Posts Tagged ‘trash’

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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What is trash and what is garbage? #CIFF

Sunday, March 21st, 2010

Today is the third day of the Hospitality Headquarters of the Cleveland International Film Festival.  Overall, our waste production program has exceeded out expectations.  For two days running, we have created only a single bag of real trash each day.  That includes restrooms, food prep, packaging, and service ware.  I really did not expect it go as well as it has.

I have to give my props to the powers that be at the Film Festival for allowing me to persue this endeavor.  Being a garbage policeman has also made me really look at what we use and what we throw away.  Small things make you take notice.  For example, toothpicks used to hold sandwiches are not a terrible thing, but when you take the end and wrap it in non biodegradabel plastic frills, it no longer will break down completely.  You start to notice how we as consumers insist on using more than one disposable plate, no matter the size, strength or material.  We as consumers do not even think twice about using paper cups one after another.  We will nearly always choose a paper cup over a china cup that can be rewashed.  And I have always been astounded by the amount of napkins that are given and taken at any food venue.  THis kind of a situation really makes you take notice of what we use and what we throw away.  You never think twice about a single paper towel, but when you consider the amount that is used over the coarse of a day, and that amount really adds up.

When you really start to think about it, what is trash and what is garbage?  Most of what would have ended up in landfill will be fertilizing raspberries by the end of the summer.  I encourage all of you to think about what YOU throw away and what you call trash.

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Nature Friendly makes my day at the CIFF!

Saturday, March 20th, 2010

home I forget that not everyone thinks like me.  I hang out with so many “greenies” that I am sometimes surprised when someone that I am talking to just doesn’t ‘get it.’  From my experience at the film festival last year, I knew that we would be generating a pretty hefty amount of garbage.  Feeding thousands of plates of snacks and sandwiches, I was determined to find a way to reduce our environmental footprint.  With plenty of negotiations and a few dozen phone calls, I was finally approved to start composting on Tuesday morning.  Unfortunately, the hospitality headquarters opened on Friday morning.  I put our order together, and had it delivered Thursday afternoon.  When it arrived, however, I was disappointed to see a substitution.  My enviro-friendly hot cup with the corn resin sealant on the inside was substituted for a hot cup that had a Styrofoam core.  Not happy.  I then spent the afternoon scouring the city for a hot cup that I could use in the compost.  There were surprisingly few options.  When I did find an option, I couldn’t get it.  Minimum orders, no delivery, no pick ups, were all assorted hold ups.  Enter Nature’s Friendly Products…

I had started with Nature’s Friendly Products, as I knew they had a full line of compostable products.  They have stuff made from stuff like corn and sugar cane.  They will compost in your own garden over a season.  While their office is here, they need several days lead time to get the orders in from their warehouse in Indiana (or Iowa-one of the I states…).  Jeri Leigh talked me through all the catalog and sent me more information than I needed.  I put them on my short list to order from.  When the deadline passed and I still did not know if I would be composting, I started looking at other sources.  When my order came in wrong and I was freaking out, I finally called Nature’s Friendly Products again and nearly cried on them.  A sweet young lady named Tammy calmed me sown with her sweet southern drawl and promised to call em back.  Within ten short minutes, I got a call back.  The customer forms were in the email and a single case of cups had been rounded up and would be waiting for me by 10 am the following morning.  I am sure that she called every rep they had and probably pulled their cups from the employee break room to take care of me.

The following morning after our staff meeting, I jumped in the car and dashed off to Beachwood to pick up my cups.  Within a few minutes of arriving, they were loaded and I was back on the road.  As I sped down the road, driving farther than I have driven in months, I wondered about the emissions and gas usage by this crazy pick up.  As if on cue, the first of several plastic bags floated across the road and hit my windshield with a light smack.  The irony was not lost on me that while I was desperately trying to divert our food service waste from the landfill, the trash from someone else was attacking me.  While I cannot manage to keep others from littering or reducing the trash that they create, I can make sure that the things under my control were as green as possible.  Without the help of Nature’s Friendly Products, I would have had to use a standard hot cup and that might derail all of my plans for composting our waste.  And compost we are!  In a single day, we managed to create a single bag of garbage.  With the hundreds of plates of food that were served, that was quite an accomplishment.

If you are having an event, I highly recommend checking in with Jeri Leigh Siss and her cohorts at Nature’s Friendly Products.  With the help fo them and Rosby Companies, your next event could be zero waste.

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The Cleveland International Film Festival gets a little bit greener…

Thursday, March 18th, 2010

I worked for the Cleveland International Film Festival last year.  I am more than willing to admit that I was originally lured in by a desire to see some free movies.  What I didn’t expect was to meet so many cool people.  I thought the CIFF was a simple little arts festival.  You get a bunch of film makers to send you some films and you sell some tickets and voila!  Not so much.  Instead, it takes a year of planning to choose the films and plan the details.  It takes countless hours of designing graphics, organizing staff, cultivating sponsorships, and working out little things to get herds of film lovers to continue to come every year and to make them all happy.  Thousands of tickets are sold every year to some of the greatest films, making the Cleveland International Film Festival one of the premiere arts and culture events in the world.

If you can imagine the challenges in trying to organize and herd thousands of theater goers, hundreds of volunteers and a group of dedicated staff, then you can probably picture the amount of paper that it takes.  Tickets, programs, updates…  it boggles the mind.  Then there is the hospitality headquarters for guests and season pass holders.  Hundreds of people shuffled through the suite last year creating bag after bag of trash.  We did our best to recycle cans and bottles, but that was just a fraction of the trash that was created.  This year, the CIFF got just a little greener.

With the help of Rosby’s and Forest City, the CIFF will be composting the waste from the Hospitality Headquarters.  When we say composting, we don’t mean just food stuffs.  We will be using products from Eco Green.  These products are made from sugar cane fibers or other material and will all break down in just a few months.  I was surprised to find that these products are carried locally by Northern Haserot.  I am excited to see just how much we can divert from the landfill this year.  This plan does not come without its challenges.  I attend a lot of events every year.  Even “green” event attendees often do not recycle.  I am usually the weird guy who can be found digging through the garbage pulling  bottles and cans out to recycle.  We will be collecting everyone’s trash and separating it ourselves.  I hope that this will also help to raise awareness about our trash generation.  Watch this space to see how it works out…

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Because we are lazy…

Saturday, January 2nd, 2010

We recycle.  Everything we can.  I even bring recyclables home from my travels to make sure that they get recycled and don’t end up in the landfill.  I have ranted on and on about restaurants and food vendors like Starbucks and Chipotle that sell beverages in containers and do not recycle, so if I dine at one of these places I have to bring a bottle or plastic cup home to make sure it doesn’t end up in a whole in the ground.  Sometimes, however, I forget.  Or worse, sometimes I am just lazy and do not feel like hauling that glass bottle with me for the next couple of hours while I do my grocery shopping or whatever.  But we do better than many, and some people (even my friends-yes, you know who you are) still do not recycle.  I die a little each time I see them toss a can in the trash or that plastic container not even reused once before it heads to the curb.

That is why I am a big advocate of the bottle deposit law.  What is that?  Well, if you live in a state with a deposit, some or all beverages that come in a container have a deposit attached.  That means that when you buy a soda, you pay an extra nickel for the container.  When the container is empty, it can be returned for the five (or in some states ten) cent deposit to be returned to you.  This is not a new idea.  When I was a kid, we used to go bottle hunting.  We would scour the areas around the parks, pool, or that spot where the older kids used to hang out and drink beer on Friday nights.  We would take our dozen bottles, cash them in, and buy ourselves a treat.  I grew up in Kansas, that had a bottle deposit until sometime in the 80′s.  In most of the states on the west coast, it is still a law.  Just look at your can of Coke and you can see the eleven states that offer deposits.  But why should every state have a bottle deposit?  Because we are lazy (and greedy).

Why do we even have this debate at this stage in the game? It seems natural that we should all be recycling, so we do not need a deposit bill, right? Wrong. While those reading this may be avid “greenies” we often forget that we are still in the minority. The only way to get more recycling to be done is by making it easy, mandatory, or profitable. By adding a 5 cent deposit to every container of soda that we sell in the US, most of us would not feel it a bit. Beverage producers would need little to add to their system, as they have all the tools to implement a program in every state, as they do it already in some. Your case of beer or soda would cost you an extra $1.20. But when you return to the store, you return the cans and get your $1.20 back. In places like Oregon, I saw folks at a more difficult stage of their lives surviving by collecting those nickel containers. Parks are cleaner, roadsides have less litter, and recycling is up. Way up according to the Container Recycling Institute.  According to their numbers, states with mandatory deposits have recycling rates hovering around 60%.  On the other hand, states that do not have deposit laws have recycling  rates that only reach about 24%.  That includes progressive states like Washington that recycle well, but still have no bottle deposits.

So with the stroke of a pen, we could increase recycling rates in all states.  Why do we not do it?  Once again, laziness and greed.  Store owners hate bottle deposits as it does add to their operating expenses.  Does that mean stores in Oregon are less profitable than those in Ohio?  No.  The impact on the bottom line of stores is minimal, as they do not have to pay that deposit refund, it comes from the manufacturer.  With the simple addition of automatic bottle counting machines, the work goes back to the consumer in most cases-and consumers are lazy.  Besides, if we had to rely on store owners to do the right thing on their own, I am sure there would be complaints of food expiration dates and mandatory breaks as eating into their profits.  The real opposition comes from big business lobbying.

The American Beverage Association has gone so far as to produce a report.  But this report has issues for me.  First off, I never rust a report that is produced, commissioned, and reported by itself.  Secondly, I do not support their conclusions.  According to the report, money would be better spent to expand community recycling programs than spent on bottle deposit implementation.  While that may be true, ABA member companies would be forced to invest in bottle deposit programs, while there is no way legislation will be passed that will force bottlers to give money to the communities of the country to expand their recycling efforts.  Their report also states that 73% of Americans have curbside recycling and 83% have access to drop off recycling.  I find those numbers hard to believe, but considering the high population numbers in urban centers it could be true.  That being said, it really is slight of hand.  Even in Cleveland we have access to drop off locations and some access to curbside.  Even I find recycling difficult in this town.  So those who are less motivated or who have less time are even less likely to recycle.  But, were there a bottle deposit in place, even my non recycling friends would be likely to start.  Or at the very least, would be likely to put their cans out for the homeless to pick up and return for cash.

The ABA is a lobbying group that represents its members.  They say,“three decades of data and practical experience have undeniably demonstrated that imposing mandatory deposits on beverage containers is a poor way to increase recycling and address solid waste issues.”  Of course mandatory deposits would force their members to implement deposit programs, so not a huge surprise that their findings fell this way.

The truth of the matter is that we sell 200 BILLION beverage containers in the US every year.  Out of these, 130 billion end up in the landfill or are incinerated.  We know what we are doing, yet are too lazy to do anything about it.  That is why I support a national bottle deposit.  In a time when national corporations are doing just fine, but local recycling programs are struggling, I say that we can let Anheuser Busch and Pepsico pay the bill to take some of our waste out of the waste stream.

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Pay to throw away?

Tuesday, December 8th, 2009

File-VuilnisI wish I had been more diligent in following the agenda for city council meetings. If I had, then I would have known about the meetings in which Cleveland City Council discussed the trash collection fee. It has passed. Starting in 2010, city residents are going to start paying $8 a month to have their garbage picked up. The council did this with much reluctance, but found that the gaps in the 2010 budget needed to be filled, and were it not for this fee, we might lose a firehouse, a few police officers or something else. Since I am never short of opinions, here are my thoughts on this issue:

It is about time. In Portland, where we last lived, we paid over $35 a month per can to have garbage picked up. I was astounded when we moved here that nearly anything unwanted could simply be piled onto the tree lawn. Cleveland should have implemented this fee a long time ago. Paying makes citizens invested in their services, so by making them completely free, they are abused and over used.

Speed up the rollout of the curbside recycling program. This fee should not be thought of as a budget stop gap measure. If Cleveland really wants to make this a Green City on a Blue Lake, it needs to start taking garbage and garbage service seriously as an issue. This money raised needs to be earmarked to cut the costs associated with this department, and the start is by increasing recycling. Charging for garbage collection is great first step, but we also need to decrease the sheer volume of trash in this town. We need to limit what that monthly fee will pick up, and offer limitless recycling. Moving products from the waste stream into the recycling stream can decrease costs. Furthermore, recyclables are a commodity that can add to our city coffers, not draw from them. As long as we look at our waste stream in the same way, we are only putting a bandage on a flat tire.

How much will dumping cost? Unfortunately, Cleveland residents are selfish and poor. We already see people dumping their trash in alleys, empty lots, wherever. This has been going on while garbage service is free. So what is going to happen now that we have to pay for this service. Will the extra money cover the costs of cleaning up the city dump sites that appear? I hope that I am wrong in this area. My hope is that everyone will start taking responsibility for their waste and take it more seriously, but I am leery.

How will this law affect our already cash strapped citizens? It is a small fee. For most of us, $8 a month is small price to pay. That being said, many Cleveland residents can barely pay for food. There is an exception for elderly and disabled, but what about those who are already using food stamps and section 8 housing to stay alive. I worry that unscrupulous landlords are going to raise the rents of those most in trouble right now, in order to pay for the garbage service. Were we living in a city that had a good cross section of incomes, this would be less of an issue. However, it that were the case, we would not be having this budgetary crisis to begin with.

No matter what I have to say, Cleveland is still operating in the black, without raising taxes or firing police officers. Let’s hope that this trend continues, and Mayor Jackson and the City Council deserve Kudos for that! Read the council’s release.

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What’s in your garbage can?

Thursday, November 19th, 2009

While spending all that time sorting your recyclables and picking out the plastics, sometimes we forget the most obvious thing of all: the liner. Since we do not have curbside recycling, I have to transport all my recycling to the nearest drop off location. While I have made my peace with this, there is still something that nags at me. I have to bag my recycling, adding more plastic to the batch, and I worry what that does to the process.

Did you know that the plastic that makes up the lid to your plastic bottle and the bottle itself are different plastics? This means they cannot be recycled together, so I always take the lids off of my bottles. Same with glass jars and metal lids, etc. I have heard stories of cities that toss out bottles with lids rather than take the time to unscrew the caps. That make me wonder what happens when I drop off my recycling in a plastic bag. Also, while I stuff my bags full before putting them on the curb, my garbage is still more because of the plastic bag that I have to put it in. What’s a guy to do?

So I was thrilled while walking down the aisle of the local store (yes, it WAS a Wal Mart) and I found these bags by GoodSense. I used to buy them on the West Coast, but have never seen them in Cleveland before. They are made with 60% recycled plastic. That means less virgin plastic was manufactured for me to put garbage in. To top it off, these bags were comparably priced to many of the other brands on the shelf.
bags
One of the big things that people often fail to consider when make their purchases is what the product is made of and what the packaging is made of. By buying products with recycled content you help to close the loop. What good is recycling, if no one is making anything out of all those plastics that are being lovingly sorted? And why isn’t every box made from recycled content? It isn’t like we need a brand new box made from tree fiber to hold something for a few months and then toss it. These great little bags come in a box made from 100% recycled paperboard. So by buying this product, you can basically reuse the plastic bottles and office paper that you recycle every day.

So if these bags are not available at your local store, ask the manager to stock them. They are manufactured by:
Webster Industries, Inc
A Division of Chelsea Industries, Inc
Good Sense Division, Dept RT20
PO Box 3119
Peabody, MA 01961-3119

Close the loop!

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Should we eliminate Halloween?

Tuesday, November 3rd, 2009

Halloween is fun. I enjoy costumes and dressing up. I especially like seeing all the kids come to the door in their cute costumes, while their bundled up parents encourage them to say “Trick or Treat.” While I may go on the hit list of M&M/Mars for saying it, I think Halloween can start to go away. When I say that, I don’t really mean go away entirely, but maybe it is time for it to reinvent itself. I LOVED Halloween and trick or treating when I was a kid. After all, I was a pudgy little kid (to put it mildly), so a holiday where free candy comes to those who put on a plastic mask and go to the neighbor’s doors was just right for me. But let’s face it, times have changed. When I was a kid, we also chased the mosquito truck around playing in the stream of toxins it was releasing, bought explosives at the local stand to benefit the Jaycees, and went without supervision for most of the day after we got out of school-even in 1st grade. Things are different now. More conservative families are opting out on Halloween celebrations altogether, I am merely advocating we change the holiday to get rid of the trick or treating aspect. Here are my reasons to change Halloween.

Aren’t our kids fat enough? Studies show that childhood obesity is a huge problem in America. Stack that on top of a few hundred television stations and PS3 as the most popular babysitter in America, and you have a recipe for disaster. Do we really need to have a night where we give our already under nourished, yet overweight kids a reason to chow down on thousands of empty calories? What ever happened to bobbing for apples?

Are begging and threatening really the values our kids need to learn? “Trick or Treat.” Pretty self explanatory. Give me candy or we will conduct mischief on you or your home. In today’s society, there is already ample opportunity for kids to get up to mischief. In my neighborhood, the kids rarely even wear costumes anymore-and most are way too old for this type of fun. Yet they believe that it is their right to be given free stuff, just because they have the nerve to knock on your door. We were allowed to trick or treat until about 10 or 12 years old. Every year, I am seeing high school age kids at my door. What are we really teaching these kids?

Couldn’t our money be better spent? According to an article on the University of Nebraska Omaha’s Gateway, $1.9 billion dollars is spent on candy in the Halloween season. What could we do to promote local foods, weatherize buildings, rebuild the electric grid, or feed and educate our country’s poor with nearly 2 billion dollars?

How much garbage does this holiday generate? It is estimated that we in the US buy about 598 million pounds of candy around Halloween. That is as much as nearly 150 thousand average cars weigh. Most of that candy is bought in bags (plastic) that holds a bunch of tiny little individually wrapped sweets. Some even have a couple of layers of wrapping. Add to that the enormous amount of generated waste from the store displays and trick or treating becomes a real landfill nightmare. Not to mention that costumes come in packages and that after the day, many of these costumes are thrown out, as we choose cheap stuff over rental or reuse.

I know that I sound like an old curmudgeon, but it is time for us to evolve. While I don’t relish the thought of some of the traditions of our youth going away, we need to rethink things these days. If we continue down the paths we are following, our kids won’t have much of a future to celebrate Halloween in. Besides, with the rise of juvenile diabetes, we won’t be able to give out candy soon anyhow…..

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Life can be fun…

Monday, October 12th, 2009

Kudos to those guys at DDB Stockholm. They are the geniuses behind the new VW campaign, The Fun Theory. The idea behind the campaign is that if you make some things in life more fun, you can change the world for the better. Visit the site to see people opting to take the stairs, rather than the escalator, when it was made fun. It is a whole new take on looking at sustainability. I often wonder how we can get more people engaged and involved. How do we get the average person to just care enough to want to recycle their pop bottles or eat a vegetable. One of the viral videos making its way around the net, is the one I have embedded below. Maybe if we stop touting figures and facts and just try to make sustainability a more fun exercise, then we can start getting more people to think and care about it.


FYI, you have to visit the blog to watch videos, they do not come across in the feed, and this one is worth it!

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This Saturday is your chance to give it up.

Thursday, October 8th, 2009

Most people have stuff laying around that they can’t get rid of. I have had stuff like varnish and some old roof tar that I simply do not know how to get rid of. Hurray! This Saturday (October 10, 2009) is the Household Hazardous Waste Round-Up! If you are looking for a safe way to dispose of things like oil based paints, spray paint, motor oil, pesticides, paint thinner, glues, fluorescent bulbs or some other hazardous waste, come down to the Cuyahoga County Fairgrounds this Saturday and drop it off. Plan ahead, the times are 9am to 4pm. If that is a long way for you, check out the site for the county’s Solid Waste District, or call 216-443-3749 and see if there is a closer locale for you.

What is the big deal, anyway. Why not just toss this stuff in the garbage, buried under other trash? Remember when the river caught on fire? The reason that it did was the chemicals and pollutants that were being dumped into the river. Now, there are plenty of mandates to keep this from happening by industry, so we need to watch our household waste and keep our toxins out of our watershed. Lake Erie, the Cuyahoga River, and all our assorted streams, ponds and waterways are important to the region. They are one thing that makes NE Ohio special and beautiful. Still, every year the run off from our streets and land development add tons of pollution to these water features every year. Do your part. When hazardous household waste is sent to the landfill, it can leach into the water shed. Not only does this pollute our beaches and scenery, it can have a lasting effect on our drinking water. There is an economic impact, too, beyond just that of having to spend the dollars to clean up our mess. If we don’t keep the natural beauty of the area, we will not be able to attract new businesses to the region and make this a profitable and progressive place to be.

In case you can’t make out the details on the flyer, my pal, Beau Danne sent me this reminder email:

Residents of Cuyahoga County can bring oil or solvent-based paints, sealers, primers, varnish, polyurethanes, shellacs, spray paint, automotive fluids, kerosene, gasoline, lighter fluid, pesticides, herbicides, insecticides, paint thinner, mineral spirits, turpentine, caustic household cleaners, adhesives, roof tar, driveway sealer, mercury, fluorescent bulbs, etc. to the Cuyahoga County Fairgrounds in Berea this Saturday 10/10 from 9 to 4. Call your service dept. for additional locations.

No Latex Paint
No Business Waste
No Medical Waste

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