AZalace, thanks for a very interesting reply.
WaltonGOP can speak for himself, but I believe he was referring to the 1% sales tax that is used for landfill operations in Walton County and which pays for the current Waste Management pickups. The county decided quite a few years ago to fund trash services with the optional local 1% sales tax allowed by law. The old system it replaced required a quarterly payment to Waste Management by each individual/business, which got you a sticker to place on your trash can, which got your can emptied when the truck came around. If someone didn't pay and had no sticker or an out of date sticker, their trash just piled up. Since tourists spend money while here, that is one of the reasons the county went to the present system, to spread around the cost of hauling off all the trash left behind by the tourists. This way everyone's cans get emptied. So WaltonGOP is asking, and I am very curious also, how much revenue that 1% sales tax generates. There is another thread on here somewhere about recycling, and another poster contacted the county finance director and got what is not exactly a definitive, transparent reply. When you get into the budget in this county, you soon find out it is sort of like a game of "hide the peanut." Just ask anyone from the taxpayer's association about the years they have spent trying to reform the budget process so that citizens can get clear answers to questions like this one.
I applaud your efforts to help the county move along with this problem. I do wish you had come along years ago, or that the county had had some forward looking thinkers then instead of, once again, finding themselves in a reactive mode and behind the curve. I would think that aluminum would not be a problem to sell. It almost pays me to drive cans up to Freeport these days, if I have enough. I can understand the issues with paper, glass and plastic and fluctuating needs of the buyers, but with the proximity of the landfill to Interstate 10 and all the recyclers that are located in Pensacola, I think you might want to take the difficulties with a grain of salt. I do believe as resources of all kinds grow increasingly scarce that recycling is not only important but it will be more efficient as well.