On a national scale, total building-related construction and demolition (C&D) waste is estimated to be 135.5 million tons — a figure that represents, at 30 percent, the largest single source in the waste stream. How much do your building projects impact these numbers? Consider the following: Because the environmental consequences of C&D debris are staggering, a number of construction and development firms, industry organizations, and government agencies are advocating C&D waste reduction and recycling programs. The Massachusetts Construction and Demolition Materials Waste Ban is one, where the Massachusetts Department of Environmental Protection (MassDEP) regulates the disposal, transfer for disposal, or contracting for disposal of certain hazardous and recyclable items at solid-waste facilities in the state. An amendment to the ban, which took effect in mid-2006, now prohibits other commonly used construction and demolition materials (asphalt pavement, brick, concrete, metal, and wood). Be prepared, as these regulations are being touted as models for other states. Better yet, take a proactive role — as Milford, MA-based Consigli Construction Co. Inc. has done since 2001, when it worked with MassDEP and Northeastern University in a voluntary pilot study to help determine the realities and possibilities of construction-waste recycling. In 2002, Consigli instituted (and continues to refine) a mandatory source-separation policy for all of its jobsites, followed by a company-wide source separation and recycling program. Since this initiative began, Consigli's overall waste-reduction rate is more than 79 percent (89.5 percent for 2007 alone), with some projects achieving even greater results (its recently completed Harvard Blackstone Office renovation project, for instance, attained a 99.5-percent waste-reduction rate). These regulations affect the construction industry as a whole, but they're not actually being directly imposed on contractors, says Vance Freymann, director of business development at Consigli; rather, MassDEP is monitoring the process among waste haulers, landfills, and transfer stations. Why participate? According to Freymann, jobsite waste reduction and diversion of materials from the landfill can offer a cost-neutral benefit for the developer/owner/builder. "I don't want to represent that there's significant savings in doing this," he says. "What is accurate is that on-site C&D waste management and recycling do not cost additional money. At the same time, there has been very good buy-in from owners looking for actionable green processes and ways to obtain LEED points." Freymann offers the following steps for putting your C&D waste-management and recycling programs into place: Linda K. Monroe ([email protected]) is editorial director at Buildings magazine.