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πŸ—‘οΈ Trash & Recycling/Recycling Requirements

Recycling Requirements: Lancaster vs South San Gabriel

How do recycling requirements rules compare between Lancaster, CA and South San Gabriel, CA?

Lancaster and South San Gabriel have similar restriction levels.

Lancaster, CA

Los Angeles County

Some Restrictions

Lancaster requires residential recycling of accepted materials. Contamination with non-recyclables may cause entire bins to be rejected at the curb.

View full Lancaster rules β†’

South San Gabriel, CA

Los Angeles County

Some Restrictions

Mandatory recycling in unincorporated LA County is required per SB 1383 Organic Waste Disposal Reduction Ordinance adopted November 2021. All residents and businesses must subscribe to organic waste collection. Three-stream waste separation is mandated across all GDDs.

View full South San Gabriel rules β†’

Key Facts Comparison

FactLancasterSouth San Gabriel
AcceptedPaper, glass, aluminum, plastics-
Not AcceptedPlastic bags, food waste-
EnforcementContaminated bins skipped-
TopicRecycling Requirements-
SB 1383-Mandatory organic waste diversion
Ordinance-Adopted November 2021
Requirement-Subscribe to organic collection
Streams-Trash, recycling, organic waste

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Lancaster FAQ

What can I recycle curbside?

Paper, cardboard, glass bottles, aluminum cans, and plastics #1-#5. No plastic bags or food-soiled items.

What if my recycling bin is skipped?

Likely contaminated. Remove non-recyclables and set out on next collection day.

South San Gabriel FAQ

Is recycling mandatory in LA County?

Yes. Residents must separate recyclables and organic waste from trash. SB 1383 mandates organic waste diversion statewide. Commercial businesses generating 4+ cubic yards weekly must also recycle under AB 341.

What can I recycle?

Paper, cardboard, plastic bottles/containers (1-5, 7), glass bottles/jars, metal cans, and aluminum. No plastic bags, styrofoam, or food-contaminated items. Check your hauler's guidelines for specifics.

What happens if I don't separate organics?

Starting 2024, penalties apply for repeated non-compliance with SB 1383. Your hauler may tag contaminated bins and not collect them. Education and warnings come before fines for residential violators.

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