Construction Debris: What You Can (and Can't) Take to the Dump
Renovating your home? Drywall, lumber, concrete, and roofing materials have different disposal rules than regular trash. Here's what to know.
Read more →Small-town transfer station that Webster residents use when the town trash pickup or a long drive to a landfill isn’t convenient. It handles household loads and material drop-offs from local folks, not a huge industrial complex but definitely busy at peak times. The place feels like a working yard rather than a tidy recycling center.
Drive up to a staffed entrance booth where someone will direct vehicles; most people pull up, get checked, then proceed into the yard. There’s a drive-over scale and tipping area-trucks and compactors are visible, and loads get consolidated for hauling out of town. Recycling containers sit off to one side while bulky items are tossed into larger pits or compactors; expect to back up to a ledge or platform to empty things. Weekends and spring cleanups fill the lanes, so lines and slow-moving traffic are common.
Learn how to properly dispose of common items.

Renovating your home? Drywall, lumber, concrete, and roofing materials have different disposal rules than regular trash. Here's what to know.
Read more →
E-waste rules vary wildly by state. Some ban electronics from landfills entirely. Here's how to recycle old TVs, computers, and phones properly.
Read more →
Most counties run free household hazardous waste collection events. Here's what qualifies, how to find your local event, and how to store stuff safely until then.
Read more →