Dakota Valley Recycling

DVR is the partnership recycling department for the Cities of Apple Valley, Eagan and Burnsville
that connects residents and businesses to recycling, composting and waste disposal information.

Buying recycled-content paper provides the foundation for an environmentally sustainable paper production system.  The first paper mill in the U.S. colonies, built near Philadelphia in 1690, was a recycling mill which made paper by recycling cotton and linen rags.  Papermakers learned how to make paper from trees in the mid-1800s when forests & energy seemed unlimited, and air & water infinitely capable of cleansing and renewal.  Today, we recognize the limits of resource demand and the necessity for environmentally sustainable production systems. 

Why buy recycled-content paper:

  • Performance - Recycled-content paper has excellent performance, meeting the same technical specifications as virgin papers.    Successfully runs on the most copiers, office machines and printing presses.  High to moderate brightness levels and ranges from clean, bright whites to a wide palette of colors.
  • Availability - Recycled-content paper is available in virtually every grade of paper.  Choices are even greater if you order recycled paper ahead of time.  It is either evenly priced with virgin paper or the price differentials are quite small.  Buying in larger quantities and planning ahead further reduces or eliminates price premiums on recycled paper.
  • Environment - Saves trees, energy, water, and landfill space compared to virgin paper.  Protects forests, watersheds, and ecosystems and produces less pollution than virgin paper production.  Offers environmental savings many times over, since fibers can be recycled repeatedly.

1 ton (20 cases) of 100% recycled content paper, versus paper using virgin wood, saves:

  • 17 trees
  • 7000 gallons of water
  • 4100 kWh of energy, enough to power an average home for 6 months
  • 60 pounds of air pollution
  • 2.5 cubic yards of landfill space

Other logos:

Also look for Forest Stewardship Council (FSC) and Sustainable Forestry Initiative (SFI) Chain-of-custody certificates.  This means the trees used to make the paper were harvested from a sustainable forest. 

 

Recent Tweets

Minnesotans produce 6 lb of waste per person per day, enough to fill Target field 25 times. #LESS is more http://t.co/4RexHtYB #reduce
It's Compost Awareness Week! If you haven't tried composting, now's a great time to start. Brush up on tips & tricks: http://t.co/jbEsXyr9
Fresh off Earth Day: Burnsville residents still looking for something green to do, plant a tree! Tree sale Sat: http://t.co/ar3shDZ7
Burnsville residents, check out the clean-up events during I Love Burnsville week, June 2-8 http://t.co/kUc3JhhT
Have a question for your city recycling staff? Ask us here on Twitter, or use our email contact form: http://t.co/G8ZG5ZXv