New Eyes For The Needy

Category : Household

New Eyes for the Needy purchases new eyeglasses for poor children and adults in the United States and recycles donated glasses for distribution to indigent people in developing nations worldwide.

Next time you get a new pair of glasses be sure to recycle your old ones. Maybe you even have a few old pairs lingering around your house for those just in case moments, but really, when was the last time you used them? 1 year or more ago? If so, it is time to donate them so that someone in need can use them – AND it keeps them out of the landfill!

Mail or ship your contributions to New Eyes in padded envelopes or boxes using the least expensive method of shipping (the cost of shipping is tax-deductible) to:

New Eyes for the Needy
549 Millburn Avenue
PO Box 332
Short Hills, NJ 07078

Reynolds Wrap 100% Recycled Aluminum Foil

Category : Food & Beverages, Household

Reynolds Wrap has come out with a 100% Recycled Aluminum Foil! I love seeing large corporations making strides to “green” their products.
The foil is made from a mix of post-consumer and industrial aluminum. The package and core are also made of recycled materials. Suggested retail price is $2.99 and can easily be found in your local supermarket.

Recycled PVC For Freeways & Railways

Category : Travel

 

In addition to noise corridors, recycled plastic is also being used to replace old wooden rail ties. Photo: sxc.hu

 

I’m not a huge fan of plastic as it is not a natural product and has been known to emit toxins ,but I do believe that we should utilize the plastic that we already have and recycle it for other uses rather than tossing it in our landfills where it will sit for hundreds or thousands of years.  I’m happy to hear that there are such great uses for PVC and I hope the idea of recycling it for use in freeways and railways catches on.  The article below states that using PVC in our transportation infrastructure costs 1/3 of the price of the concrete version of the same thing!

by Lori Brown

With the federal stimulus plan allowing for more highway and railway infrastructure improvements to be made, the need for project resources will inevitably increase as well.

Becoming more common is the use of recycled plastics in construction of these large-scale infrastructure projects.

Polyvinyl chloride (PVC), or plastic #3, is a thermoplastic polymer of vinyl chloride commonly used in piping for water systems and other construction processes.  The additives used in the production of PVC inhibit most large-scale, post-consumer recycling, a factor contributing to a national recycling rate of only one quarter of one percent!

Read the full article

Free Green Can at the Taste of Chicago

Category : Fun Things To Do

I just received a note from Free Green Can, as I recently blogged about how great they are.  The facts are amazing…I was very happy when I first saw their cans in the park for The Taste of Chicago – hopefully we’ll continue to see them around town!

“Free Green Can has donated 65 of their huge dual trash and recycling
bins to the Taste, to take care of the 450 tons of waste that the 3.5
million Taste goers are expected to generate. The cans have two
30-gallon drums for both traditional trash and recyclable materials.
They’ve been specifically engineered to increase recycling by
eliminating an extra step that can often be the difference in a person’s
decision to recycle. Despite the massive amount of waste that people
generate outside of their home – as the Taste is an extreme example of -
very little out of home waste is recycled. The numbers are staggering in
this area, and we believe out of home recycling is the next battlefield
in the overall recycling movement – an often forgotten frontier among
environmentalists. We believe the Taste of Chicago is a perfect example
of the massive difference a quality recycling program can make on behalf
of the environment.”

Spread the word about Free Green Can and encourage people to work with them for neighborhood events, local ball-parks, etc.!

Recycle Caps With Aveda

Category : Household

I love Aveda’s new program for recycling rigid plastic caps.  Most areas don’t recycle #5 plastics (fortunately Chicago now does!) so here is a great alternative for those of you who would otherwise would be forced to put them in our ever growing landfills.

RECYCLE CAPS WITH AVEDA

Aveda found that a majority of plastic bottle caps do not get recycled today.

Often these caps end up as litter or trash, ending up in landfills and beaches or migrating into our rivers and oceans. Birds and other marine creatures mistake them for food with tragic results. The magnitude of this pollution problem is devastating to our oceans and wildlife.

You can be part of the solution by joining Recycle Caps with Aveda.

Aveda is announcing a new recycling initiative that helps extend the current boundaries of recycling and elicit participation from all corners of our community. With the help of our network of salons and stores, in partnership with community schools, we are building a new recycling program for plastic bottle caps in which caps are collected at stores and schools and then sent by Aveda to our recycler where the material is recycled into new caps and containers. Aveda has been able to work closely with our suppliers to develop ways to make new caps and containers from the recycled caps. We hope to ship new products using this reworked, environmentally-friendly material later this year.

What type of caps do we collect?

The program accepts caps that are rigid polypropylene plastic, sometimes noted with a 5 in the chasing arrows recycling symbol. This includes caps that twist on with a threaded neck such as caps on shampoo, water, soda, milk and other beverage bottles, flip top caps on tubes and food product bottles (such as ketchup and mayonnaise), laundry detergents and some jar lids such as peanut butter.

Excluded from collection are pharmaceutical lids and non rigid lids such as yogurt lids, tub lids (margarine, cottage cheese), and screw on lids that are not rigid. If you can bend or break the lid with your bare hands, then it does not meet the rigid plastic definition. Please do not include any metal lids or plastic pumps or sprayers. Unfortunately, too much of the wrong types of materials can contaminate the recycling process. We appreciate your efforts in keeping it clean!

We kicked the cap out of plastic at

New York Fashion Week Spring/Summer 2009

Fashion Week Spring/Summer 2009 marked the official kick-off of Aveda’s Caps Recycling Program—our powerful grassroots effort to help save marine life by reducing the amount of caps littering our beaches and oceans. Models, stylists and designers backstage participated in the program—bringing in their plastic caps to Rodarte, 3.1 Phillip Lim, Preen and Alexander Wang—Aveda’s designer partners in “green-ing” the runways.

Join the Recycle Caps with Aveda campaign. Bring your plastic caps into an Aveda Store and feel great knowing that they will be repurposed into new Aveda packaging and kept from entering our waterways and harming wildlife.

Want to know how your school can get involved?
Contact capcollection@aveda.com when you are ready to enroll your school.

Mandatory Recycling & Composting Ordinance – San Francisco

1

Category : Food & Beverages, Household

On Tuesday San Francisco passed an ordinance to help realize their goal of zero waste by 2020.  I love how progressive San Fran is and which Chicago would adopt the same ordinance.

 

Press Release from the City of San Francisco

Mayor Newsom Signs Mandatory Recycling and Composting Ordinance

Measure is Key to Reaching 75% Landfill Diversion

06/23/09 – Mayor Gavin Newsom today signed mandatory recycling legislation requiring residential and commercial building owners to sign up for recycling and composting services.

Mayor Newsom’s ordinance will require all residences and businesses in San Francisco to take advantage of the city’s recycling and composting collection programs. While several other cities require recycling service and participation, San Francisco is the first city to require the collection of food scraps and other compostables. Refuse collection has been mandatory since the 1930s.

“San Francisco has the best recycling and composting programs in the nation, and we’ve already attained an impressive, and first in the nation, 72 percent recycling rate because of them,” said Mayor Newsom. “I am pleased with the leadership the Board of Supervisors has demonstrated on this important legislation. By collaborating with all of our stakeholders, businesses, colleagues, and citizens, we can build on our success and continue to lead the nation in recycling.”

A comprehensive study conducted by the Department of the Environment found that 36 percent of what San Francisco sends to landfills is compostable, primarily food scraps, and 31 percent is recyclable—which is mostly paper. There are facilities in the City and surrounding areas that reuse, recycle, compost or otherwise process and market most materials discarded in San Francisco, saving this material from landfill and creating green-collar jobs.

Newsom said a primary goal of the mandatory recycling ordinance, which was co-sponsored by Supervisors Ross Mirkarimi and Chris Daly, is to get recycling and composting happening in buildings where it is not currently provided.

According to the San Francisco Department of the Environment, if all of the recyclable and compostable materials currently going to landfills were captured by the city’s programs, San Francisco’s recycling rate would soar from 72 percent to 90 percent.

No fines are specified in the ordinance, but there is a cap of $100 established for residences and businesses that generate less than one cubic yard of refuse per week, which is the equivalent of six 32-gallon carts. Fines higher than $100 may still apply to businesses and to landlords of large apartment buildings who refuse to offer recycling and composting opportunities to tenants when feasible.

Newsom said that cities with mandatory recycling and fines, such as Seattle, rarely assess such fines. He stressed that fines serve primarily to heighten public awareness and encourage compliance.

Free Green Can – Chicago

1

Category : Household

Yesterday I highlighted the fact that the City of Chicago is going to use Free Green Can at summer festivals.  I think Free Green Can is such an amazing idea that I wanted to share more info with you.  I personally would love to see them have one of these at every other corner on major streets.  Chicago is a clean city but there is always room for improvement.  I am always picking up trash from in front of my house but I would imagine that if there was a recycle bin/trash bin every couple or few blocks people would be more inclined to use them rather than tossing their things on the ground.

Here’s a little info I grabbed from their site but be sure to click on their logo above to be directed directly to them for all of the information.

The Birth of the Free Green Can

In the summer of 2008 Steve Holland the Founder of the free green can, attended his 11-year-old son’s baseball game at a local park. Like most parents, he was prepared with water bottles. As he finished the water he asked his son to throw the plastic bottle in a recycling bin. His son ran past many over flowing garbage cans (which were filled with plastic bottles and paper cups) and reached one recycling bin which was also over flowing. He returned and asked his father, “Why are there more garbage cans then recycling bins?” Mr. Holland thought his son had a great question. Later that month, Mr. Holland attended a local city meeting and asked why there was a lack of recycling bins and so many garbage cans at the baseball park. He was told that the city couldn’t afford the recycling bins. As the meeting continued Mr. Holland sketched the first dual purpose recycle/trash bin with panels for environmentally responsible companies to support a recycling program. Thus the free green can was born.

About the Free Green Can

The purpose of the free green can is always to provide a recycling opportunity where there is a trash opportunity. This gives the public the option to help the environment with very little effort on their part. There is no need to walk an additional couple feet to find a stand alone recycling bin. The free green can is a dual purpose recycle/trash container. The free green can:

  • has two separate and easy to remove 30+ gallon insert liners. One for recyclables (plastic, aluminum, paper, and glass) and the other for trash.
  • is easy to install by using four grass or concrete anchors.
  • is very durable and built to stand up to the environment.
  • has a lifetime guarantee.
  • has a specially designed top to keep weather elements from entering and/or filling the free green can.
  • has a unique design that compliments both modern and historical settings.

Free Green Can and the Environment

In one year the free green can, will help the environment by potentially collecting:

7,280     9 FL. Oz. Plastic Bottles      =    43,680  hours of lights for a 60 watt light bulb

11,180   12 FL. Oz. Aluminum Cans =    33,540  hours of energy to run a T.V.

5,512     16 FL. Oz. Glass Bottles     =    22,048  hours of light for a 100 watt light bulb

5,668     1/2″ thick Newspapers         =    57 trees spared

 

Free Green Can and the Public

On the Go Recycling…..

  • With consumers spending less time at home, 40% of waste is generated OUTSIDE of the home.
  • 77% of the US population recycles at home
  • Only 32.5% of total waste is recycled

                    United States Environmental Protection Agency Recycle Data

The free green can gives the public an opportunity to do the environmentally responsible thing. It is important to give the public the opportunity to recycle as often as possible and with little effort. The free green can also conditions our youth at any early age to recycle outside of the home. With a recycling opportunity being so available by using the free green can it creates a natural public peer pressure to recycle.


Turning trash into cash – Chicago

Category : Household

This is really cool – I hope it catches on and is a huge success!  Free Green Can is a brilliant idea!

June 19, 2009

 

BY FRAN SPIELMAN City Hall Reporter fspielman@suntimes.com

Chicago already has more than 2,000 bus shelters and sidewalk billboards that carry advertising and generate sorely needed revenue.

How about ad-bearing recycling bins?

City Hall has given Aurora-based Free Green Can the go-ahead to install its free recycling containers at city festivals this summer to test a concept already in place in downtown Oswego and at the Schaumburg Flyers stadium.

Chief Environmental Officer Sadhu Johnston disclosed the summer test after company officials were seen wheeling one of the ad-bearing containers into Johnston’s City Hall office earlier this week.

“It’s intriguing. All good ideas are intriguing,” he said, refusing to reveal the city’s potential share of ad revenue.

Read the whole story: Chicago Sun-Times


Save 163,000 Trees!

Category : Beauty, Household

[from the April 2006 issue of Vegetarian Times]

All you have to do is a replace one box of your regular facial tissues with a box of 100 percent recycled ones.  If every household in America did that, 163,000 trees would be saved.  Making it easy is the Natural Resources Defense Council, which has put together a handy wallet-size card of which brands of paper products (paper towels to toilet paper) are a boon to the environment.  Download the card!

I know the recycled stuff isn’t as soft as the virgin tissues.  I admit that when I’m sick I will occasionally break down and buy a nice soft box of tissues but that is typically just once a year so I don’t feel too badly about it considering all year long I only purchase recycled tissues.  Hopefully they’ll continue making progress with creating softer recycled tissues so I won’t need to do cheat once a year!

Tell tissue manufacturers to stop using virgin wood for throwaway products. [from the Natural Resources Defense Council website]
If a brand you buy for your home doesn’t have any recycled content, contact the manufacturer (click hereto send a message to paper giant Kimberly-Clark). Tell the company to use more recycled fibers, to avoid sourcing from ecologically valuable forests such as those in the Cumberland Plateau and Canadian boreal, and to ensure any virgin fibers used are certified by the Forest Stewardship Council. Saving forests also helps reduce global warming pollution.

Big Green Lies

Category : Food & Beverages, Household

Are cloth diapers better than disposables? Should a pollution alert be issued for your kitchen? Do hybrids really save energy? These and other green questions will be answered SATURDAY afternoon when Seventh Generation President Jeffrey Hollender hosts Big Green Lies, a new television special on Fine Living Network Saturday, June 6 at 1 p.m..

Big Green Lies is a fun, hip, compelling and instructive green program that playfully explores the truths — and the falsehoods — behind several common Green Myths, such as cloth vs. disposable diapers, organic vs. non-organic foods, and hybrid cars vs. traditional models.

Watch a preview on YouTube.