Curbside Organic Waste Collection Pilot Program
In the spring of 2021, all Yorkton residents were invited to take part in an organics survey. Of the respondents, 64% voted in favour of an organics collection program with an additional 26% responding 'maybe depending on cost.' The City has also received several resident inquiries regarding interest in a curbside organics program.
At December 19, 2022, Council Meeting, Council approved the option for Environmental Services to proceed with the residential organics collection pilot program in 2023. In February 2023, 400 residences were selected to participate in the residential curbside organics collection program.
From 2011 to 2021 the City observed a 57% increase in in-city refuses from May to October relative to the rest of the year. During the summer of 2022, waste audits were completed of in-city refuse and we found that organic material (yard and food waste) made up 52% of the total refuse by weight.
Scope of the project
The weekly organics collection program will be on the same day as the household's weekly garbage pickup.
Duration of the project
The project will start the week of April 17, and run until the week of October 30, 2023.
Zones Selected
Thursday and Friday collection zones were chosen based on the contractors preference and operational efficiency.
- Streets were chosen within zones based on collection efficiency and with an attempt to get adequate zone representation.
What can and can not go in the new organics bin?
We are targeting two main types of organic waste:
- Organic yard waste such as leaves, grass clipping, and garden waste
- Food waste - 'scrape the plate' approach. Anything that can be consumed can go in the bin. Other compostable items such as coffee grounds and solidified fats/food grease are also acceptable.
What goes in:
- All food scraps: as a 'scrape the plate' program, acceptable materials include fruits, vegetables, meat, poultry, fish, bones, bread, dough, pasta, grains, eggs, dairy products, and coffee grounds. Small amounts of cooking greases and oils.
- Yard waste - lawn clippings and trimmings, leaves, garden waste, and flowers.
- Plastic compostable bags
What stays out:
- Tree branches and woody material
- All paper products (pizza boxes, paper towels, napkins, Kleenex, newspapers)
- Plastic bags (non-compostable)
- Plastic single-use cutlery (even if labelled compostable)
- Stickers, rubber bands, plastic labels and twist ties on produce
- Aluminium foil
- Pet feces
- Diapers
- Styrofoam
Residential Curbside Pilot Project Routes
Click on the map and zoom in to view the pilot route perimeters.