Many banks, hospitals, lawyers' offices, accountants, and other offices that deal with very large amounts of confidential paperwork often pay for professional shredding services to come and take stuff by the ton to destroy for them.
In the right situation, an enterprising Papercreter might actually be able to set up a small business where one could make some money chopping up large amounts of paper by the ton.
You'd need to be able to respond to requests on the customer's timetable though. You won't win many customers over by responding, "I'll be over to pick it up in the late spring once construction season starts." You also won't be allowed to pick up the documents and hold them till you need to build something.
It probably makes sense for someone that is planning on making lots of blocks, and has an indoor area where they can mix papercrete and make blocks year round.
--- In papercreters@yahoogroups.com, Ion Gorun <gorunweb@...> wrote:
>
> Banks have to shred all paper they thorw away.
>
> Furniture stores throw away tons of cardboard.
>
>
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Saturday, July 20, 2013
[papercreters] Re: Getting free paper. The collector's encyclopedia.
at 8:17 AM