honoluluadvertiser.com

Sponsored by:

Comment, blog & share photos

Log in | Become a member
The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Thursday, August 3, 2006

BUREAUCRACY BUSTER
Bulky-item pickup has new setup

By Robbie Dingeman
Advertiser Columnist

Q. I live in Kane'ohe and have some bulky items I would like to throw out through the city's bulky pickup service. When I called the number I've used for years to find out when to put the items out on the curb, I was referred to a different number and told that my community is now on a regular schedule for bulky-item pickup. What's going on?

A. City recycling coordinator Suzanne Jones said the city last month began offering the monthly regularly scheduled bulky-item pickup in Windward O'ahu, which was the last district on the island to be converted to this schedule.

Jones said the city began offering curbside monthly service in urban Honolulu in 2000. When Mayor Mufi Hannemann took office last year, he made a promise that he would expand this service to the Wai'anae Coast and other parts of O'ahu.

The city completed the last area in July. Jones said the city ran full-page ads in daily and weekly newspapers in June. "We did not mail a flyer out to everyone," she said, since it's not a service that most people need regularly.

And Jones said city employees at the old phone numbers still will direct folks to the new system. If you missed your pickup date for the month, you may transport your items yourself to city convenience centers listed in the phone book.

She offers some other tips for dealing with bulky items:

  • Put out your items by 6 a.m. of the day pickup is scheduled but don't be alarmed if it takes three or four days for pickup. That's because one truck may pick up the old furniture and carpet and another on a different day will take the old appliances to the metal recycler.

  • Remember that the service is designed to handle rubbish produced by an average household that's too big to fit in regular bins. That means appliances, furniture, carpets and mattresses but not tires, auto batteries, construction debris over one cubic yard and hazardous waste. The city encourages donating usable large items to such organizations as Goodwill and the Salvation Army.

  • For more information, visit www.opala.org. For more information on curbside pickup, call the environmental concern line at 692-5656.

    If you have a question or a problem and need help getting to the right person, you can reach The Bureaucracy Buster one of three ways:

    Write to:

    The Bureaucracy Buster
    The Honolulu Advertiser
    605 Kapi'olani Blvd.
    Honolulu, HI 96813

    E-mail: buster@honoluluadvertiser.com

    Phone: 535-2454 and leave a message. Be sure to give us your name and daytime telephone number in case we need more information.