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The National Recycling Coalition (NRC) announced the recipients of the 2025 National Recycling Awards during the National Recycling Congress, at Wichita State University, held October 1-3, 2025. The ceremony, led by Peter Adrian, of the Solid Waste Agency of Lake County (SWALCO), celebrated the most forward-thinking and impactful leaders, organizations, and programs advancing recycling, organics management, and circularity across the nation.

This year marked a milestone for the NRC Awards Program, with more than 60 nominations鈥攖he highest number in NRC history. The breadth and creativity of this year鈥檚 nominees reflected a national surge of innovation in waste reduction, resource recovery, and community engagement.

Awards Chair Ann Gibbs commented, 鈥淭he quality of nominations this year was truly exceptional. We saw an incredible range of creative, practical, and replicable solutions that are transforming recycling and circularity nationwide. Choosing the winners was both inspiring and incredibly difficult because the work being done across the country is so strong and diverse.鈥

Peter Adrian, who served as the emcee for the in-person ceremony, echoed that enthusiasm. 鈥淚t was energizing to see so many leaders gathered to celebrate real progress,鈥 Adrian said. 鈥淭hese awardees aren鈥檛 just maintaining recycling programs, they鈥檙e reinventing them. They鈥檙e turning food waste into renewable energy, building equitable, community-led systems, and proving that circularity isn鈥檛 just a goal, it鈥檚 the future of sustainable development.鈥

This year鈥檚 winners represent a remarkable breadth of creativity and measurable impact in advancing a circular economy. Domtar鈥檚 Kingsport Mill was recognized for transforming into Tennessee鈥檚 largest 100% recycled containerboard facility鈥攁 model of industrial-scale circularity that diverts hundreds of thousands of tons of recovered fiber annually. Green Era, located on Chicago鈥檚 South Side, was honored for its pioneering urban anaerobic digester that converts 85,000 tons of food waste into renewable natural gas and compost while reinvesting in local jobs and workforce training.

Educational leaders also shined: Santa Monica College鈥檚 Sustainable Materials Management Program and Salinas Valley Recycles are preparing the next generation of zero-waste champions through immersive, bilingual education that equips students to lead sustainable change. earthday365 continues to elevate regional circularity in St. Louis, diverting over 6,700 tons of waste each year through restaurant certification, hard-to-recycle events, and community engagement.

Osceola County鈥檚 Responsible Recycling Osceola Program earned national praise for its multilingual outreach, glass pulverizer demonstrations, and creative school partnerships that have reached over 40,000 residents. The program鈥檚 success in reducing contamination and inspiring community pride has positioned it as a scalable model for equitable, hands-on recycling education.

For advancing state-level recycling policy and waste reduction, Senator Jana Hughes was highlighted for her leadership on introducing legislation to support battery stewardship and waste incentives.聽 She plays a critical role in policy frameworks in enabling circular systems.

Finally, the prestigious Lifetime Achievement in Recycling Award was presented to Susan Kinsella, Executive Director of Conservatree and founder of the Environmental Paper Network. Kinsella鈥檚 decades of leadership in sustainable paper and procurement have shaped national policy, jumpstarted recycled paper markets, and united more than 250 organizations around the world in advancing responsible production and reuse. Her work exemplifies the long-term vision and collaboration at the heart of the recycling movement.

  • Lifetime Achievement in Recycling 鈥 Susan Kinsella 鈥 Executive Director of Conservatree and founder of the Environmental Paper Network, whose decades of leadership transformed recycled paper markets and sustainable procurement worldwide.
  • Honorable Mention 鈥 Lifetime Achievement in Recycling 鈥 Diane Cohen 鈥 Founder of Finger Lakes ReUse, a national leader in reuse innovation, job creation, and workforce development.
  • Board Director of the Year 鈥 Teresa Bradley 鈥 Recognized for outstanding leadership,聽 contributions, and dedication to advancing circularity and NRC鈥檚 mission.
  • Recycler of the Year 鈥 Lisa Puckett 鈥 CEO of BayArea Compliance, creator of the NETZERO360 program, and national leader in waste recovery and ESG-integrated compliance systems.
  • Bill Heenan Emerging Leader Award 鈥 Delaney Demro 鈥 Program Manager at SUNY ESF鈥檚 Center for Sustainable Materials Management, advancing TRUE Zero Waste certification and DEI-focused reuse initiatives.
  • Outstanding Higher Education Program 鈥 Sustainable Materials Management Program at Santa Monica College (accepted by Victoria Charles) 鈥 A pioneering community college program offering degrees and certificates in zero waste and sustainable materials management, building a vital workforce pipeline for the circular economy.
  • Outstanding K鈥12 School Program 鈥 Salinas Valley Recycles (accepted by Sara Papineau-Brandt) 鈥 Inspiring youth through field trips, classroom lessons, and Green Teams that teach recycling, composting, and environmental leadership across Monterey County, CA.
  • Outstanding Not-for-Profit Business Leadership 鈥 earthday365 (accepted by Jessica Watson) 鈥 Drives regional circularity in St. Louis through large-scale public engagement, restaurant certification, and waste reduction programs that divert 6,700+ tons annually.
  • The Fred Schmitt Award for Outstanding Corporate Leadership 鈥 Domtar Kingsport Packaging Mill (accepted by Jan Martin) 鈥 Tennessee鈥檚 largest 100% recycled containerboard facility, demonstrating industrial-scale circularity through recovered fiber, water efficiency, and local partnerships
  • The Beth Brown Boettner Award for Outstanding Public Education & Outreach 鈥 Osceola County鈥檚 Responsible Recycling Osceola (accepted by Paul Conover & Nicole Enverga) 鈥 A creative, multilingual education initiative engaging more than 40,000 residents through demonstrations, school partnerships, and art contests.
  • Outstanding Recycling Innovation 鈥 Green Era (Chicago, IL) 鈥 Operates the nation鈥檚 first large-scale urban anaerobic digester, turning 85,000 tons of food waste into renewable energy and compost while reinvesting in workforce training.
  • Outstanding Recycling Organization 鈥 Oklahoma Recycling Association聽 (accepted by Jerry Schuber) 鈥 Celebrated for three decades of education, outreach, and collaboration that advance recycling across Oklahoma.
  • The Tim McClure Award for Outstanding Community or Government Program 鈥 Pennsylvania Resources Council鈥檚 Glass Recycling Program (accepted by Sarah Alessio Shea) 鈥 Developed community-based glass recycling infrastructure, diverting over 4,200 tons of glass and supporting local jobs.
  • Outstanding Elected Leader 鈥 Nebraska State Senator Jana Hughes 鈥 Championed the Safe Battery Collection and Recycling Act and other initiatives strengthening Nebraska鈥檚 recycling and waste management systems.
  • Outstanding Diversity Leadership 鈥 Terry Craghead (Fertile Ground Cooperative) 鈥 Founded a worker-owned cooperative that transforms waste into community wealth while advancing equity and inclusion in Oklahoma City.
HONORABLE MENTIONS:聽
    • Outstanding Not-for-Profit Business Leadership 鈥 Servolution Network 鈥 Diverts over 50,000 pounds of household hazardous waste annually by turning collected paint into 鈥淩e-Mix鈥 paint for community restoration projects.
    • The Beth Brown Boettner Award for Outstanding Public Education & Outreach 鈥 鈥淕ive a Hoot! Donate Your Loot!鈥 Move-Out Campaign (Rice University) 鈥 Diverted over 29,000 pounds of materials from landfills by repurposing student move-out donations for reuse and recycling.
    • Outstanding Recycling Organization 鈥 Nebraska Recycling Council (Kimberly Carroll Steward, Executive Director) 鈥 Supports over 60 communities by improving recycling infrastructure and reducing contamination across Nebraska.
    • Bill Heenan Emerging Leader Award 鈥 Mrinali Kakamare and Nora Gerber 鈥 Mrinali expanded recycling across North Carolina correctional facilities, while Nora grew the Can Fairy program to divert 44,000 pounds of aluminum in Columbus, OH.
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