- Joined
- Jul 10, 2022
- Messages
- 3,655
When I lived in NYS, through 1999, it was simple, because it was the law.
But here in Phila. metro?
I work in NJ so one day I decided I'll just return it after work. Place after place rejected me.
Maybe this is a loophole: "My tank is full, I can't take it." Meanwhile people are pulling in for oil changes.
That day I went to a random garage in PA--the guy wasn't all that happy but took it. Other places in PA say the same thing, "Tank is full."
It's really a shame imho--2 of our cars take 5 quarts, one 6.8. That's not a lot of oil to refuse. Recycling is as basic as being responsible imho. A homeowner DIY has no other means and I think people who sell it should take it back for disposal.
But here in Phila. metro?
I work in NJ so one day I decided I'll just return it after work. Place after place rejected me.
Maybe this is a loophole: "My tank is full, I can't take it." Meanwhile people are pulling in for oil changes.
That day I went to a random garage in PA--the guy wasn't all that happy but took it. Other places in PA say the same thing, "Tank is full."
It's really a shame imho--2 of our cars take 5 quarts, one 6.8. That's not a lot of oil to refuse. Recycling is as basic as being responsible imho. A homeowner DIY has no other means and I think people who sell it should take it back for disposal.