Soft and Woody Yard Waste
Managing Grass Clippings and Mosquitoes
Soft or Woody Yard Waste?
Are you confused about the difference between soft yard waste and woody yard waste? Or why they are collected separately? Soft yard waste and wood yard waste are processed separately for collection and further processing. Soft yard waste includes grass, leaves, flowers, weeds and soft clippings that are less than ½” in diameter. After collection, it’s then processed into Smartleaf® compost. Soft yard waste is picked up on your regularly scheduled collection day (from mid-January until the end of October). Woody yard waste includes branches, brush, small logs greater that ½” in diameter, and shrubs; these are processed into wood mulch. Woody yard waste is collected year-round on Thursday and Friday by appointment only. Please email publicworks@collegeparkmd.gov or call 240-487-3590 to schedule a collection. How to properly prepare your material for collection: Separate soft material from woody material. Place each type of source separated material in a separate container.
- Use paper yard waste bags, the beige yard waste cart, or personal reusable containers* for either type of material. *Personal containers must have a yellow City yard waste sticker; free stickers are available at the Department of Public Works.
- Bundles of woody material must be no more than 4 feet long and comprised of individual branches up to 4 inches in diameter.
- Individual bundles must not exceed 2 feet in diameter or weigh more than 50 pounds and must be tied with biodegradable material.
- Logs must be cut into 12-inch sections and no more than 12 inches in diameter. A maximum of 25 logs will be collected at a scheduled pick-up.
- Do not use plastic bags or City-issued refuse or recycling carts.
- Place at the curb by 7:00 a.m.
- Soft and Woody Yard Waste that is oversized and requires the use of a crane will be charged at a cost of $100 per collection, per hour.
- Material improperly set out for collection will not be collected.
Keep Grass Clippings Off The Street!
As you take care of your lawn this season, do not sweep or blow grass and leaves into the street. Lawn clippings and debris that are left in the street wash into storm drains and storm sewers, potentially clogging them, which may result in flooding. Debris that washes into storm sewers is transported through local waterways and eventually to the Chesapeake Bay, threatening aquatic life and drinking water quality.
Instead, you can leave the cut grass on the lawn to recycle the nutrients or start a compost pile in your backyard (visit http://mda.maryland.gov/resource_conservation/Documents/tip4.pdf for a brochure from the Maryland Department of Agriculture.) You may also place clippings in paper bags or reusable containers for weekly curbside pickup on the same day as your trash and recycling collection.
Controlling Mosquitoes
Warm spring days can cause larvae to come alive, producing active mosquitoes. The Maryland Department of Agriculture (MDA) will begin applying mosquito larvicide control products in known breeding areas with standing water to prevent development of larvae into biting adult mosquitoes. Mosquito spraying starts in early June.
West Nile and Zika virus are both transmitted by mosquitoes. To help control the mosquito population in your community, remember to tip anything that holds water on a weekly basis (birdbaths, old tires, plastic children’s toys, tarps, pet dishes etc.).
Request For Exemption From Adult Mosquito Control Services
Any resident who wishes to have his/her property excluded from adult mosquito control pesticide applications by truck-mounted ultra-low volume (ULV) sprayers must fill out this form annually. Visit, http://mda.maryland.gov/plants-pests/Documents/Exemption%202018.pdf for the application.