The problem is not a lack of information.
The problem is that disposal information is spread across city pages, county programs, trash-hauler websites, facility notices, and business listings. Rules can differ by material, city, load size, and whether you are a resident or contractor.
That fragmentation makes a simple cleanup job harder than it should be. It can also lead to wasted trips, illegal dumping, and recyclable material going to a landfill.
What we are building
Start with the thing in front of you, not government terminology.
Understand the likely route and what to verify before leaving.
See where the information came from and when it was reviewed.
Starting local
The first coverage area is Riverside County, California. The current directory focuses on common household and job-site materials, with visible source links and verification notes.
WasteWayfinder does not operate disposal facilities and is not a government agency. We organize public information and point visitors to the original source for final confirmation.
The long-term idea
We want the site to become a practical layer between residents, contractors, local agencies, haulers, recyclers, and reuse organizations—making the best available next step easier to find.