TERRACYCLE NEWS

ELIMINATING THE IDEA OF WASTE®

Recycling old school binders for the environment

TerraCycle Office Depot Include USA
Recycling old school binders when purchasing new ones is being offered to shoppers by Terracycle at Office Depot and OfficeMax stores. Office Depot has teamed with Trenton-based Terracycle, which collects and repurposes hard-to-recycle, post-consumer waste. Shoppers can bring any old, empty binder to an Office Depot or OfficeMax retail location and receive a $2 instant discount off a same-day binder purchase. The Binder Recycling Program encourages shoppers to help preserve the environment by recycling, since many binders are tossed into the garbage after each school year. TerraCycle is able to recycle the binders, significantly reducing the amount of waste going into landfills. “We’re excited to partner with TerraCycle this back-to-school season as parents, teachers and students prepare for the school year with new supplies,” said Ron Lalla, executive vice president of merchandising for Office Depot. “The program provides a way to recycle binders in an environmentally conscious way while also offering a discount to shoppers who are looking for new ones.” TerraCycle works with major manufacturers and retailers to recycle products and packaging that would normally be thrown away. To learn more about TerraCycle and its innovative recycling solutions, visitwww.terracycle.com. For more information on the Office Depot Binder Recycling Program, visitofficedepot.com/recyclebinders The $2 discount applies only to binders purchased and will not be applied to any free binders with a purchase. It is limited to six discounts per household or business. Area participating stores are Office Max, Route 541, Burlington Township and Office Depot, Route 561, Voorhees. Founded in 2001, TerraCycle, Inc., collects and re-purposes waste, ranging from used potato chip bags to coffee capsules to cigarette butts. The waste is collected through free, national, brand-funded recycling programs, as well as various consumer and government-funded models. The collected waste is reused, upcycled or recycled into a variety of affordable, sustainable consumer products and industrial applications. Each year, across 20 countries, TerraCycle collects and repurposes billions of pieces of waste, donating millions of dollars to schools and charities in the process. To learn more about TerraCycle or get involved in its recycling programs, visit www.terracycle.com