The NWA Council plans to make recycling a routine part of trash pickup.

FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. — Northwest Arkansas is booming, but it’s recycling systems haven’t kept up with recent growth. That’s why the Northwest Arkansas Council is presenting a roadmap to help bring recycling to your front door. 

Currently, recycling in Northwest Arkansas is facing a few problems:

Low Satisfaction: Only about 52% of residents are satisfied with local recycling services, significantly lower than the national average of 74%. This suggests a need for considerable improvement.Confusion and Inconsistency: With many small towns each handling waste and recycling differently, residents are often confused about how to recycle, as rules vary from one city to the next.Landfill Capacity Concerns: The region relies on a single landfill that is facing serious capacity issues, with potential space limitations in the next 20 to 25 years.Wasted Resources: An estimated 117,000 tons of recyclable materials are lost to landfills each year, material that could be reused.Underutilized Facilities: The primary materials recovery facility (MRF) in the region, CARDS MRF, operates at only about half its capacity, recycling approximately 20,000 tons per year out of an estimated 40,000-ton capacity. This represents wasted potential due to people not recycling enough. Limited Access and Education: Only about 60% of single-family homes have access to curbside recycling, and there’s very little communication to the public on how to properly use services, leading to low participation and confusion.

Charlotte Pitt, one of the authors of the “Recycling Roadmap,” told 5NEWS there are benefits to recycling. 

“Obviously, there’s preserving your disposal assets, which is the landfill in the region. There’s supplying, you know, remanufacturing valuable materials. And then there’s the natural resources side, that if you’re remanufacturing those materials, you’re not having to bring in new raw materials to make products that we use every day, things like laundry detergent bottles or aluminum cans.”

Recently, the Fayetteville City Council voted 5-1 to approve a new cart-based recycling system.Â