

Scanning and emailing documents can reduce paper usage, office costs, and the need to shred. Put an end to junk mail such as credit card offers and remove old employees from mailing lists. The personal information can be torn off and shredded while the rest can be recycled.Įstablish a company policy at your business on what needs to be shredded and what does not so everyone is on the same page. For example, your personal information may be on the bottom third of a document while the remaining two-thirds is just general information. Shred only the portions of the document containing sensitive information. For this reason, paper markets don't like to buy shredded paper and don't like to see it in with the higher-grade junk mail and office paper.Įco-Cycle recommends minimizing the amount of paper you shred, at home and at work, by following these simple tips: Many contaminants can hide in the shred, such as plastic strips from a document cover that were accidentally shredded along with the paper. The paper mills that buy recycled paper must do a quality sort on the material before they put it into their multi-million dollar machines, and it's just plain impossible to do a good quality sort of shredded paper.

The only problem is that the shredded paper gets grabbed by the fingers on the screens and gets pulled into the reject bin, and off to the landfill. The length of a paper fiber determines its value since a longer fiber can be used to make a higher-grade paper and can be recycled more times.Īt the Boulder County recycling facility, mixed paper from households and businesses goes over an automated screen that makes the paper product cleaner by shaking out non-fiber contaminants like bits of glass, etc. When you shred paper, what you're actually doing is cutting the lengths of the individual paper fibers, thus cutting the future recycling potential of that fiber. But shredding paper isn't great for the environment and recycling for three reasons: In the age of identity theft, shredding confidential documents has become an important safeguard of privacy. You can then recycle the paper whole in your single-stream bin. Another alternative to shredding is to simply black out sensitive information with a permanent black marker, taking care to mark both sides of the paper if the content is still visible from the back. Rip it, don’t shred it. Instead of shredding, consider ripping off sensitive elements of your documents (bank account numbers, social security numbers, etc.) and shredding or ripping only those parts, leaving the rest of the page whole and recycling it with your single-stream recycling.Ĥ. Be careful not to include items like faux credit cards made of plastic, promotional stickers or sheets of address label stickers.ģ. Shredding shortens the paper fibers and therefore cuts the recycled life of paper in half.Ģ. Please avoid shredding paper whenever possible. Quick tips for the careful “shred” recycler:ġ. Please NO: "Neon," Fluorescent, or Dark-Colored Papers, Newspaper or Cardboard, Kraft® or Goldenrod (orange-brownish envelopes), Stickers or Sheets of Address Labels or other non-paper material.
