program a free city service. It's really that simple.
So I have to pay for you to dispose of your personal property?