What To Do With Bottle Caps And Other Items That Can’t Be Recycled Curbside
Certain plastic items don’t belong in your curbside bin. However, there is a way to recycle them that will keep them out of the landfill and help support the work of Matthew 25: Ministries, a local humanitarian aid and disaster relief organization since 1991 (www.M25M.org). M25M will accept the following at its facility, at 11060 Kenwood Road:
- Clean plastic jars, tubs, and lids.
- Clean pill bottles and caps—any size and color, both prescription and over-the-counter.
- Clean beverage bottle caps. (No beverage containers allowed; send those curbside.)
- Clean miscellaneous rigid plastic items that have the general appearance and feel of the items above.

What You Should Know
M25M uses a grinding machine that turns rigid plastics into small flakes. When they have a tractor-trailer load, they ship the flakes to a processor/cleaner of recycled plastics, which pays the organization and helps fund their humanitarian efforts.
The grinding machine M25M uses has blades that are sharp, close together, and delicate. That’s why:
- Debris and metal are not allowed.
- Plastic bags are not allowed—they get wrapped in the blades.
- No foods, soaps, liquids, or other residues are allowed. If items aren’t clean and dry, the plastic won’t flake. (That’s why they don’t want beverage containers.)
- No containers that formerly held cleaners are allowed, because when the flakes are cleaned at the processor, residues can seriously affect their special cleaning agents.
- Paper labels are not a problem. They’ll be ground up and later washed off the flakes at the processor, using special cleaning agents. However, if you can remove the labels easily, please do.
Matthew 25: Ministries wants you to know that volunteers who sort through the containers before grinding may read any labels you leave on pill bottles. Also, they occasionally send containers to developing countries as part of medical supplies. While they don’t send containers that have labels on them, they can’t guarantee the privacy of your medical information. That responsibility is yours alone.












