Hennepin County Community Recycling Opinion Survey
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Hennepin County Community Recycling Opinion Survey
Gathering Public Feedback to Inform Long-Term Waste Management Planning
Every six years, Hennepin County, Minnesota’s most-populated county, completes a Solid Waste Management Plan to address how it will support the state-mandated goal of 75% recycling by 2030 for the Twin Cities metro area. In this update, the county wanted to integrate its ambitious Climate Action Plan, which envisions a zero-waste future to help achieve net-zero carbon emissions by 2050.
The county’s climate-action and zero-waste goals require a transformation of the county’s solid waste system to a circular economy that values raw materials and prioritizes reuse. Driving the needed change in policies, programming and infrastructure requires broad public support and advocacy for a zero-waste future.
Our solid waste and strategic communications teams were brought on board to conduct a survey of residents to assess opinions on recycling programs and establish a baseline on level of support for needed policy actions for the most recent Solid Waste Management Plan, which covers 2024 to 2029.
We designed the survey and partnered with a third-party polling company, which sampled 500 county residents by phone. Our team weighted the results to create a representative sample, then analyzed the data.
The survey spanned several topics, from food waste disposal to waste reduction to drop-off facility use. Some key discoveries include:
- Recycling drop-offs are used infrequently by residents, if at all. Lower income residents were more likely to say they never use drop-off locations compared to higher income residents.
- 80% of residents support requiring to-go containers to be recyclable or compostable.
- Participation in organics recycling differs across the county, and those who participate in curbside organics recycling generally have positive feelings about the program.
- 25% of residents report using backyard or on-site composting as their primary way to dispose of food waste.
- Most residents (77%) rarely or never used a drop-off location to recycle batteries.
These correlated with several strategies outlined in the plan, like:
- Expanding access for collection and drop-off options for hard-to-recycle items.
- Increasing participation in curbside organics recycling services and backyard composting.
- Reducing single-use plastics and plastic packaging.
- Encouraging retailers to increase consumer awareness of responsible end-of-life handling for products containing lithium-ion batteries.
The findings and strategies are helping guide Hennepin County on its journey toward zero waste and reducing carbon emissions by 45% of 2010 levels by 2030 and its 2050 goal.
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