If you are confused about your schedule, here's a summary. The PDF schedules provided by the City of Toronto and Circular Materials are both correct. Some map areas have changed their pickup schedules: for example, Parkdale used to be Wed Day 2 and they have now switched to Wed Day 1. The PDF versions of the maps show these changes correctly. But the mobile app and website lookup function don't.

Folks affected by Day switches should have received special printed mail notices about these changes, but some didn't.

One disappointing note about the PDF calendars: while those on the city's site are visually identical to those on Circular Materials site, the ones used by Circular Materials are inaccessible and untagged. Why don't they use the same tagged versions that are on the city site? Who knows! Does Circular Materials even know about the AODA (Accessibility for Ontarians with Disabilities Act)? No they don't.

2/5

#Accessibility #AODA #a11y #TaggedPDF #recycling #calendars #Toronto #CircularMaterials

A thread (5 posts) on the disastrous roll out of Toronto's new recycling collection system.

The City of Toronto's switch to using Circular Materials for recycling collection in Toronto made almost every mistake possible:
- many, many, many missed pickups
- a broken mobile app
- a broken address lookup function on website
- incorrect paper calendars sent to some addresses
- failing to respond to customer help calls

In particular, rolling out a new collection schedule to millions of people without ensuring that your website and app are functioning correctly is inexcusable.

1/5

#Toronto #recycling #garbage #TOWaste #CircularMaterials #TOPoli

Ford defends Circular Materials as missed recycling pickups spark backlash in Toronto

What to know Circular Materials took over Ontario’s recycling program on Jan. 1, with GFL Environmental now handling…
#NewsBeep #News #Headlines #CA #Canada #CircularMaterials #DougFord #ontario #recycling #Toronto
https://www.newsbeep.com/358766/

ONTARIO WASTE COLLECTION CHANGES

On Nov. 4, 2025, Circular Materials released new details on the changes to curbside recycling in Waterloo Region. Circular Materials is the national not-for-profit which took over responsibility for managing recycling in the province in March 2024.  

The changes are part of Ontario’s new recycling regulation that moves recycling programs to an extended producer responsibility (EPR) model. The new recycling program officially starts on Jan. 1, 2026 and is funded and operated by producers of packaging and paper products.  

“The program takes the costs of and operational responsibility for blue box recycling away from taxpayers and municipalities. This means that residents will no longer be paying for recycling services as this cost will be borne by producers,” Jennifer Kerr, Director of Community and Media Relations at Circular Materials, said.  

Under current recycling programs, each municipality decides what materials can be placed in blue bins. The change introduces a unified materials list that is the same across the province.   

The new list includes previously unaccepted items, including hot and cold beverage cups, toothpaste tubes, black plastic containers and frozen juice containers. The complete list of materials is available on the Circular Materials website.   

“The unified material list and new materials included are a great example of how extended producer responsibility advances innovation and improves environmental outcomes,” Kerr said.  

March 2026 brings additional changes to curbside recycling. Recycling collection will shift to a bi-weekly, four-day schedule running Tuesday to Friday. To accommodate the change, Circular Materials is delivering two additional blue boxes to residents starting in January 2026.  

“The new bi-weekly recycling schedule will alternate with the new bi-weekly garbage and organics collection schedule which is managed by the Region of Waterloo,” Kerr said.   

While Circular Materials manages the program, each community is serviced by a different collection contractor. Miller Waste currently provides curbside collection in Cambridge, Kitchener, and Waterloo.   

Starting on Mar. 3, 2026, Miller Waste will provide collection service across all Waterloo Region communities, including North Dumfries, Wellesley, Wilmot and Woolwich. Contact information for local collection services, along with the most up-to-date recycling details, is available at circularmaterials.ca/waterlooregion.  

The move from municipally operated programs to a province-wide program is a major change. Kerr said the feedback from residents has mainly been on clarifying what the changes are.   

“We appreciate residents’ and communities’ continued engagement and participation in recycling through this transition. Resident participation is vital to increasing recycling rates and advancing a more sustainable future,” Kerr said. 

#AlexKinsella #Cambridge #CircularMaterials #jenniferKerr #kitchener #millerWaste #NorthDumfries #recycling #RegionOfWaterloo #waterloo #waterlooRegion #Wellesley #Wilmot #Woolwich

Can circularity be attempted in Developing Regions? Most solid waste there is food. Get large portions of that out of the solid waste stream & waste mgmt would be so much easier.
Listen on YouTube:

https://youtu.be/0Myzg4L_z-M?si=qEEhv31QLWhXDMux

#sustainability #circulareconomy #recycling #wastemanagement #circularity #reuse #sustainable #circularmaterials

Circularity & Waste Mgmt in Developing Regions via Water Treatment

YouTube

Up to now Environmental Life Cycle Assessments (LCAs) can't be done for construction projects until materials have been chosen, which is too late in the Architecture process to make positive changes. Here I discuss a method of having initial baseline LCAs early in the process.

Listen on Spotify

#lca #lifecycleanalysis #sustainability #Architecture #constructionindustry #construction #circulareconomy #circularmaterials #sustainablefuture #environmentalimpact

https://open.spotify.com/episode/0djDusxDo3NNCjVksmdZ20

Initial LCAs for the Architecture and Contruction Industry

Sparks Sustainability · Episode

Spotify

How can manufacturers find circular materials? How can 1 industry know what waste materials others produce? How can materials from deconstructed buildings be found & sold? How can we build up sites of industrial symbiosis?
We need A Circular Materials Commodities Market

Listen on Spotify:

#sustainability #circulareconomy #sustainable #circularmaterials #reuse #recycling #sustainablefuture #deconstruction #industrialsymbiosis

https://open.spotify.com/episode/7I2fToHvyA2OfljZSq8CiM

(cm)2 - Circular Materials Commodities Market

Sparks Sustainability · Episode

Spotify

What policies or incentives could motivate manufacturers to use circular materials? And to take back and reuse their own products & materials?

Listen on Spotify:

#circulareconomy #recycledmaterials #sustainability #reuse #sustainable #recycling #circularmaterials #sustainablefuture

https://open.spotify.com/episode/4j8QbUCALIpCgiauRpes5w

Incentivizing Circularity: Motivating Manufacturers to Reuse Materials

Sparks Sustainability · Episode

Spotify

Currently writing my next podcast/article on initiating Circularity in developing regions. How/where do you even start? What will make a substantial impact?

#sustainability #circulareconomy #sustainable #circularmaterials #developingregions

Taking Inspiration from Early Aviation History to Spur Sustainable Innovation, Ingenuity, & Advancement with Prizes.

Listen on Spotify:

#sustainability #circulareconomy #innovation #sustainable #circularmaterials #reuse #recycling

https://open.spotify.com/episode/5whv2EvnbDeYIvbF9VYfD2

Spurring Sustainability & Circular Economy Innovations with Prizes

Sparks Sustainability · Episode

Spotify