Yes – the bailer that our recycler uses can’t handle quantities of text blocks. We found that pulling the volumes apart by hand worked
better than any attempt to chop the spine off. The covers get pulled or cut off first (using a utility knife) and then the students tear them apart.
R. Cecilia Knight
Burling Library
Grinnell College
641-269-3368
knight@grinnell.edu
From: Serials
in Libraries Discussion Forum [mailto:SERIALST@LISTSERV.NASIG.ORG] On Behalf Of
Diane Westerfield
Sent: Thursday, July 09, 2015 10:19 AM
To: SERIALST@LISTSERV.NASIG.ORG
Subject: [SERIALST] Recycling withdrawn bound periodicals?
Hi everyone,
My library is in the process of withdrawing a large number (5 digits) of bound periodicals and government documents. We thought we could just cut the covers off and throw
them in the trash, while recycling the "meat" of the volumes as paper. Cutting off covers actually saves a little time in terms of stamping and marking.
However, our recycling company has come back and said they can't deal with the volumes because of the glue in the binding. We would have to chop or saw the spines off so
all they have to deal with is the actual paper.
Anyone else run into this problem? And have a solution besides "send it all to the landfill"? I know PVA is used in commercial library binding and PVA is recyclable to plastic
but perhaps it contaminates paper recycling. We don't have a guillotine in the library building, which I imagine would be the easiest way to chop off book spines.
Thanks,
Diane Westerfield
Colorado College
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