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Jefferson County residents may drop off storm tree debris for free at the Storm Debris Drop-Off Sites listed below. This free service is for Jefferson County residents only, and residents will be asked to show driver’s license and their license plate will be documented.
Eight sites have been made available to accommodate initial demand. However, site participation/demand will be monitored daily to determine whether a given site should continue to stay open. Any site determined to be closed due to low demand will be communicated to our residents through our website, social media, and our e-newsletter.
All sites open Monday - Friday 2 p.m. - 7 p.m., Saturday 9 a.m. - 7 p.m. Closed Sundays.
- Shawnee Park, 4501 West Broadway
- Waste Reduction Center, 636 Meriwether Avenue
- Public Works Yard, 595 N. Hubbards Lane
- E.P. Tom Sawyer Park, (enter from Tom Sawyer Drive near the softball fields)
- Charlie Vettiner Park, (enter from Mary Dell Road)
- Fern Creek Park, 8703 Ferndale Road
- Near Fairdale Elementary, 10618 West Manslick Road
- Public Works Yard, 10500 Lower River Road (enter from Bethany Lane)
Contractors and businesses who are hauling debris may use the Waste Reduction Center for the usual fee. Visit Louisvilleky.gov/WRC for details.
Visit their website at louisvilleky.gov/government/public-works, like them on Facebook facebook.com/LouPubWorks, or follow them on Twitter @LouPubWorks.
Trash for Cash is a state program that helps ensure roadways around Louisville are kept clean while raising money for local community-serving non-profits!
If you are a 501(c)3 non-profit, we will work with you to find a roadway that needs attention--and in return for each mile cleaned, the non-profit will earn $100!
Apply online here to start the process. https://louisvilleky.gov/government/brightside/trash-cash
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Get directly involved in making Louisville a more litter-free community through the Report-A-Litterer program aimed at motorists who throw fast-food wrappers, cigarette butts, soda bottles or any type of litter out their car window. |
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Metro Public Works' Roads & Operations crews is continuing the 2024 Pothole Blitz season, which features eleven teams deployed every day throughout Metro Louisville to keep the roads in safe condition.
Metro makes pothole repairs year-round, averaging some 40,000 potholes per year. So far this year, Public Works has repaired more than 23,000 potholes, including those filled in the annual Blitz, a concentrated effort that began in March.
Residents have three ways to report a pothole:
Visit their website at louisvilleky.gov/government/public-works, like them on Facebook facebook.com/LouPubWorks, or follow them on Twitter @LouPubWorks.
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