We currently do not landfill glass. We currently grind it, actually, and use it as an aggregate material. You don't get anything for that. It actually costs money to dispose of that recyclable at this time.
What happens in the recyclable industry is that things change. The economic benefit of utilizing these materials for other means sometimes happens because you have it, and somebody knows you have it, and they would like to build a business case to utilize that material for the remanufacturing of some other component. That has happened. Even in our small community here in Prince Edward Island, we had one recycler that was using silage wrap. For those who may not be familiar with that, it is a wrap used for agricultural silage and it's a plastic that, for the most part, is non-recyclable. The recycler was using it to make plastic lumber by mixing it with other plastics to produce a reusable product. That plastic was then used to fence in the cattle that were using the silage wrap.
Things like that do happen if you have enough material on hand to do that.