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Learn about Landfills

A landfill is a place to dispose of refuse and other waste material by burying it. There are no open solid waste landfills in Cuyahoga County. Trash is collected and sent for end-disposal to landfills located throughout Ohio. Find a waste (trash) transfer station.

The information below describes what happens when the trash leaves the curb in Cuyahoga County.

How trash gets to a landfill


1) Trash is picked up in a collection truck curbside on trash day. In Cuyahoga County, trash is collected by an automated truck or manually with a packer truck. The automated truck picks up a wheeled cart with a mechanical side-arm and empties the trash into the truck. Trash picked up manually is thrown into a truck by a worker. 










2) The collection truck drops all the neighborhood trash at a waste transfer station. The trash truck passes over a scale and is weighed as it arrives. Trash is dumped from the truck onto the tipping floor, and the empty collection truck is weighed again as it leaves.

In Cuyahoga County, there are 9 waste transfer stations that are operated by either local communities or private companies.   





3) Trash is scooped up from the transfer station's tipping floor and loaded onto large semi-trailer trucks. When it is full, the semi-trailer passes over a scale and is weighed as it leaves the waste transfer station. The semi transports the trash to a designated landfill.








4) The semi arrives at the landfill and passes over another a scale. At the working face of the landfill, the trash is pushed out of the truck by walking floors or lifting the trailer bed (pictured). The empty semi-trailer is weighed one last time on the way out.










5) At the working face, the dumped trash is moved around by bulldozers and compactors to maximize space in the landfill.  A layer of dirt is used to cover the trash at the end of every day.










6) The landfill operators maintain the site in a variety of ways. The landfill has a fence to keep people out, but also to prevent litter from blowing off site. Since a landfill has dirt roads, the operators must water the roads on hot, dry days to prevent flying dust and debris.

How a new landfill is built

Landfills are dug out from the ground. The landfill is lined with a layer of clay and a second layer (or liner) of plastic.  Safety systems to collect leachate and methane gas have to be installed before the landfill can except any trash. Permits must be issued before a landfill can be built or operated.  See the Ohio EPA's website for more information.

   

 

Old (closed) landfills

Landfills will eventually meet capacity and are closed.  Once they are closed, they are no longer allowed to accept trash and must be monitored for 30 years. Operators must comply with federal and state regulations throughout the entire process. See the US EPA's website for more information.

This is the view from the top of a mountain of trash at an old landfill in Solon, Ohio.  This landfill provides landfill gas to a near by business, which is used to cook food.   

 

   
   

 

Calendar of Events


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Ongoing
Household Hazardous Waste Disposal Program
City Service Departments

April 1-30, 2016
Recycle Your Computer Month

April 15, 2024
OALPRP & OEPA Student Scholarship applications due

April 17, 2024
Earth Day Coalition's Earthfest
Cuyahoga County Fairgrounds

April 22, 2024
Happy Earth Day!

April 23, 2024
Party for the Planet
Cleveland Metroparks Zoo

April 23, 2024
Compost Seminar & Bin Sale
Parma

May 4, 2024
Compost Seminar & Bin Sale
Bay Village

May 6, 2024
Compost Seminar & Bin Sale
Cleveland

May 20, 2024
Recycling Roundtable for Business
Garfield Heights




  

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