The City of Everett, Washington is announcing an event for city residents who may want to do some major spring cleaning. Here’s what’s planned along with details from the City. There may be a charge depending on what you are bringing so take a careful look and have cash ready.
Click for more detailed information.
To kick off Earth Month, the City of Everett is hosting a recycling collection pilot event for Everett residents on Saturday, April 1, starting at 9 a.m. and ending when capacity is reached or 3 p.m. The event will take place in Lot B of Everett Station, located south of 3201 Smith Ave.
“Recycling is such an important component of environmental sustainability, helping us to reduce waste and conserve non-renewable resources,” said Cassie Franklin, mayor of the City of Everett. “Events like this are just one way the City of Everett is working toward a greener and more sustainable future.”
For this event, the City of Everett will be accepting a variety of hard-to-recycle household items. Before attending, they recommend reviewing the full list of what will be accepted, which includes information on processing fees for items that are more expensive to recycle and volume limits..
The recycling collection event was made possible due to support from Everett’s Local Solid Waste Financial Assistance grant from the Washington Department of Ecology. This event is anticipated to divert approximately 35 tons of recyclable household items from the landfill.
Information on what will be accepted for recycling, processing fees, location and hours can be found at everettwa.gov/recycling.
To learn more about the City of Everett’s sustainability and climate action goals, please visit everettwa.gov/sustainability.
Items that will be accepted Processing fees apply to certain items. CASH ONLY. Please bring exact change.
TIRES: Limit 6 passenger tires per household (18 inches and below) free of charge. $1.50 extra tires off rim. $3 for all passenger tires on rims. $9 for each large truck tire, and $18 for each truck tire on rim. No oversized tires accepted. Service will be provided until the truck is full.
APPLIANCES/SCRAP METAL: Household appliances, auto parts, engines and gas lawnmowers (drained of oil and gasoline), metal lawn chairs, barbecues, steel, aluminum, brass, copper, and other ferrous and nonferrous metals. $5 charge for each water heater that still has insulation coating.
REFRIGERATORS/FREEZERS/AIR CONDITIONERS: $35 per refrigerator or freezer. $35 for each household air conditioner.
PROPANE TANKS: Residential tanks only. $5.
PORCELAIN TOILETS AND SINKS: Remove toilet seats, hardware and base wax rings. $15.
BULKY WOOD: Includes clean wood, plywood, pallets, and other untreated and unpainted wood. No yard debris, branches, sod or brush. Please lay a tarp under wood debris for easy removal. Nails do not need to be removed. Limit: two loads per household
ELECTRONIC EQUIPMENT: DVD players, VCRs, stereo equipment, printers, copiers, fax machines, scanners, cellular phones/batteries (remove personal information), CPUs, and computer peripherals such as keyboards and mice. Computer monitors and televisions will not be accepted. You can recycle these items for free at local locations, please see the E-Cycle website for more information.
MATTRESS/BOX SPRINGS: Mattresses and box springs of any size. $30 per mattress and $30 per box spring. Vendor reserves the right to refuse any item it cannot recycle. No furniture or frames. No wet or soiled items.
DOCUMENT SHREDDING: Shredding of confidential paper materials. Limit 4 file-size boxes. No exceptions. Service will be provided until the truck is full.
No flat beds or dump trucks allowed. We reserve the right to refuse oversized, commercial, contaminated, excessive or unacceptable loads. SECURE YOUR LOAD. IT’S THE LAW!
My Everett News is a hyperlocal news website featuring breaking news and events in Everett, WA. We also cover City of Everett information and items of interest to those who live and work in Everett. It's written by Leland Dart a former Snohomish County based radio reporter born and raised in Everett.
Like what you see on our website? Want to support MyEverettNews.com? Click the button below to donate any amount. Your support is vital to continue our mission of bringing you news and photos about Everett, Washington you can’t find anywhere else.