Home-bound Recyclers Stay Strong, Boost Revenues for Old Cardboard
Linda G. Weimer • July 7, 2020

The suffering endured on the Eastern Shore due to the covid-19 pandemic has included economic pain. But, as many businesses closed or made irksome changes, one enterprise gave signs of health — residential recycling.
From Betterton in the north down to Caroline County, Shore residents kept up their environmentally-helpful habits and gave a boost to private and governmental recycling programs.
The major uptick came in collections of cardboard, up by 50 percent in one month for one operator.
“People are buying online stuff they used to go to a store for — everything, coffee beans, clothes, anything,” said Ford Schumann, director of Infinity Recycling, Inc. of Millington. His non-profit firm collects reusable discards for four towns — Chestertown and Betterton in Kent, Hillsboro in Caroline, and Queen Anne in Talbot. It also serves individual clients.
With many purchases arriving in boxes, there was more cardboard to set out in Infinity’s plastic totes. Schumann did not have precise figures on Infinity’s increase, but the Maryland Environmental Service (MES) did. That quasi-governmental agency, which operates 38 drop-off locations for recyclables in four mid-Shore counties, reported a 23 percent increase for April and a 50 percent increase in May for cardboard, compared to the same months in 2019.
The surge in collected cardboard came at an opportune time. With high demand by box manufacturers, the material’s value also jumped. Prices for OCC (trade term for old corrugated cardboard) rose 46 percent in May, the trade journal Resource Recycling reported in its May 19 online newsletter.
The ton of OCC that had earned $73 in April earned $107 in May, the journal said. Melissa Filiaggi, recycling manager for MES, reported the metal bins at Midshore Regional Recycling Program sites bulged with 185,860 pounds of cardboard in May, which produced 93 tons of the material. The sites are in Queen Anne’s, Caroline, Talbot, and Kent counties.
Ms. Filiaggi wrote in an email that “significantly risen prices” were a welcome upside to the challenges of the pandemic.
Infinity Recycling will also enjoy the higher revenues. Schumann said his firm’s modest volumes do not give it power to negotiate prices with commodity brokers, but that values are generally standard across the industry.
“We’ll see that increase,” said Jennifer Stafford, Infinity’s office manager.
Across the Bay, there were similar reports.
Richard Bowen, manager of recycling and waste reduction for Anne Arundel County, said the weights of both cardboard and mixed papers increased about 5 percent in April and 6 percent in May over the previous year. This was especially good news for the county in view of the fact that the two products account for 48 percent of total collection weights. And, with most of Anne Arundel’s 165,000 single-family households contributing to curbside recycling, the uptick in revenues was meaningful.
All of Anne Arundel’s collections go to Recycle America in Elkridge, owned by the giant Waste Management, Inc. The recovery center usually charges the county $12 per ton for sorting, baling and transporting the end-products to the buyers. “With the higher prices for mixed papers and cardboard, we’ll pay only $9.56 per ton instead,” Bowen said.
The official added that the county never planned its volunteer recycling program as a profit-making venture. “But it is cheaper than the $45 per ton for disposal (in landfills). Plus there’s less wasted resources and less harm to the environment.”
Linda G. Weimer retired from fulltime news reporting in 2009 after three years with the Sun Media Group's suburban Baltimore weeklies. As a freelancer, her work has appeared in more than a dozen regional and national publications, including The Washington Post, Sierra Magazine, Seafood Leader, and The New York Times.
Common Sense for the Eastern Shore

The House Agriculture Committee recently voted, along party lines, to advance legislation that would cut as much as $300 million from the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program. SNAP is the nation’s most important anti-hunger program, helping more than 41 million people in the U.S. pay for food. With potential cuts this large, it helps to know who benefits from this program in Maryland, and who would lose this assistance. The Center on Budget and Policy Priorities compiled data on SNAP beneficiaries by congressional district, cited below, and produced the Maryland state datasheet , shown below. In Maryland, in 2023-24, 1 in 9 people lived in a household with SNAP benefits. In Maryland’s First Congressional District, in 2023-24: Almost 34,000 households used SNAP benefits. Of those households, 43% had at least one senior (over age 60). 29% of SNAP recipients were people of color. 15% were Black, non-Hispanic, higher than 11.8% nationally. 6% were Hispanic (19.4% nationally). There were 24,700 total veterans (ages 18-64). Of those, 2,200 lived in households that used SNAP benefits (9%). The CBPP SNAP datasheet for Maryland is below. See data from all the states and download factsheets here.

Apparently, some people think that the GOP’s “big beautiful bill” is a foregone conclusion, and that the struggle over the budget and Trump’s agenda is over and done. Not true. On Sunday night, the bill — given the alternate name “Big Bad Bullsh*t Bill” by the Democratic Women’s Caucus — was voted out of the House Budget Committee. The GOP plan is to pass this legislation in the House before Memorial Day. But that’s not the end of it. As Jessica Craven explained in her Chop Wood Carry Water column: “Remember, we have at least six weeks left in this process. The bill has to: Pass the House, Then head to the Senate where it will likely be rewritten almost completely, Then be passed there, Then be brought back to the House for reconciliation, And then, if the House changes that version at all, Go back to the Senate for another vote.” She adds, “Every step of that process is a place for us to kill it.” The bill is over a thousand pages long, and the American people will not get a chance to read it until it has passed the House. But, thanks to 5Calls , we know it includes:

The 447th legislative session of the Maryland General Assembly adjourned on April 8. This End of Session Report highlights the work Shore Progress has done to fight for working families and bring real results home to the Shore. Over the 90-day session, lawmakers debated 1,901 bills and passed 878 into law. Shore Progress and members supported legislation that delivers for the Eastern Shore, protecting our environment, expanding access to housing and healthcare, strengthening workers’ rights, and more. Shore Progress Supported Legislation By The Numbers: Over 60 pieces of our backed legislation were passed. Another 15 passed in one Chamber but not the other. Legislation details are below, past the budget section. The 2026 Maryland State Budget How We Got Here: Maryland’s budget problems didn’t start overnight. They began under Governor Larry Hogan. Governor Hogan expanded the state budget yearly but blocked the legislature from moving money around or making common-sense changes. Instead of fixing the structural issues, Hogan used federal covid relief funds to hide the cracks and drained our state’s savings from $5.5 billion to $2.3 billion to boost his image before leaving office. How Trump/Musk Made It Worse: Maryland is facing a new fiscal crisis driven by the Trump–Musk administration, whose trade wars, tariff policies, and deep federal cuts have hit us harder than most, costing the state over 30,000 jobs, shuttering offices, and erasing promised investments. A University of Maryland study estimates Trump’s tariffs alone could cost us $2 billion, and those federal cuts have already added $300 million to our budget deficit. Covid aid gave us a short-term boost and even created a fake surplus under Hogan, but that money is gone, while housing, healthcare, and college prices keep rising. The Trump–Musk White House is only making things worse by slashing funding, gutting services, and eliminating research that Marylanders rely on. How The State Budget Fixes These Issues: This year, Maryland faced a $3 billion budget gap, and the General Assembly fixed it with a smart mix of cuts and fair new revenue, while protecting working families, schools, and health care. The 2025 Budget cuts $1.9 billion ($400 million less than last year) without gutting services people rely on. The General Assembly raised $1.2 billion in fair new revenue, mostly from the wealthiest Marylanders. The Budget ended with a $350 million surplus, plus $2.4 billion saved in the Rainy Day Fund (more than 9% of general fund revenue), which came in $7 million above what the Spending Affordability Committee called for. The budget protects funding for our schools, health care, transit, and public workers. The budget delivers real wins: $800 million more annually for transit and infrastructure, plus $500 million for long-term transportation needs. It invests $9.7 billion in public schools and boosts local education aid by $572.5 million, a 7% increase. If current revenue trends hold, no new taxes will be needed next session. Even better, 94% of Marylanders will see a tax cut or no change, while only the wealthiest 5% will finally pay their fair share. The tax system is smarter now. We’re: Taxing IT and data services like Texas and D.C. do; Raising taxes on cannabis and sports betting, not groceries or medicine; and Letting counties adjust income taxes. The budget also restores critical funding: $122 million for teacher planning $15 million for cancer research $11 million for crime victims $7 million for local business zones, and Continued support for public TV, the arts, and BCCC The budget invests in People with disabilities, with $181 million in services Growing private-sector jobs with $139 million in funding, including $27.5 million for quantum tech, $16 million for the Sunny Day Fund, and $10 million for infrastructure loans. Health care is protected for 1.5 million Marylanders, with $15.6 billion for Medicaid and higher provider pay. Public safety is getting a boost too, with $60 million for victim services, $5.5 million for juvenile services, and $5 million for parole and probation staffing. This budget also tackles climate change with $100 million for clean energy and solar projects, and $200 million in potential ratepayer relief. Public workers get a well-deserved raise, with $200 million in salary increases, including a 1% COLA and ~2.5% raises for union workers. The ultra-wealthy will finally chip in to pay for it: People earning over $750,000 will pay more, Millionaires will pay 6.5%, and Capital gains over $350,000 get a 2% surcharge. Deductions are capped for high earners, but working families can still deduct student loans, medical debt, and donations. This budget is bold, fair, and built to last. That’s why Shore Progress proudly supports it. Click on the arrows below for details in each section.