Pill Bottles
Bottles measuring at least 2” in two dimensions can be recycled in curbside collections or transfer stations. (Caps may remain on plastic bottles.) Bottles that are smaller should be placed in the trash.
A-Z List
- Aerosol Containers
- Aluminum Cans
- Aluminum Foil
- Ammunition
- Antifreeze
- Appliances
- Asbestos
- Asphalt Shingles
- Batteries
- Blankets and Bedding
- Books
- Bottle Caps
- Brita Water Filters
- Car Seats
- Cardboard
- CD and DVD Cases
- Ceiling Tiles
- Cell Phones
- Clean Wood
- Clothing
- Coffee Pods
- Computers and Electronics
- Construction and Demolition Debris
- Contact Lenses and Packaging
- Explosives and Fireworks
- Facial Tissue
- Fire Extinguishers
- Fluorescent Bulbs
- Food Scraps
- Furniture
- Glass
- Hangers
- Hazardous Waste
- Inkjet and Toner Cartridges
- Leaf and Yard Debris
- Mattresses
- Mercury Thermostats
- Milk/Juice Cartons
- Motor Oil and Filters
- Needles and Sharps
- Paint
- Paper
- Pesticides
- Pill Bottles
- Pizza Boxes
- Plant Pot (Plastic)
- Plastic Bags, Mailers, and Film/Wrap
- Plastics
- Prescription Medicines
- Propane Tanks
- Radios, Sterios, and Other Electronic Items
- Refrigerators
- Ribbons and Bows
- Scrap Metal
- Shoes
- Smoke & Carbon Monoxide Detectors
- Styrofoam
- Tires
- Toothbrushes
- Tyvek Envelopes
- Wrapping Paper
- Xylophones
- Yard Waste