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March 2024 by ann seifert
Great place! The lady who is there is so nice and helpful.
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February 2024 by Kristen Colvard-bryant
I'm not sure what the concept is here. They sure have a lot of demands and attitude for a recycling center. God help you if you have a question, you'll be answered with some snarky answer. I live right down the road from here and will not utilize them
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November 2023 by Ale Guandalini
Organized and clean, but the lady running the place is rude. It's not a place to just arrive and leave your recyclable waste. You need to separate your trash into 10 different categories, a service that employees should do. I will start disposing of my recyclable waste until residential collection begins.
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November 2023 by Jeff Bodkin
Clean, easy to access and friendly employees.
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September 2023 by Roman
Love or planet, recycle
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January 2023 by rebecca whelchel
Great center with helpful people and easy parking. Recycle, Red Bank!
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June 2022 by Jenny Watson
This place makes it easy to recycle. Everyone should recycle
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March 2022 by Edie Norris
All the folks here just work when they want to.
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February 2022 by Ben Griffin
The people are nice, but they’re on island time or vacation time. It’s late to open and early to close. It’s hours are inconvenient to working people who work Mon-Fri. Curbside pick up would be a preferred resource for red bank locals or expanding the recycling center’s working hours. I’m sure it’s fine for people who are not working or retired.
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March 2021 by T Whitman
Organized and clean, but the lady running the place was rude.
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March 2021 by Thomas Blanks
Great recycling center for Red Bank and Hamilton county.
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February 2021 by Abigail
Friendly and helpful staff - one or two nice ladies. Presorting your recyclables makes the process very quick so you can walk them to the labeled bins. I use free liquor-store boxes that some stores leave outside. Organized and tidy place. Open Tuesdays and Thursdays until 5 pm and Saturdays until 4:00. Covid-19 restrictions may have changed that so I would google “recycle Dayton Blvd” for the listing.
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May 2020 by Denna E.
We haven't yet ordered our recycling bin yet and I have been making the effort to get the proper recycling to its place. To be honest, I enjoy a trip to the Red Bank Recycling Center. It's kept really nice for a refuse type of place. It makes me feel like I'm doing something to help the environment. I feel like I'm helping and we all need to feel that way from time to time! Not going to lie, I do enjoy throwing the glass bottles in and hearing the crash. It's somewhat cathartic. RBRC is open 3 days a week, Tuesday, Thursday, and Saturday. Closed on any federal holidays. Each type of recycled element has its own container. Super easy to turn in your recyclables. Here's some tips, they have some of these posted on the recycle containers.Paper and Cardboard: Paper of all sorts is acceptable, including books, flyers, magazines, junk mail, and colored paper. Avoid waxy papers. Cardboard can be recycled as long as it is not saturated with food and grease, as is common with pizza boxes. Remove liners before recycling cereal or other food boxes.Plastic: Most recyclable plastics have the numbers on them, often on the bottom, and one through seven are usually accepted. Many disposable utensils cannot be included, unfortunately, due to the low quality blend of plastics used. If you can easily crumple the plastic, such as with a baggie, do not include it in your recycling bin. Plastic bags are not accepted curbside, but your local grocery store may collect them.Aluminum: In general, all aluminum cans are accepted for recycling. Rinse out liquids, especially sodas and juices, in order to avoid an onslaught of bugs to the area. If you are tight on space, you can crush the cans.Glass: Most glass containers can be recycled. Rinse them prior to placing them in the bin and avoid breaking them. If glass shatters, it can't be recycled since the mixing of different colors can contaminate individual batches. (So crashing good, shattering bad.)