Municipal Trash Can Program Begins

Green banner with DPW logo and text "Department of Public Works Press Release"

BALTIMORE, MD (June 26, 2014) – Baltimore City Department of Public Works Director Rudolph S. Chow, P.E., announced today that trash cans and recycling containers are being distributed in select Baltimore City neighborhoods. This pilot program will test a Municipal Trash Can system aimed at creating cleaner, healthier communities.

Residents in the Belair-Edison neighborhood and certain areas in Greater Mondawmin have already begun receiving the cans. Distribution will continue into next week as more than 9,000 residences will receive the cans. Crews from the Bureau of Solid Waste are ready to begin collecting trash from the new cans right away.

“We believe the Municipal Trash Can Pilot Program is a proactive step that will help us attack litter and rat problems head on. It allows us to better serve our citizens, and achieve greater operating efficiency,” said Mr. Chow. “But we need residents to use the cans in order for all of us to reap the benefits.”

Each trash can is constructed of heavy-duty plastic and is equipped with an attached lid and wheels to make it easy to move. Bagged trash should be put in the cans and left at the normal pickup locations.

The recycling bins that are also being distributed will reduce the waste stream. By separating out recyclables, including paper, metal, glass and many plastic products, a week’s worth of bagged household trash should fit easily in the trash cans. Residents may clean and reuse their old trash cans for extra recycling, for storage, or for anything else they’d like.

The new trash cans are the property of the City, and are assigned one to a residence. Each can is equipped with a chip that the City can use to determine where the can belongs. Taking a can from a property is considered theft and may be subject to law enforcement action.

Related Stories

DPW Offices, Sanitation Yards Closed on Juneteenth City of Baltimore to Observe Juneteenth, Wednesday, June 19

The Baltimore City Department of Public Works (DPW) Acting Director Khalil Zaied reminds residents that Juneteenth will be observed on Wednesday, June 19, 2024. As a City-observed holiday, DPW offices and sanitation yards will be CLOSEDTrash and recycling collections WILL NOT take place on the Juneteenth holiday closure. The trash and recycling make-up day is Saturday, June 22. There will be NO street sweeping during the Juneteenth closure.

Mayor Scott, DPW Announce Water Billing System Upgrades Water Bills to Get New Look and User-Friendly Improvements for Customer Self-Service Portal

 Mayor Brandon M. Scott and the Baltimore City Department of Public Works (DPW) have announced that starting this month the water bills mailed to Baltimore City residents will have a new look, making them easier to read and easier to pay. DPW’s water billing upgrade efforts also include improvements to its Customer Self-Service Portal, creating a user-friendly, one-stop shop for customers to manage and pay their monthly water bills.

DPW Offices, Sanitation Yards Close for Memorial Day Holiday, Monday, May 27, 2024

Baltimore City Department of Public Works (DPW) Acting Director Khalil Zaied reminds residents that Memorial Day is on Monday, May 27, 2024. As a City-observed holiday, DPW offices and sanitation yards will be CLOSED. The Memorial Day closure does NOT impact weekly trash and recycling collections. Monday is not a scheduled curbside trash or recycling collection day. Mechanical street sweeping WILL NOT be in effect.