recycling

The Cost of Trash Disposal is Going Up in Central Florida (duh)

Just in case you’ve been living under a rock, land to bury our trash is not infinite. Residents across Central Florida are feeling the pinch as the cost of trash disposal continues to rise, with the City of Apopka recently implementing significant rate hikes for solid waste services. Starting in January 2026, Apopka residents will see their monthly garbage collection fees increase by nearly 15%.

City officials cited rising operational expenses, including fuel costs, labor shortages, increased trash disposal costs and stricter environmental compliance, as the primary drivers behind the change.

The situation isn’t just isolated to Apopka. Orange County, which operates the Orange County Landfill, one of Central Florida’s largest disposal sites, has also raised its tipping fees over the past year and will continue to do so at 13% YOY. As of late 2025, the landfill charges waste haulers $54.20 per ton, up from $47 per ton this time last year. This increase trickles down to municipalities and private waste haulers, which then pass the cost onto residents and businesses who pay for trash. The Orange County Landfill serves not only unincorporated areas but also neighboring cities like Apopka and Orlando, meaning the financial impact reverberates across much of Central Florida and causes other garbage disposal sites to raise their prices.

These escalating costs highlight a broader trend across the state: as landfills reach capacity and environmental regulations tighten, the true price of waste is becoming harder to ignore.

O-Town Compost urges government officials to act now and invest in composting and recycling programs at the municipal-level. Also, it’s important to focus on public outreach and education to make sure people know how to properly sort their waste and minimize contamination. The longer we wait the higher the premium on permitted landfill capacity gets, and we get closer to a trash disposal crisis (currently happening in South Florida with Miami-Dade and Broward Counties where trash is being railed up to Georgia-area landfills). Let’s invest in waste diversion so future generations will have a better future.


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Commercial and Multi-Residential Composting Services in Alachua County and the City of #Gainesville.



Waste Diversion Abound! O-Town's Special Recycling Service On The Scene

The new, one of a kind service has officially launched for our 500+ subscribers. Customers can log in to their customer portal, access the shop, and select from among 7 different hard-to-recycle items.

Batteries, light bulbs, paint, plastic film, textiles, small electronics, and wires & cords.

We’ve had this idea for awhile, but weren’t ready to execute on it until we were in a comfortable spot with our composting service. O-Town’s primary focus remains with the collection and composting of organic waste, but we’re always looking to add value for our dedicated subscribers.

What’s important to us is giving folks access to recycling programs that are convenient. That’s why people often refer to state’s like Colorado, Washington, and Oregon as being ahead of Florida in environmentalism. There are just more policies and programs in place, plus companies like Ridwell, are in place to shape the culture.

The Southeastern region of the United States has the highest waste per capita in the nation. We are slowing changing the throw-away culture into one that is conscious of what goes to the landfill. We’re so grateful for our community of waste warriors.

Why We Compost in Orlando

At O-Town Compost, we believe in a healthy balance of sustainable growth, which means giving back to the ecosystem what we take.

Orlando was once known for its agricultural presence. Citrus groves stretching as far as the eye could see, and farm land that sprawled from Apoka to Christmas with only a clump of buildings downtown to disrupt the horizon. Heck, I’ve even talked to an UCF alumni who remembers hitching up her horse outside her classrooms. Then, in 1971, Disney decided to open its famous resort and theme park, and the boom started.

Composting is a regenerative practice that allows us to bring back some of that natural habitat that we lost to development. Traditionally, compost replaces nutrients lost in the soil that were taken by the plants that eventually became our food. This fertility loss was replaced with organic compost after every crop cycle, introducing a cocktail of healthy bacteria and nutrients to began building the soil structure once again. It’s no joke when they say “it all starts with the soil.”

At the urban and suburban levels, reverting a small quarter acre lot from lawn to native habitat can invite bees, insects, butterflies, and birds completely altering the space to form a mini-ecosystem. That’s why at O-Town Compost we want to remain small and local to create mini-ecosystems of food waste collection to composting to growing food again. We are helping organizations and individuals change Orlando, pound by pound, into a hybrid between development and nature. A place where the ecosystem isn’t being wiped out, nor are the people being told to leave, but a coexistence. Sign up to start community composting in your neighborhood today!

Guiding Principles of Community Composting:

  1. Resources recovered: Waste is reduced; food scraps and other organic materials are diverted from disposal and composted.

  2. Locally based and closed loop: Organic materials are a community asset, and are generated and recycled into compost within the same neighborhood or community.

  3. Organic materials returned to soils: Compost is used to enhance local soils, support local food production, and conserve natural ecology by improving soil structure and maintaining nutrients, carbon, and soil microorganisms.

  4. Community-scaled and diverse: Composting infrastructure is diverse, distributed, and sustainable; systems are scaled to meet the needs of a self-defined community. (O-Town Compost is coming to West Orlando this summer!)

  5. Community engaged, empowered, and educated: Compost programming engages and educates the community in food systems thinking, resource stewardship, or community sustainability, while providing solutions that empower individuals, businesses, and institutions to capture organic waste and retain it as a community resource.

  6. Community supported: Aligns with community goals (such as healthy soils and healthy people) and is supported by the community it serves. The reverse is true, too; a community composting program supports community social, economic, and environmental well-being.

The Community Composting Movement Is Gaining Momentum

The founding of O-Town Compost was heavily influenced by other community composting operations around the country, like Bootstrap Compost in Boston, Let Us Compost in Athens, GA, and Rust Belt Riders in Cleveland. All are great examples of small local composters with a long list of residential subscribers who have been diverting massive quantities of food waste and making a positive contribution to their surrounding cities. The opportunity exists in every U.S. city, where successful organics programs are typically nowhere to be found, and the local governments are more focused on improving lagging recycling programs. Food waste management has been left to the private sector to deal with in large part.

Typically, the large waste haulers (a.k.a. Big Waste), like Waste Management and Republic Services, would get involved in the action, but since they have a constant inflow of trash into their landfills and incinerators, they’re okay with the status quo. Food waste is heavy after all, and the more tonnage coming into the landfill means more revenue. Although, it’s doubtful that these big companies will remain on the sidelines for long. In the meantime, small micro-haulers are carving out a niche in cities across the East Coast, South, and Mid-West.

Community Composters around the U.S.

Community Composters around the U.S.

The Institute of Local Self Reliance (ILSR) has been an instrumental part of the composting movement with their “Composting For Community” Podcast, and the organization of webinars and conferences to bring the nation’s decentralized composters together for sharing knowledge. One of ILSR’s feature writers, Neil Seldman, has been a force in his activism and criticism against Big Waste for years. Mr. Seldman’s article in December of 2018, “Monopoly and the U.S. Waste Knot” inspired O-Town Compost’s founder to look differently at the waste industry he was part of and at current U.S. recycling practices. Ultimately, recycling has suffered since the introduction of single stream, which was a recycling program talked up by large waste haulers looking to vertically integrate their collection systems. If you’re interested in making the greatest environmental impact, diverting food waste is the clear winner over standard recycling. Thus, O-Town Compost was born with food waste in mind, and the wind at our backs. Seemingly, there is unimaginable potential to repair Orlando’s eco-system and shift away from landfill waste management in Orange County, FL.

O-Town Compost Comes To East Orlando

O-Town Compost Comes To East Orlando

Shockingly, Americans waste about a pound of food per day, meaning that the average household generates around four pounds per day. O-Town Compost’s mission is to provide Orlando with a solution to this problem in their Residential/Small Office Service. It’s a convenient way for busy people to do the right thing while not taking any additional time out of their day. Just like Trash and Recycling Day, you have O-Town Compost Day, where we’ll come swap out your bucket for a clean one, and take your food waste back to be turned into finished compost. Don’t feel bad anymore if you want to throw out grandma’s casserole!