Kent County Department of Public Works, operating out of Grand Rapids, Michigan, received a $50,000 grant from the Foodservice Packaging Institute’s Foam Recycling Coalition (FRC). The grant enables businesses and over 250,000 households in the county and the neighboring six counties to recycle materials such as foam polystyrene (PS) cups, plates, bowls, take-out containers, egg cartons and block packaging foam.
The FRC grant assisted with funding the purchase and installation of a foam densifier, used to compact foam products into foam blocks or ingots. Kent County DPW will sell the foam ingots to Atlas Molded Products, in Byron Center, Michigan, to be manufactured into thermal insulation panels for foundations, walls and roofs, as well as converted into styrene resins commonly used to make picture frames and crown molding.
Residents and businesses can take their used polystyrene foam to the new North Kent Waste and Recycling Facility at 2908 Ten Mile Road NE in Rockford, Michigan. The facility accepts single stream recycling, old corrugated cardboard (OCC), scrap metal, vinyl siding and household hazardous waste as well as hard-to-recycle materials. There is no charge for using the residential recycling drop-off stations, including the polystyrene foam drop-off.
“Kent County is expanding foam polystyrene recycling access to a large population of West Michigan, and we are proud to be a part of that effort,” said Natha Dempsey, president of the Foodservice Packaging Institute. “The county’s facilities and programs exemplify the regional impact one county can make.”
The grant is made possible through contributions to FRC, which focuses exclusively on increased recycling of post-consumer foam polystyrene. Its members include Americas Styrenics; Chick-fil-A; CKF Inc.; Dart Container Corp.; Dyne-A-Pak; Genpak; INEOS Styrolution America LLC; Novolex; and Republic Plastics.
Kent County is the 38th grant recipient to receive FRC funding since 2015. Over 14 million additional residents in the U.S. and Canada can recycle foam polystyrene because of FRC grants.
Published December 2025







