Resource Library
- Signage
- View Downloads
- Download Pleasanton Commercial Guide (5.27 MB)
- Download Pleasanton Decals (1.16 MB)
- Download Pleasanton Multifamily Guide (8.19 MB)
- Download Pleasanton Posters (701.86 KB)
- View Downloads
- News | 11/14/2016
With the passage of Proposition 67, California became the first state in the nation to enact a state law to ban plastic shopping bags. The passage of Proposition 67 does not change the implementation of the expanded reusable bag ordinance in Alameda County.
Read More - News
The Alameda County Waste Management Authority approved an expanded reusable bag ordinance for Alameda County. The expanded ordinance will apply to all stores and restaurants in the county, and will go into effect on May 1, 2017 for retail stores and November 1, 2017 for restaurants.
Read More - News | 08/25/2016
StopWaste programs to reduce food waste in commercial kitchens and Alameda County schools were recently profiled in BioCycle magazine.
Read More - News | 05/26/2016
Eight businesses were selected for their leadership in reducing waste and increasing efficiency.
Read More - News | 03/14/2016
An article in the March 11, 2016 Oakland Tribune reports on how packaging, labeling, and programmatic differences have led to confusion amongst Bay Area consumers who want to do the "right thing" with their recyclables.
Read More - Success Stories
Learn how the City of Pleasanton used sheet mulch to convert a lawn along Main Street to a Bay-Friendly landscape that is saving as much as 384,000 gallons of water annually. Sheet mulching the lawn instead of excavating it kept 16.5 tons of turf out of the landfill. The new no-mow landscape looks great, costs less to maintain, and provides bird and pollinator habitat and other benefits.
Read More - Brochures
A one page flyer that shows the process of how our food scraps are turned into compost.
- News | 09/24/2014
Heeding the Governor's call to cut back on water use, in June the city of Pleasanton replaced the lawn around its administration buildings with new landscaping designed to reduce water consumption by as much as 93 percent.
Read More