Posts Tagged ‘recycling’

August is Recycle Your Computer Month.

Thursday, August 12th, 2010

When we started this business we each had our own printer.  Then we added a third for printing on alternative media.  But as time goes on, we have reduced our printing so much that we have decommissioned one printer and are preparing another for retirement.  I do have plenty of cables and my old laptop though, that are less than in good shape.  Luckily this is Recycle Your Computer Month in Cuyahoga County.  So join me in cleaning out that attic or office corner and getting rid of all those old mice, keyboards, printers, monitors  and computers that you always thought you would fix up.  They will recycle all th eparts they can and keep hazardous materials out of the landfill!

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Water, water, everywhere?

Sunday, June 27th, 2010

Cool things are happening in the area of sustainability when it comes to water.  First off, we have the Sustainability Summit group that has been continuously working on great ideas and initiatives since the summit ended.  Here is an update from their group:

Sustainable Water 2019

Let’s reconnect with our lake!  This is the main focus of the group.  whether through more enviro-friendly recreation, kicked bottled water to the curb, or supporting green building and stormwater management in the region, this group has a PASSION for making our watershed sustainable.

Born out of the Sustainable Cleveland 2019 Summit in August of 2009, the Sustainable Water group has ramped up awareness about the dangers of bottled water and the importance of protecting our watersheds.

passionate members include representatives from Green City Blue Lake, The Cleveland Museum of Natural History, Earthday Coalition leaders, local business leaders, and entrepreneurs.

The group celebrated World Water Day March 22nd with a parade and band in the rain down Euclid Avenue, handed out 1000 steel water bottes with local tap water at Earthfest with ” Drink Local. Drink Tap.” sponsored by the Division of Water Pollution Control.

We plan to have tables at events throughout the summer and will be building a boat for the Lake Erie Boat Float Sept 11th.

6-21-10—The Sustainable Water 2019 group has an exciting announcement: It will be adopted as a project of the Institute of Applied Phenomenology in Science and Technology, a think tank of practitioners and academicians with interests in organizational development associated with “everydayness”.Erin Huber, the 2019 group co-lead, works at the Institute. The group’s Drink Local. Drink Tap. Campaign – highlighting the vast clean water resource of Lake Erie – will be the focus of a behavioral change study. The group meets every other Friday morning at the Westside market Cafe from 7:30-9am.

Next meeting is 6/25 at 7:30

and 7/9 from 9:15-10:45 (note the time change)

Pleaes email Erin Huber at integrity692000@yahoo.com for more information or to RSVP for a meeting.  All are welcome.

In the spirit of connecting to the lake, and in the spirit of raising awareness of recycling and waste issues, comes the announcement of  the dates for the next annual Lake Erie Boat Float.  This event was organized as a way to raise awareness of the use of plastics and to help increase recycling.  The Great Lakes are an important natural resource that we rely on for social and economic reasons.  We need to care for it, and other major water bodies around the globe.  I wrote about the plastics floating around the oceans, and Lake Erie could be a potential hot spot for this kind of pollution.  Registration is free and all you have to do is make your boat out of recyclable plastics.  The site even has tips and videos on how to make a plastic bottle boat.  Even if you don’t make a boat, be sure to come out for the fun!  Here is the info:

Saturday, September 11, 2010
Boat Launch @ 9 a.m.
Lower Edgewater State Park Beach
Cleveland, Ohio

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Rethink Plastic Waste with E4S

Wednesday, June 2nd, 2010

Here is another great event from the E4S network:

RETHINK PLASTIC WASTE: CHALLENGES AND OPPORTUNITIES
Network Event
Zero Waste NEO Network Event

Date: Thursday, June 10, 2010
Time: 8:30 am to 11:00 am
register for this event
request a display table
Location: Trinity Commons, 2230 Euclid Avenue, Cleveland, Ohio 44115

Description:
Does your organization have a recycling program? Do you still find plastic in the trash? Join the Zero Waste NEO Network to connect with members of the recycling industry, learn from business leaders who have successfully implemented and maintained a recycling program, and set goals to reduce your own organization`s waste stream.

Featured panelists

Jim Galvin, President, Legacy Polymers
Joseph Hensel, Chairman, Polyflow
More TBA

Agenda
8:30 – 9:00 Networking
9:00 – 11:00 Program

Registration is Required: Click here to register online or call 216-451-7755

And here is more in the email that I received from E4s….
START-UP
New Design: E4S Start-Up Business Members Program
Member Roundtable
Wednesday, June 2, 2010 – 5:30pm to 7:30pm
E4S Connection and Learning Center
Price: E4S Start-up Members: Free; Start-up Non-members: $25
________________________________________

LOCAL FOOD
Growing the Market For Local Food
Local Food Cleveland Network Event
Monday, June 7, 2010 – 5:30pm to 7:30pm
Great Lakes Brewing Company Tasting Room
Price: Free
Whole Foods Market Cedar Center 5% Community Day
To Support Local Food Cleveland
Tuesday, June 8, 2010 – 8:00am to 9:00pm
Whole Foods Market Cedar Center

________________________________________

ZERO WASTE
Rethink Plastic Waste: Challenges and Opportunities
Zero Waste NEO Network Event
Thursday, June 10, 2010 – 8:30am to 11:00am
Trinity Commons
Price: E4S Members: Free, Non-members: $25
________________________________________

E4S THIRD TUESDAY
Sustainable Transportation @ Work
E4S Third Tuesday Network Event
Tuesday, June 15, 2010 – 5:30pm to 8:30pm
Great Lakes Brewing Company Tasting Room
Price: Free
________________________________________

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Reduce, reduce, reduce 10 steps toward zero.

Thursday, May 27th, 2010

In case you didn’t know, GLDC has expanding its branding and online social media services.  This week has added a series of new clients, and we have been busy around the office trying to get some of the work cleared out before the holiday weekend.  St the same time, I have been having multiple discussions surrounding reducing one’s waste.  It seemed like a great time to offer up a “classic” blog post that I published a while ago.

Zero waste. It sounds impossible. One problem that we encountered when addressing setting up the new office, was trash pickup. We found that as a commercial site, we couldn’t get Cleveland trash pickup. We didn’t really want a giant ugly dumpster on the property that would end up being much more than we needed. The solution: a zero waste office. It remains to be seen if it can really be done or not. We are already working on it for our home. Today is trash day, and for the second week in a row, we don’t have a bag of garbage to put out. But can that sort of curb on trash be translated to an office setting? That remains to be seen. In the meantime, here are 10 steps that everyone can try to work toward a zero waste life.

1. Cook at home. Home cooking means that you know what goes into your food. You can control portions and deal with the waste. Additionally, take out food comes in containers that are often hard to recycle and often end up in the trash; and even recyclers don’t want that pizza box.
2. Reduce. Buy products that have little or no packaging. Yes, it freaks out the cashier when you set a handful of tomatoes on the blet with no little plastic bag, but they will get over it. If you can, buy in bulk. If large packages don’t fit your lifestyle (how long will it take me to use 25 lbs of sugar?), you can visit bulk departments at the supermarket. Take along your own containers, and you effectively eliminate packaging all together. And don’t forget to bring along your reusable shopping tote and avoid the plastic bags!
3. Recycle. While recycling may not be available curbside, there are plenty of drop off spots. I have heard that you can even drop off Styrofoam at Heinan’s. When you make the effort to go zero waste, you start to see just what can be recycled, and what can’t. This will eventually impact your buying choices-a good thing.
4. Reuse. Why buy Tupperware when those margarine containers are perfectly reusable? I even started washing ziplock backs and reusing them. Yes, my partner laughs at me, but who cares? Before replacing that broken appliance, see if it can be repaired rather than thrown out.
5. Compost. Organic materials compost and make great food for your plants. The garden will be better off, and so will the planet.
6. Take your own cup for coffee. If you buy coffee on the go, add it up. Every coffee or latte usually has a cup, a lid, and often a gripper. Where does it go when you finish? Bring your own mug and reduce all that waste.
7. Skip bottled water. Plastic bottles are bad for the environment. Why recyclable, most are destined for the landfill, so skip them. There is plenty of new research out that says they leach chemicals into the water and lots of bottled water companies are just packaging tap water anyway. Invest in a good steel water bottle if you drink a lot.
8. Buy better stuff. Why many goods may be cheaper, buy products that are sure to last. If you don’t need them anymore, they can be donated. Antiques are around, because we used to value craftsmanship and quality. Buy goods that will last longer than you need them to and donate, reuse or give them away when you no longer need them.
9. Have a garage sale. They say that one man’s trash is another man’s treasure. You will be hugely surprised just how true that is if you have a garage sale. Put a price on something and people want it. You will find that even the stuff that charity shops don’t really want, you can sell at a garage sale for a couple of bucks.
10.Adopt the one in one out rule. We have a strict policy of not adding to our household. For every new item that comes into our home, another goes out. This system is perfect for us. We no longer amass things that we don’t need. If we get a new item of clothing or new coffee mug, then another has to go out. This keeps us getting rid of items while they are still usable and can be donated or shared, instead of waiting for 10 years when those jeans are so out of style that no one will get any more use out of them.

What can you do to reduce your waste?

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How much fiber do you have?

Thursday, May 13th, 2010

We all have fiber. No, I don’t mean dietary fiber, but rather fiber waste. When we talk fiber waste, we mean things like cardboard, paper and the like. It is a huge problem in the US. Estimates vary, but at least half of all the waste that fills today’s landfill is fiber waste. At the same time, paper and cardboard are a vital commodity that can be bought and sold on the open market. It seems foreign to me that people do not ALL recycle cardboard? I can remember using a bailer at every job I had in retail-going back over 25 years. Since moving to Ohio, though it seems that much of what could be considered a resource is casually dumped into the landfill.

Luckily, there are groups like E4S who are determined to raise awareness and connect people who can change this. Today I attended a fiber waste panel discussion. The room was packed, which made me happy to see so much interest. Let’s face it. We pay for garbage service, but we pay less for recyclables. In fact, sometimes we get paid to recycle. So what is the deal? This was the question that was put to the panel. This panel discussion was moderated by Victoria Avi. The panelists included:

Beau Daane, Business and Recycling Specialist, Cuyahoga County Solid Waste District
Jaca Kaverman, Assistant Executive Housekeeper, Hyatt Regency Cleveland
John Piotrowski, VP of Operations, Green Recovery Group
Janet VonGunten, Specifications Sales Representative, xpedx

In addition, there was a supplier of recycling service pick up and a compactor company. Overall, the discussion was for businesses who have yet to start a recycling program or who are just getting their feet wet, it was filled with great ideas and resources. I even learned a thing or two from the talented and informed panel. Basically, though the idea was this:
Recycle your paper waste. It is the easiest thing to recycle and still most of it goes to landfill.
Cardboard is a valuable commodity and you can get paid for it.
If you are in an office setting, think about partnering with other tenants.
The Cuyahoga County Solid Waste District has a welath of information on how to deal with your waste stream and reduce your impact on the landfill.
Start with reduction before recycling. If you can use less to begin with, you will save money on products AND trash.
Reuse paper products whenever you can.
Engage your staff.
Identify opportunities and use them to benefit your company.
Recycling can help your bottom line and save you some money!
I could go on and on, but we watched this video and I think it says it all:

E4S events are top notch and I highly recommend you try and make it to as many of them as you can! And join the Zero Waste Network.

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What are you doing Thursday?

Tuesday, May 11th, 2010

For those of you who are wondering what to do to start recycling in your office, here is a great event. I know that one problem many people deal with is just getting started with the whole recycling business. In an office environment, paper and cardboard are the biggest components of the waste stream, and it is easily recycled. Join me at a panel discussion on reducing your waste output, by finding ways to deal with fiber waste:

Below are the details for the event. We have a great panel and a great program to share that will help companies find solutions towards reducing their paper, cardboard and other fiber waste. I hope you can join us as well. If you are interested in volunteering at the event, please let me know. Or, if you have the means and simply want to attend, please click here to register online.

Thank you so much for your continued support!

Rethink Fiber Waste: Cardboard, Paper, and More
Thursday, May 13, 2010 8:30 – 11 am
Trinity Commons, 2230 Euclid Avenue, Cleveland, Ohio 44115
A Zero Waste NEO Network Event

Does your organization have a recycling program? Do you still find paper and cardboard in the trash? Join the E4S Zero Waste Network to connect with members of the recycling industry, learn from business leaders who have successfully implemented and maintained a recycling program, and set goals to reduce your own organization`s waste stream.

Featured speakers

• Beau Daane, Business and Recycling Specialist, Cuyahoga County Solid Waste District
• John Piotrowski, VP of Operations, Green Recovery Group
• Greg Tilton, Sr. VP of Operations, U.S. Cotton, LLC
• Janet VonGunten, Specifications Sales Representative, xpedx

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The Three R’s of greener living…

Wednesday, March 10th, 2010

Reduce, Reuse, Recycle-Tips for a Greener 2010

Global warming, climate change, carbon footprint, sustainability… we all know the buzzwords and if you are reading this post it means you want to live a greener life.  But the question for most people is where do I begin?  Saving the planet is not an easy task, but the road begins with small steps.  Therefore, I present to you a list of some small steps that you can take to make your life a little greener in 2010.

Reduce your energy consumption. It seems pretty simple because it is.  Turn off the lights when you leave the room.  Wash your slothes in cold water.  Turn down your thermostat in the winter by a couple of degrees and put on a sweater.  Get a programmable thermostat.  The easiest thing you can do is change out your traditional light bulbs for CFL (Compact Flourescent) bulbs. For every incandescent bulb that you replace, you will save about $30 a year in energy costs. If everyone in a city the size of Chicago replaced just one main light bulb with a CFL bulb, we would save the greenhouse gas emissions of about 200,000 cars on the road. If everyone in the country did it, we would save enough energy to light 2.5 million homes for a year and it equates to the emissions of over 3/4 of a million cars.  Replacing just 16 bulbs is like not driving your car for a year.  Trade out one in four bulbs in your house and the amount you spend on lighting will be cut in half.  Only 10% of electricity used in an incandescent bulb is given off as light, the rest is heat:  a big waste on a hot summer night!

Reduce your packaging consuption. Packaging amounts to a huge portion of a products carbon footprint.  If you think about all the things that you buy, they come in packages.  The more the packaging, the more the waste that mostly goes to landfill.  Ideally, we would all be able to buy in bulk and have relatively little impact.  Unfortunately, most of us do not have that option.  But with some simple planning and thought, all of us can reduce our packaging consumption.  Buy in the biggest package available that works for you.  Avoid small individually packaged items.  Things like snack packs have a ton of packaging.  But buying in a large package and breaking down into small tupperware that is reusable can have realatively small amounts of packaging.  Buy products that are concentrated.  A concentrated detergent has less packaging than the same washing amount of less concentrated liquid.  Look at your purchases for packaging that ahs recycled content.  Who cares if the cereal that you buy comes in a box made from recycled paper or virgin materials-only Mother Earth.

Reuse everything that you can.  Can that jar be used for something else?  They make a fine vase.  Save those margarine containers for use as a food container.  Wash out your ziplock bags and use them again.  Instead of buying individual hand soap containers, buy a bulk package and refill the small one.  Paper sacks with handles are an instant gift bag.  Newspapers make fine gift wrap.  Write on the back of scrap paper, or print on the back side of all the things you print.  Try sewing a small hole in clothing or invest in a good stain fighter to reuse clothes that you thought were not salvagable.  Still can’t save them?  Try making a wuilt or cut into smaller pieces for dust cloths.  By using everything at least twice, you can cut your consumption of virgin materials significantly.

Recycle. If you are reducing and reusing, then your need to recycle is dramatically lessened.  Still, recycling can have the biggest impact on the environment in that everyone can do it while having the least impact on their everyday life.  If you do not have a curbside recycling program available, make the extra effort to take your old goods to a drop off location.  Recycle all your jars.  Glass is one of the easiest things to recycle and making recycled glass uses 40% less energy than making glass from virgin materials.  Remove your lids and rinse your jars.  When it comes to plastics, all containers have a universal recycling number on the bottom.  While there are not uses for all the numbers so far, emerging technologies are finding ways to make new polymers and diesel fuels from assorted plastics.  In the meantime, Amricans use 2.5 million plastic bottles every hour and most (estimates are about 65-70%) end up in the landfill.  Remove your lids when recycling bottles as they are generally a different type of plastic than the bottle and in some cash strapped communities, it is cheaper to toss bottles with a lid still on than to pay someone to sort and remove lids.  Paper accounts for half of the waste we send to landfill.  If Americans reycled half of that, we would save 125 million trees every year.  Over 48 % of the Earth’s surface was once covered with forests.  Half of those forests are gone and only 1/5 of native forests are left.  Making a ton of paper from recycled stock saves 50% of water used and 17 trees.  For every 38,000 bills paid online, 5,058 pounds of greenhouse gases are avoided and two tons of trees are preserved.  Stop your junk mail!  17.8 tons of junk mail is delivered every year by the postal service.  44% of that goes unopened and less than 25% is recycled.  Recycle all your metals.  All steel has some recycled content.  It is generally at least 25% recycled content minimum, so the systems are all in place already.  Aluminum is easily recycled, and aluminum cans will make it back to the shelf in as little as 90 days.  But it isn’t just cans; foil counts too-even the foil on the 20 million Hershey’s kisses that are produced every year.

The road to a greener life is a long one.  But the journey of a thousand miles begins with one step.  What is your next step?

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Recycling can be useful!

Sunday, January 31st, 2010

This video is simply brilliant.  While you may not find the use of bottles as a building material particularly useful in your neck of the woods, it is a great concept.  Imagine what a little design help could do to make this even more beautiful.  I especially love the light!

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Recycle this!

Saturday, January 30th, 2010

I saw something similar to this on television. Surprising that we can recycle styrofoam, but who does? I wish we had programs for this kind of thing in Ohio.

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How green is your restaurant?

Thursday, January 28th, 2010

I was looking through the EcoWatch Journal the other day-a great publication, by the way, and highly recommended.  I was reading a great article about Crocker park and how it does not recycle.  In case you do not know, Crocker Park was a combination live, work, shop community built in Westlake, Ohio.  The idea was to take the concept of a “lifestyle center” which is the name for an outdoor mall, usually constructed to look like a city, and add to it.  They added office space and residential units.  This essentially made Crocker Park a miniature town.  I love the development.  It is constructed like many developments in the Seattle Metro area.  Being more than just shopping, the residents and office dwellers have restaurants, art events, town square activities and there are places to sit and just watch the world go by.  That is why I was so disappointed to hear that this one of a kind development did not offer recycling to its residents or its commercial tenants.  It is bad enough for retail and offices, but when you throw busy, popular restaurants like the Cheesecake Factory into the mix, and you have a lot of materials that are going into the landfill.

There are heroes to celebrate.  Many of the employees of places like Trader Joe’s actually collect their own recycling and take it home or to drop off stations on their own time.  This is the kind of dedication that we need to make real change in the region.  For the management team at Crocker Park, though, it is more of business as usual.  It truly is a shame, too, because a recycling program could actually save them money.  It cost less in garbage fees to have someone take all of the glass, plastic, and paper out of the mix.  Charities actually make money on paper waste, and some churches have included can and bottle collection in their fundraising programs.  Why then, would a company whose job it is to make money bypass the obvious and pay more to have their trash hauled away.  It is plainly laziness and shortsightedness at its best.  If you think of all the recyclable waste generated by restaurants and bars in a major metropolitan area, the need for commercial recycling is more important than a residential one.  Let’s face it, vodka doesn’t come in a biodegradable bag and McDonald’s uses tons of paper goods.

On the other end of the spectrum, comes The Greenhouse Tavern.  Now if you are the type that like to read this blog, then you already know about The Greenhouse Tavern.  You know about the design features, like rescued reused barn boards and the poured concrete bar with glass from their own bottles.  You know about their efforts to celebrate local ingredients and use fresh local foods.  You must know about how Chef Jonathan Sawyer is creating delicious dishes and promoting fine cooking in the region.  You probably know about  the plans to add a greenhouse to the roof to be the only restaurant in the region who grows their own herbs and maybe the first at all inside a major city.  What should know that they are the first Certified Green Restaurant in Ohio.  But what you may not know are some of the things that they do to get that designation.  The highlight for me is the attention paid to waste.  In order to recycle in that little slice of restaurant heaven (E 4th), they had to convince someone to give up their valuable parking spot to accommodate a dumpster.  Then to keep from adding to the waste stream outside their doors, they looked at to go containers and doggy bags.  From an email that I received:

At The Greenhouse Tavern we take our green restaurant certification very seriously.  We use a sugar cane photodegradable to go box.  It is compostable and can be tossed in your garden.  We do not offer to go silverware or napkins.  We recycle and reuse all of our glass.

Now, The Greenhouse Tavern sits in Cleveland, in a downtown location, in a city that doesn’t offer full curbside recycling.  Still, these guys show such a commitment, that it puts the restaurants of Crocker Park to shame.  If any one of the major tenants at Crocker demanded recycling within the project, the management would cave and offer it.  Still, no one even tries.  So how green is the restaurant that you like to go to?  Have you asked?  I say skip the trip out to the burbs and keep you money flowing to those businesses who are doing the right thing…

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