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πŸ—‘οΈ Trash & Recycling/Mandatory Organics Recycling

Mandatory Organics Recycling: Chicago vs Tinley Park

How do mandatory organics recycling rules compare between Chicago, IL and Tinley Park, IL?

Chicago and Tinley Park have similar restriction levels.

Chicago, IL

Cook County

Few Restrictions

Unlike New York or San Francisco, Chicago has no citywide mandatory organic-waste separation. The Department of Streets and Sanitation runs voluntary food-scrap drop-off sites and a backyard composting credit program while studying a future mandate.

View full Chicago rules β†’

Tinley Park, IL

Cook County

Few Restrictions

Illinois has no statewide mandatory commercial organics or food-scrap diversion law comparable to California SB 1383. The Illinois Food Scrap Composting Pilot (415 ILCS 20) authorizes voluntary programs. Cook County Solid Waste Plan encourages but does not require residential organics; suburban municipalities run optional curbside collection.

View full Tinley Park rules β†’

Key Facts Comparison

FactChicagoTinley Park
Mandate statusNot yet citywide-
Yard waste ban415 ILCS 5/22.22-
Drop-off pilotsSelected farmers markets-
Climate plan2022 commits future mandate-
Private organicsAvailable by hauler contract-
State mandate-None as of 2026
Pilot statute-415 ILCS 20 voluntary
County stance-Encouraged not required
Suburban programs-Optional curbside fee-based
Chicago-Small voluntary drop-off pilot

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Chicago FAQ

Where can I drop off food scraps?

The Streets and Sanitation pilot list and the Illinois Food Scrap and Composting Coalition map locations at farmers markets, community gardens, and a few drop-off bins. Some private services like Block Bins offer paid pickup.

Will Chicago mandate composting?

The 2022 Climate Action Plan flags a future commercial organics mandate, and the Bureau of Sanitation is studying rollout. As of 2026 there is no enforced household requirement, only the statewide yard-waste ban.

Tinley Park FAQ

Do I have to compost food scraps in Cook County?

No. Illinois does not mandate residential organics separation. Many Cook suburbs offer optional fee-based curbside food-scrap collection through SCARCE or Lakeshore Recycling Systems; participation is voluntary and typically billed as an add-on to regular trash service.

Are restaurants required to divert food waste?

No statewide commercial organics mandate exists in Illinois. Some Cook County hospitals, universities, and large food-service operators participate voluntarily for sustainability and cost reasons. Future state legislation modeled on California SB 1383 has been proposed but not enacted.

Where can I drop off food scraps?

Several Cook County suburbs and the Chicago Pilsen drop-off support residential food-scrap drop-off. Chicago Department of Streets and Sanitation lists locations; many suburban park districts and farmers markets also host SCARCE drop bins seasonally.

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