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 →Kinsley's Landfill is the big county landfill out on Delsea Drive that both homeowners and haulers use when stuff needs to be buried rather than recycled. It's the kind of place where commercial trucks show up alongside pickup trucks hauling brush or construction debris. Expect a working-site vibe rather than anything fancy; it's where the area's bulky, non-recyclable material ends up.
Drive up to a concrete booth and slow down for the scale; the site charges by weight, so there’s usually a weigh-in on the way in and again when you leave. Trucks and trailers line up, especially on weekends and during spring yard-cleanup times, and the tipping area is a large open cell where material gets dumped and covered. The property is expansive - dirt roads, compacted cover, and piles that change over time - and commercial loads are accepted alongside residential drop-offs.
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 →