Second step: Reuse (source: Minnesota Office of Environmental Assitance)

Reusing items by repairing them, donating them to charity and community groups or selling them also reduces waste. Reusing, when possible, is preferable to recycling because the item does not need to be reprocessed before it can be used again.

Buy reusable products and avoid single-use items

We think of products as being disposable. Actually, products are moved, buried or burned, but the material goes somewhere to be managed by others.

But some consumers wonder about the environmental impact of single-use products compared to items that must be washed before reuse. Isn't water a natural resource that we ought to conserve? Which has worse environmental consequences: single-use or reusable?

Although there is no "new" water created, it does get filtered and stored through natural and human-made systems. Water is a reusable resource and if we take care of it by using it conservatively and keeping it clean, water will be around for a long time. Landfill space is not naturally replenished or reusable.

The volume of household solid waste created by use of single-use products is far greater than that generated by the use of reusable goods. When Itasca Medical Center in Grand Rapids changed to reusable dessert dishes, waste volume from single-use dishes decreased by 99 percent.


Reuse bags, containers, paper, boxes and other items

Many everyday household goods can have more than one life. After being emptied and cleaned, common items can be used in countless money-saving and practical ways.

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