Skip to main content

News release

October 21, 2021

Contact

MPCA Communications, news.mpca@state.mn.us

MPCA offers $1M in grants to increase reuse and improve recycling and composting in Greater Minnesota

The Minnesota Pollution Control Agency (MPCA) is now accepting applications for grant funding to help expand or improve recycling and composting programs in Greater Minnesota. The agency will award approximately $1 million to help counties, cities, townships, or tribal communities reduce the amount of waste entering landfills by establishing best practices to reuse more materials and make recycling or composting programs more efficient and effective.  

Proposals for these grants must include projects that are locally administered, have an educational component with measurable outcomes, and include one or more of the following elements:

  • Establish curbside recycling or composting
  • Increase recycling or composting
  • Reduce the amount of recyclable materials entering disposal facilities
  • Reduce the costs associated with hauling waste by locating collection sites as close as possible to the site where the waste is generated

Preferred projects will focus on implementing or expanding local capacity to improve the collection of traditional recyclables such as plastic, glass, metal and paper, improve the quality of recyclables, transition to single-sort recycling collection, or establish or expand reusing materials in their original form. Grants may also help establish or expand organics collection and the processing or transfer capacity for source-separated organic materials, or develop or expand programs for hard to recycle and bulky materials such as mattresses, car seats, concrete, shingles, electronic waste, etc.

Minnesota counties, cities, townships, tribal communities, or other political subdivisions outside the Twin Cities seven-county metropolitan area are encouraged to submit proposals for projects. If the applicant is a city, the city’s population must be less than 45,000. The maximum grant award(s) is $250,000, per project. Applicants must match at least 25% of the grant award.

Applicants that demonstrate they are utilizing best practices and who implement preferred projects will be given priority, but any project that will expand or improve recycling or composting programs in Greater Minnesota is eligible.

Share this