Interesting, where is this place?
It's actually moved to Des Moines, not in Ankeny anymore.
Yesway does not take cans, but then again, Yesway sucks.One more time, Iowa state law states that anyone who sells items with a deposit must take back the items and provide the deposit back. The business must have an exception issued from the DNR to not do this.
You can take them back to any gas station, liquor store, grocery store, etc. If they say they won't take them they are in violation of the law.
http://www.iowadnr.gov/Environmenta...y/Waste-Planning-Recycling/Bottle-Deposit-Law
I have returned cans to Casey's 100's of times and they never questioned it once.
You sure? I haven't been there for about three months, but I guess I would be surprised if this operation moved to Des Moines. The place I'm talking about is on the west side of South Ankeny Blvd immediately north of Benchwarmers.
Huh...good to know.It did move to Des Moines. It closed in Ankeny on June 2. Its now at 1501 NE Broadway.
for all of you complaining you dont have somewhere to recyle the cans....why dont you start a center if you care that much.....My friends parents did that and paid for both their kids college just doing it 2 nights a week and in a small town
Was going to find something like this and recommend taking them to Michigan.
We need to get rid of this and just add them to your recycling.
Let trash companies handle the trash and get rid of the deposit laws. Then there will be some actual profit for the recyclers.
Maybe HyVee was less worried about having to handle the volume of cans and more worried about people coming in with an unlimited number of cans and bottles and other customers not being able to get their turn when they were bringing in a reasonable amount of returns. It isn't like HyVee has 20 machines so people can always find an open one.My spouse had that problem with HyVee a while back, when they were limiting the amount they would pay back at a given time. His point was that they didn't limit how much he could buy at one time but they DID limit how many he could return. He won. Then again, he can be a real PITA if he feels he is in the right.![]()
That system would work if the market for producing cans from raw materials wasn't cheaper than using recycled cans. That's the problem with the free market, it doesn't account for negative externalities. Once raw materials are more finite and harder to mine, then yes, companies will be salvaging like crazy, but then it might be too late.
The free market generally works efficiently well for things, but it is not good at preserving and protecting the very fundamental natural resources and ecosystem services (like bees pollinating our food, or the quickly dwindling, once vast tropical forests of this planet that help control weather and water patterns, give us medicine and other interesting discoveries, etc.) we all rely upon in the modern economy. Trust me, I'm not a believer in the government regulating certain aspects of the economy (stay out), but environmental regulation is important.
I disagree with this and am saddened to see all the comments on here about people just throwing the cans away. There truly is no such thing as "throwing away." If the cans aren't recycled then they end up in a landfill and it is a waste of the raw materials, fossil fuel-based energy (usually), and water used to create that new can not to recycle it. Every statistic I've ever read suggests the bottle bill increases recycling rates:
http://www.bottlebill.org/about/benefits/waste.htm
Obviously, consider the source of the statistics above, but other studies I've seen over time conclude the same, I just didn't spend the time trying to dig them up. Anyway, the study above seems to suggest the average rate of can recycling is 40 to 50% in states without the bottle bill from 1984 to 2004 (a large sample size). While recycling in those states with the bottle bill was 20 to 30% points higher on average.
If every municipality had recycling, then I'd be less opposed to repeal of the bill as the post above seems to call for, but right now, count me as one who thinks we should be increasing the tax to 10c on the bottle bill to tick up recycling rates even more. It has been a net good for our planet and I don't understand the "throw away" attitude. Some of it may just be tongue-in-cheek comments and jokes, but for the serious folks, I don't understand why you would just throw them away. Resources are not infinite. Also, the assumption that everything gets sorted or a system is in place to recycle commingled trash is foolish. A few municipalities do really take trash this seriously, but most (particularly in the western states outside of the Pacific Ocean bordering states) don't and to think that some entity is just going to do it for you, is silly.
Don't believe me that stuff like this gets thrown away, go tour your neighboring landfill and see what's going in there. I toured one for a Chamber of Commerce event in central Iowa several years ago and TONS of recyclable stuff is in there - not many redeemable cans as far as my observation goes (probably because of the bottle bill) - but lots of other recyclable stuff.