Bulky items like furniture, mattresses, appliances, and electronics are not put in curbside carts. Clark County residents request bulky-item collection or use the RecycleRight tool to find drop-off and transfer station options for large or special waste.
Large items do not belong in the blue recycling cart or standard garbage cart. Clark County's RecycleRight online tool and app let residents look up local reuse, recycling, and disposal options for specific items in the A to Z directory and request collection of bulky items, electronic waste, and more. Appliances with refrigerants, mattresses, and construction debris typically go to a county transfer station or an authorized recycler rather than curbside. Household hazardous waste is handled through separate county programs, not regular collection. Contact the Solid Waste and Recycling Division for current options and fees.
Setting bulky or prohibited items at the curb without arranging collection can leave them uncollected; abandoning them on property or public land is enforced as illegal dumping or nuisance.
Other ordinances people look up for this city. Green dot = verified primary-source excerpt.
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Clark County encourages backyard composting and runs free workshops, We Compost community food-waste hubs, and a Composter Recycler program. Optional every-o...
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Clark County has no ordinance banning residential artificial turf, and homeowners may install it in their yards. In development-regulated landscaping, county...
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Clark County actively encourages native landscaping. Its development code favors compatibility with existing native vegetation and drought-resistant planting...
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Rainwater harvesting is legal in Clark County and statewide. Washington's Department of Ecology exempts on-site rooftop rainwater collection from water-right...
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Clark County itself imposes no countywide lawn-watering schedule. Water is delivered by local utilities and districts, chiefly Clark Public Utilities, which ...
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Washington's RCW 17.10 requires every property owner to eradicate Class A noxious weeds and control designated Class B and listed Class C weeds. The Clark Co...
See how Clark County's bulk item disposal rules stack up against other locations.
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