PLASTIC BOTTLE RECYCLING 5-08
I am writing
to you about an important
environmental problem facing the
Branford community: the town will
not collect plastic water bottles
(except for #2) at the weekly
curbside collection.
This is
hard for me to understand because
bottled water has become extremely
popular; the consumption of bottles
water has grown over 500% over the
last five years.
Branford’s
lack of recycling water bottles
concerns me because it poses a major
threat to our environment.
Discarded bottles use up vital space
in landfills.
When
trash is burned, the toxic fumes
from the bottles pollute the air we
breathe and destroy the ozone layer.
When
I first learned that Branford did
not recycle water bottles, I assumed
it was because the bottles were made
of a type of plastic that could not
be recycled or reused in some way.
I later
discovered recycled water bottles
can be turned into sweaters,
carpets, t-shirts and many other
useful things.
I am
not sure of Branford’s reason for
not recycling water bottles, but I
have heard that it may have
something to do with transportation
expenses.
I
hope you reconsider this issue,
because the bottles get transported
to the dump anyway, just not in a
recycling truck.
I would
like you to help the citizens of
Branford to recycle any kind of
product during the weekly curbside
garbage and recycling pick-up.
If you
need any help letting people know
about the change, I could make
posters and spread the word.
I hope
we can solve this issue in a way
that will help the Branford
Community.
Thank
you for your time and consideration.
Kiley
Thank
you for your letter and your concern
about the environment.
Yes, it
is possible to recycle plastic water
bottles – the technology exists.
While a
part of the reason why we don’t
recycle them is because of economic
reasons (money), there is also a
much larger reason that needs to be
explained.
Whatever
the town collects, whether it is
garbage or recyclables, we need to
have a place to take those
materials.
When
your garbage and recycling is picked
up by the trucks, it is then brought
to a facility called the Branford
Recycling Center & Transfer Station.
The
garbage is put into large tractor
trailers, and is taken to a facility
in the town of
Bristol, CT,
where the garbage that you made in
your house is burned to make
electricity.
Garbage
is no longer sent to landfills, as
the landfills in the state have
filled up.
So the
garbage is given another use by
creating the electricity that we use
in our homes, and only the ash is
left to be buried in landfills.
While
burning the garbage does make some
pollution, the plants have lots and
lots of pollution controls on them,
so it is much better for the
environment than the old, leaky
landfills were.
As long
as people keep making garbage, we
don’t have a choice not to dispose
of it at all, but must choose what
methods are best, while trying to
cut down on the amount of garbage.
Recycling
is a little different. When you put
a bottle or can or newspaper in your
recycling box at home, we collect it
to take to the Branford Recycling
Center.
There
the newspapers go in one container,
the cardboard in another, and the
mixed bottles and cans go in a
third.
The
bottles and cans then are brought to
a facility to be sorted and
separated from each other and sent
off to processors.
The
processors make new items from this
recycled material, and then the
recycled item is sold again.
If it
doesn’t go through all those stages,
including having someone buy it,
then we’ve just made very expensive
garbage, because it’s not really
recycling.
Why
do we recycle?
Think
about that.
Why do
we recycle?
Don’t
stop with an answer like “recycling
is good”, or “it’s good for the
environment”.
Think
about why it is good for the
environment.
The
purpose of recycling is to try and
conserve all natural resources.
We talk
a lot about “sustainability”.
That
means that when we leave this
planet, it shouldn’t be any worse
off then when we arrived on it.
How
many planets would be needed to
support your lifestyle?
We’ve
only got one planet. What’s already
here, plus the sunlight coming into
it, is all we have to work with.
Scientists talk about
something called a “life-cycle analysis”
which reduces everything to its value in
terms of energy and then looks at how
much energy it takes from mining the raw
material, to making the product, to
transporting the product around, to
using it, to transporting it back to a
landfill or waste-to-energy facility or
recycling center, and then to
re-manufacturing it, if possible.
We’ve
looked at this for plastic water bottles
in Branford.
The sorting
facility we use to separate our bottles
and cans, called a Materials Recovery
Facility or MRF, is in Groton
Connecticut, about an hour away by
truck.
There isn’t
a MRF anywhere in New Haven County.
At this
time, with no facilities locally, if we
were to recycle plastic water bottles,
than we would be utilizing more natural
resources than we would be saving by
recycling the bottles.
Most
plastic is made from petroleum (oil).
I think of
oil as being made from dinosaurs – we
don’t have any more dinosaurs, which is
why oil is called a “non-renewable
resource”.
By
recycling plastic bottles, you are
conserving petroleum.
However,
the trucks that carry the water bottles
to be recycled are using diesel fuel
(also a petroleum product), and with the
distance that the truck would have to go
in order for the plastic water bottles
to be recycled, we would be using more
oil (diesel fuel) than we would be
saving by recycling the plastic water
bottles.
It’s what I
call burning 5 dinosaurs to save 4
dinosaurs.
It doesn’t
really save the environment.
It’s
actually worse for it.
And even
with what gas cost in 2006, it would
then cost us more to recycle the bottles
and cans per ton than it does to burn
the garbage.
The plastic
bottles fill up the truck with a little
bit of plastic and a whole lot of air.
It’s a
waste of the diesel fuel oil to haul
air an hour away, while cluttering
up our highways with more and more
trucks.
When the
plastic bottles are in the garbage, we
can pack the air out of them.
When they
are in the recycling, we can’t or it
would crush the glass so it couldn’t be
sorted by color and recycled.
Sometimes we ask
the wrong questions.
The best
answer to the grocery store question
“paper bag or plastic bag?” is “no,
thank you”.
So if
you are concerned about water bottles in
the garbage and them being burned, let’s
back up and ask a different question:
why do we
have all these water bottles to dispose
of, and is there a better answer?
My
recommendation is to consider investing
in a re-usable water bottle, that you
can fill up from the faucet or from a
water cooler, and encourage your friends
to do so as well.
There are
water bottles that are made from
different kinds of
plastics
and also of metal that are available for
purchase.
They come
in a variety of sizes, shapes, colors
and styles too!
And if you
do have a regular, plastic bottle like
Poland Springs, then wash it and fill it
again.
Think about
that:
if every
bottle was re-used just once, then there
would be only half as many
bottles to debate about.
Use them
more than once, and the problem keeps
getting smaller.
That’s under your
control!
Children
can be very powerful influences.
And
children, like yourself, are consumers
and educators.
We have to
learn not to rely on others, like
government, to do the right things for
us, but to take the steps we each have
control over to make the changes we want
to see in the world.
Will you
help with that?
I am glad that you
took the time to write me about your
concern for the environment.
If you have
any other questions, please look at my
web site at www.Branford-CT.gov under
Town Hall Departments and then Solid
Waste & Recycling, or email me at
SolidWaste@Branford-CT.gov.
Remember,
there are three R’s:
Reduce, Re-Use, and
then
Recycle!
"Green books" for Adults 2/08
Kim writes
Does
anyone have a suggestion for a good
"green" book for a library to promote
for book discussion? I've read The
Weathermakers and am now reading In
Defense of Food, both which I have
enjoyed. But it takes me a while
to get through books these days and am
wondering what else is out there that
would be a good recommendation.
Judy suggests:
How about:
Plan B 2.0:
Rescuing a Planet Under Stress and a
Civilization in Trouble -
by Lester R.
Brown
http://www.earth-policy.org/Books/PB2/index.htm
Haven't read it but
want to.
Alison suggests:
This is
coming at green issues from a somewhat
different angle, but it certainly makes
you think about the effects of human
activity on the planet - "The World
Without Us" by Alan Weisman. I
read parts of it & found it quite
thoughtful.
From
The New Yorker
Teasing out the consequences of a simple
thought experiment what would happen if
the human species were suddenly
extinguished. Weisman has written
a sort of pop-science ghost story, in
which the whole earth is the haunted
house. Among the highlights: with pumps
not working, the New York City subways
would fill with water within days, while
weeds and then trees would retake the
buckled streets and wild predators would
ravage the domesticated dogs. Texas’s
unattended petrochemical complexes might
ignite, scattering hydrogen cyanide to
the winds a "mini chemical nuclear
winter." After thousands of years, the
Chunnel, rubber tires, and more than a
billion tons of plastic might remain,
but eventually a polymer-eating microbe
could evolve, and, with the spectacular
return of fish and bird populations, the
earth might revert to Eden.
Copyright © 2007
From
Publishers Weekly
Starred Review.
If a virulent virus or even the Rapture
depopulated Earth overnight, how long
before all trace of humankind vanished?
That's the provocative, and occasionally
puckish, question posed by Weisman
(An Echo in My Blood) in this
imaginative hybrid of solid science
reporting and morbid speculation. Days
after our disappearance, pumps keeping
Manhattan's subways dry would fail,
tunnels would flood, soil under streets
would sluice away and the foundations of
towering skyscrapers built to last for
centuries would start to crumble. At the
other end of the chronological spectrum,
anything made of bronze might survive in
recognizable form for millions of years
along with one billion pounds of
degraded but almost indestructible
plastics manufactured since the mid-20th
century. Meanwhile, land freed from
mankind's environmentally poisonous
footprint would quickly reconstitute
itself, as in Chernobyl, where animal
life has returned after 1986's deadly
radiation leak, and in the demilitarized
zone between North and South Korea, a
refuge since 1953 for the almost-extinct
goral mountain goat and Amur leopard.
From a patch of primeval forest in
Poland to monumental underground
villages in Turkey, Weisman's
enthralling tour of the world of
tomorrow explores what little will
remain of ancient times while
anticipating, often poetically, what a
planet without us would be like.
(July)
Copyright © Reed
Business Information, a division of Reed
Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Kate suggests:
For a sort of different perspective ...
Aldo Leopold, A Sand County Almanac, is
a classic, wonderfully written book on
the "father of conservation"s
perspective on the land. This last
chapter - a land ethic - is a
cornerstone of conservation thinking.
It's historical, beautiful, and not so
much about what a person "should do", as
a thoughtful celebration of nature, and
a consideration of humans' role.
CJ
suggests:
Here are
several thought-provoking books to
consider
Rathjie,
RUBBISH! The Archaeology of Garbage
Rogers, GONE
TOMORROW: The Hidden Life of
Garbage
Royte, GARBAGE
LAND: On the Secret Trail of
Trash
?, The Story of
Stuff (each chapter is a life cycle
story of different items:
TV, hamburger, car, bike, computer etc)
Quinn: Ishmael,
My Ishmael, Story of B
(these three books are a mix of
environment and re-thinking of how
civilization might work in
general...very thought-provoking and
argument-provoking)
Thoreau, Walden
etc
Diamond, Crash
Office Paper and gory details about
paper gradeS 4/07
[I wanted to ask
you more about office paper recycling,
and] the reason for my thorough re-check
of the office paper rules was triggered
by a sign at the transfer station that
may mislead others as well as [my
friend]. I had handed him a batch of
proxy / prospectus "books" all of which
were white paper, standard weight with
covers one notch heavier than the thin
stuff inside, which I had been saving up
for some time. They were bound by two
staples each. When he came home he told
me that they could not go in the office
paper bin, he had to put them in the
regular trash. We had quite a heated
discussion about it as I got the
impression that it was the human that
told him that, but in the end he
clarified that it was a sign on the bin
that said "no paper backs".
I argued that that
referred to paperback books with news
print pages, in them or perhaps white
paper but with glue holding the pages in
(yes it was an argument, like the one we
had when coloured paper became
acceptable).
I said I was sure
I knew what I was talking about as I
remembered you saying that you cut the
glue parts off the paper, which I had
been doing. But none of what I had
given him had glue. After I talked to
you I realized that perhaps the sign
should be clarified, e.g. "Office only,
no glued backs, no newsprint", or a lot
of stapled white paper books could miss
being recycled.
Now another
question: I have been assuming that if
a post card that may or may not be shiny
has a regular paper base e.g. such as
a return receipt requested card, it is
o.k., but that a heavy photo print may
not be, but of that I am not sure. Also,
when I am tearing my address out of
catalogs and off of magazine covers that
must go in regular trash (we have two
cross shredders one for general and one
for recyclable) the catalogue stuff is
sometimes pretty flimsy shiny stuff,
other times it is heaver duty, and the
Yale annual report cover and inside
could be used to build a bridge. I put
that in magazines, glue backing is part
of it, and I have been doing the
shredding of its address in the plain
trash. However, if a catalogue cover
address is as flimsy a publishers
clearing house flier or a credit card
insert could the address go in the
recyclable shredder? At what thickness
does it get too heavy? Same question
with regard to the heavier duty paper
used on some of the proxies e.g. 24
weight as opposed to 20 weight?
Diana
If you will go to my
flyers and looked at
Office Paper, you will
see the sign that I use. Unfortunately,
the company who provides our office
paper recycling and the green bins, does
not empty the bins, but swaps empty ones
for the full ones they take away.
Therefore, there is little point in my
trying to put my signs on the bins, as
the bins only stay 2 weeks. "No
paperbacks" is correct, though "no
paperback books with glue bindings"
might be clearer. I don't think it is
something I can fix.
On the rest, Whew! I
think you're overanalyzing, but I’ll
give you more detail. There are 4 basic
categories into which I divide the world
of paper-like things made from trees –
at least this is the division for
purposes of the recycling center:
1) There is
corrugated cardboard. Besides the
obvious 3-layer boxes, this can include
the box liners – but if you don't know
what I mean, don't include similar
things. It can include brown paper
bags, known as "Kraft", which are the
regular paper grocery bags. And it may
include those brown/yellow big envelopes
which are also technically "Kraft",
although they sometimes get called
"manila envelopes", which they are not.
"Manila" is like the off-white folders
that go inside a green hanging folder,
and they are not related.
2) There are
newspapers, magazines, and catalogs.
These are actually 2 different grades,
but we mix them. Newspaper or newsprint
is technically called a "groundwood"
paper, and it's the kind that would turn
yellow if left in the sun. It's a
"cheaper" sort of paper, not intended
for archival quality documents, but
rather for the read it and dispose of it
sorts of things. Other things that are
groundwood paper and can therefore go
with the newspapers are the packing
paper that moving companies wrap around
your dishes – it's just unprinted
newsprint – and the kind of scratch
paper we used to see for doing our math
homework on in grade school. You still
see 500-page coloring books made out of
it, but it seems less common these days,
maybe because you wouldn't want to put
it through any kind of high speed copy
machine. Magazines and catalogs are
either newsprint (with maybe a glue
binding, but probably staples) or a
newsprint base (probably) with a clay
coating, which is what makes it shiny.
We can deal with the glue on those
occasional magazines. No, I'm not sure
why, but probably just a volume issue.
This
newspaper/magazine mix is probably still
marketed as something like a "number 6
news" – as opposed to the higher
quality #8 news, which is black and
white only making even the Sunday paper
a problem. Last I knew, a #6 news
allows for 5% by weight of "outthrows",
and 1/2 a percent by weight of "prohibitives".
Our brown paper bags, that we insist on
to bundle the news, actually fall into
this 5% of stuff they aren't really
looking for, but can deal with, because
there's nothing wrong with it except
it's the wrong paper grade. Now when a
mayonnaise jar from the other
compartment of the truck falls in the
news, that's a prohibited material. But
reality allows for even a tiny bit of
that sort of thing.
3) Then there is
what in Branford still counts as
trash. That's used or unused
Kleenex, paper towels, or tissue paper.
It's cereal boxes and the back of a pad
of paper and those higher-quality white
boxes that could be gray cardboard if
they weren't being upscale (boxboard and
paperboard, though I always forget which
is which category). It's the greasy
bottom part of the pizza box, green
hanging folders, construction paper, and
real carbon paper. It's butter or
frozen green bean cartons or coffee cups
with a polycoat (plastic) layer on them
(even though the similar juice boxes and
milk cartons are a polycoat that we take
with bottles and cans!). And I throw my
ripped off addresses in here rather than
doing any other sorting for those tiny
bits, regardless of what they came
from. And it's waxed paper, Tyvek
envelopes, plastic book report covers
and AOL diskettes that came in the mail,
but aren't paper at all.
4) And lastly, there
is Office Paper. Its fancy name
to contrast with "groundwood" is
"sulfite paper". That's the category we
take at the transfer station, but don't
take at the curb, since it has to be
separate from the news, and since it's a
higher-quality paper and we need to keep
it dry. Office Paper does not have to
be white. Only the white is mandatory
for businesses under state law, but it's
a lot more work to separate just white,
and if it comes to our transfer station
there has been no reason to keep it
separate for many years now. The
markets aren't keen on really dark
colors like goldenrod, dark red, green,
or black (is there black copy paper??)
but a few sheets here or there won't
matter.
We also expanded to
the shiny/glossy non-magazine papers in
November 2005. What this means is you
can put in computer paper of just about
any kind (unless you still have the kind
made out of newsprint that, again, I
don't see around much any more). You
can put in copy paper, letterhead, and
most of your junk mail and good mail,
too. Prospectuses should be fine. (prospecti?)
Glossy pamphlet-like things are fine.
Postcards are fine. I guess I wouldn't
do actual photographs on real, live
photography paper. But even blueprints
are OK, I'm told. Sticky notes are OK,
and so is NCR paper (carbonless "carbon"
paper & multi-part forms). Paper clips,
rubber bands and staples aren't paper,
but they don't need to be removed and
that sure makes the sorting easier. So
if you're cleaning out a filing cabinet,
we don't want the newspaper clippings,
hanging folders, and plastic things.
The manila folders are fine here, though
not the colored ones that are like
construction paper. If it came in the
mail, it's probably fine here except for
those Kraft envelopes, AOL diskettes,
and magazines/catalogs or newspapers.
Window envelopes are fine, and so are
those funky see-through envelopes that
look almost like plastic, but are
actually cellulose (wood!).
If your insurance
company annual report comes on something
half-way between a magazine and a
pamphlet, I don't know the right answer
of which kind of shiny it is over which
kind of base (sulfite or groundwood).
When in doubt, I'd put such things with
the newspaper, because that's probably
right, and because contamination doesn't
matter as much there. 20 pound or 24
pound papers are both absolutely fine.
Stiffer, high-quality postcard-type
paper is also fine as long as it isn't
like construction paper. I don't know
how to tell you the difference except
that I do it by look and feel, and for
all I know I'm guessing wrong
sometimes. Again, when in doubt, throw
it out.
You shouldn't have that many items or
that much volume left that doesn't fit
in one of the categories I've
mentioned. If you have something else
you're dying to know the answer to, I
have a bottle of acid I can use to test
sulfite vs. groundwood paper if you
bring me a sample, but please, if it's
just a couple things, just relegate them
to the trash and save the gas of
bringing them to Town Hall.
PLASTIC PLANT CONTAINER RECYCLING 12/06
With
spring just around the corner and being
conservation chairman of the
Branford Garden Club I was wondering if
we were allowed to recycle those small
usually green plastic pots that we all
get at the local garden centers when we
buy our plants in the spring?
Last year when I asked at one of the
garden centers they said it is cheaper
for them to buy new than to clean them
and reuse the pots.
It just seems like there must be a way
to get rid of them other than adding to
the land fill because even with sharing
seedlings with others and then they have
to get rid of them, I alone must end the
season with an extra 100 or so. Any
ideas or thoughts?
Sincerely,
Nancy
Yes, this is something I’ve looked
into, and no, I don’t have any great
ideas for the plastic pots. There
are 2 separate issues: recycling,
and re-use. I’ll start with
recycling.
The green plastic pots and the
flimsier, black six-pack sets are
probably 2 different kinds of
plastic from each other, and some of
the trays may be the same as one of
them or may be a third type.
Without samples in front of me, I’m
not sure. The plastics labeling
legislation I believe only applies
to bottles and rigid containers over
8 ounces – though they certainly
label most things smaller than that,
as well, and are now labeling
films. You might find a triangle
made of arrows with a number in it
on a child’s Big Wheel tricycle, but
there is no law that says they have
to. So I’m not even sure what kind
of plastic they are made of. There
are also plastics made in a process
so they can be melted down again,
and others that are
chemically/physically altered, and
it just won’t be reversed.
Plastics recycling markets are
fairly strong for #1 & #2 bottles (a
bottle is a container whose neck is
smaller than the body – for example,
a yogurt container is not a bottle),
but still pretty weak for other
numbers and other shapes, with a few
exceptions. Flower pots are not
high on any recycler’s list of
plastics they want. I am aware of
one sorting facility in Willimantic
that has found a market to buy the
5-gallon plastic pails and the
laundry baskets and such that they
fish out of construction dumpsters,
and they said if they received
flower pots, they could probably
throw them in there, but the
separation, collection and
transportation issues didn’t yield a
reasonable possibility when I
considered it a couple months ago.
I have hopes that something closer
to Branford might get built some
time that could change the
economics.
I, too, have talked to garden
centers about taking them back for
re-use, but the used pots are
contaminated with soil and possibly
pathogens. The garden centers have
to be extremely careful not to let
one plant disease spread, so the
pots would have to be not just
cleaned, but sterilized, and that’s
why few places will take them back.
It’s not really the garden centers
we use, anyway, it’s usually their
suppliers, who seem pretty
disinterested. And incidentally,
the soil is a contaminant in plastic
recycling, as well.
Lastly, the pots don’t go in a
landfill. Branford stopped putting
household garbage in our landfill in
1991, and, like about 82% of the
state, our garbage goes to a
waste-to-energy facility to be
burned to make electricity. It’s
not nearly as good as a full cycle,
but we do get one more use out of
the flower pot, namely the energy
value as fuel. Do keep in mind,
though – and spread the word to
other gardeners – that dirt makes a
rotten fuel, so please don’t put the
soil in the garbage. Also, people
keep putting dead plants with the
soil and with the pot into the
compost pile behind the transfer
station. The plastic won’t rot, so
please keep them separate! We don’t
want plastic pieces in the finished
leaf compost, nor in the wood chip
mulch.
Thanks for thinking about it and
helping to spread the word. I’m
going to add this to the Waste
Challenge portion of my web site, so
perhaps others can keep thinking
instead of just discarding.
ANGIE’S LIST 10/06
I’m interested in
your flyer about “Fix It”. What is Angie’s List?
Bill
I have to admit I’ve
never used it myself, but you’ll need a computer to
use it. Go to
www.angieslist.com . You’ll need to register
with them, but there’s no charge. It’s consumers
telling consumers who they used for some project and
giving a review of what they thought of the service,
like this plumber did great work but was a little
expensive, or this guy said he fixed my bathtub, but
then the living room flooded. Check it out, and if
it works for you, write us and let us know!
Peg
PLASTIC RECYCLING, MIXED PAPER, COMPOST
BINS, RECYCLING SABOTAGE 10/06
We think
it is good to suggest that we recycle
more, but it is difficult given how poor
the recycling
programs
are
here. We just moved from
Newton
Massachusetts and were shocked to see
how little was recycled in Branford. We
also
have a
house on
Nantucket
and they are much much better than
Branford. For example, the inability to
recycle plastic, even #2 PETE here is
distressing. A lot of trash consists of
containers that
could be recycled. We also recycle
mixed paper but have to take it to the
recycling station. Whenever I go there
is hardly anyone there so I suspect that
most
people just throw out their mixed
paper. In MA they picked up almost all
kinds of containers and all kinds of
paper, as well as bundled
corrugated cardboard, every week. That
should be done here.
In MA they also sold subsidized
composters.
We, and I
suspect many residents,
would
be willing to pay to have a wider range
of materials recycled.
Finally, the
people who collect garbage and materials
should be monitored. I was out early
two weeks ago when they came by and they
took our newspapers and bottles and just
threw them in the trash truck with our
garbage. That is pretty distressing
after we took the time to carefully
separate all the relevant materials.
They were
correctly sorted and bundled so this was
not a case of them deciding that we had
put out things that
could not be recycled.
60 pounds less trash
in a year
is
minimal. The goal in our town in MA was
to recycle
50% of all household waste.
We could do much better but it
will
take a more supportive town policy to do
it.
Paul
Lots of
topics and a long answer coming. I’ll
try to go point by point.
Recycling in
general is dependent on markets,
markets, markets. In some ways we are a
very global marketplace – for example,
all of our newspaper right now goes to
Mainland China (though by way of West
Haven), and issues as large as the
balance of trade, or availability of
shipping containers due to what happens
in the Middle East affects our programs
in little ol’ Branford. But in other
ways, (think globally; act locally) we
are very dependent on what’s available
right here.
Plastic
Recycling:
Branford
does recycle the cloudy (undyed or
“natural”) #2 plastics, also known as
HDPE or high density polyethylene, or
better known as “milk jugs”. For a
discussion of why we don’t recycle the
clear #1 PETE (polyethylene
terephthalate) plastics like cranberry
juice containers, or the colored #2s
like laundry detergent or shampoo
(Click here). The
quick answer is that it is neither
environmentally nor economically worth
it, considering where our sorting
facility is.
The
interesting aside here is that I am
talking to a graduate student at the
Yale school of Forestry and
Environmental Studies who might be doing
a Life Cycle Analysis of this very
issue, since it seems like an unanswered
question how much gasoline one has to
burn to make it not worth recycling the
plastics.
Our curbside
paper program collects the newspapers,
inserts, magazines, and catalogs. This
is by far the largest fraction of the
residential paper waste stream by
weight. Office paper including almost
all of the junk mail folks receive can
indeed be dropped off at the transfer
station, and indeed, it’s
underutilized. There is a major debate
going on in the world of professional
recyclers right now which
oversimplifying can be boiled down to
quality vs. quantity. Paper is marketed
by grade, and there are hundreds of
published grades, as well as more grades
that are defined as something the seller
and buyer can agree to. In the time I
have been doing recycling professionally
(nearly 20 years) the markets have been
very volatile and we are currently in
the steadiest high market I have seen.
That’s great! But I run what I consider
a conservative program, though
innovative in particular areas. In good
times, markets scramble for paper and
the quality can diminish with no
particular harm to a program. In bad
times just moving it can be difficult,
regardless of price.
In the early
‘90’s the paper mills couldn’t deal well
with magazines mixed with the news, and
some didn’t want even the funny papers
and adds. Those mills have mostly
closed for not being able to keep up
with the times. Newer mills are fine
with magazines, both because of
different technology, and because there
is a better understanding of what
percentages one can expect to find in a
residential mix.
Keep in mind
the 3 arrows of the recycling circle
(what pre-dated the recycling triangle
on the bottom of plastics): The first
arrow is collection of the material.
The second arrow is turning the material
into a new product. And the third arrow
is buying and using that new product.
Without the 3rd arrow, we’ve
just made new and more expensive trash.
Different
paper grades get turned into different
paper or other products. For example,
the office paper is most likely to be
turned into tissue – toilet paper and
Kleenex. Newspaper might be turned into
new newspaper, or into insulation, mulch
products to spray on with your grass
seed, or cardboard. Corrugated
cardboard is different than paperboard
or boxboard. Just as you wouldn’t blow
your nose on wallpaper, or write a
letter to your boss on paper towels,
there are only some things that can be
done with the different recycling
grades. And a good rule of thumb is
that what can be done with it reverts to
the lowest common denominator of the
products that make up any mix. Cereal
boxes are a good recycled product, but
they have already been recycled so much
that they are among the lowest of the
low. Mixing those grades with office
paper or newspaper means that the higher
uses (and better prices) of the higher
grade products no longer apply.
Now we may
be entering an era where, as with the
magazines, the mills (read Canada and
China for the most part right now) will
take the lower-grade materials reliably
enough at a steady enough price that it
might be worth mixing grades for the
sake of the higher volume. But, as I
said, I run a conservative program and
am still watching these long-term
trends, and our nearby processor who
bales and markets including overseas
isn’t providing long-term guarantees for
some mixed materials. So for now, I’m
concentrating on improving quantity
while maintaining quality. Way too many
people don’t recycle their magazines and
catalogs curbside still. Since we’ve
saved well over a million dollars just
on newspaper recycling (might be
approaching $2 million now; I should do
that calculation again), it’s good to
spread the word that recycling keeps
taxes down.
Corrugated Cardboard:
Branford
instituted the so-called “large
cardboard” day once a month so that
people who just moved in and had large
quantities of cardboard, people who had
a refrigerator delivered and had a huge
box, the elderly or people on dialysis
who had tough cartons to break down
would have a way to recycle. I’m not
aware of other towns who offer this
service. In addition to that, on a
regular week we do try to collect one,
small, flattened bundle of corrugated
cardboard from the houses we collect
from, but the bottle/can truck just
isn’t designed to hold much cardboard.
If everyone on the route ahead of you
put out one piece, the little racks on
the bottle/can truck would fill up.
That’s why we ask everyone to save all
corrugated cardboard – even the little
pieces – for the once-a-month large
cardboard collection. Schedule here.
But yes, we do take small quantities
every week.
Subsidized Composters
We ran a
sale a few years ago and sold Earth
Machine composters at Bishop’s for one
day for the subsidized price of $15.
Bishop’s then bought the last 100 or so
and sold them for $20 (I think) for a
couple years, but they didn’t move
quickly, and they then donated the last
50 or so to Branford. We’ve given out
about 35 of them for free to folks who
ask and who promise to use them.
Because they were donated and so we
don’t run afoul of tax law, we don’t
charge anything, but I won’t have them
sitting in a resident’s garage unused
just because free sounded like too good
a deal to pass up. The price is to
promise to use it. (Click
Here for more compost information.) If
interested, call me or write with your
name, address, and phone number and
while supplies last, I’ll tell you how
to make an appointment to get one.
Paying
more for more recycling:
Yes, many
residents would gladly pay more for more
recycling, but many would not. Taxes
come from all residents and I don’t
believe in feel-good recycling if the
environmental benefit isn’t there. When
I look at adding a material to our
program, I concentrate on weight, and on
toxicity. This is the Waste Challenge
that you responded to. Organics are a
huge and heavy part of the waste
stream. One of the best things a
resident can do to recycle more is to
compost. Are you composting? (don’t
forget this long answer is going on the
web site, so I’m writing more than just
you, my new resident.) And as for the
innovation I mentioned above, our region
was the first program in the country to
recycle milk cartons – we beat Seattle
by a day! OK, it hardly matters, but I
love the symbolism.
More
importantly, we were the first permanent
collection site for electronics
recycling in the state. That costs us
money in the budget, since it’s
hazardous waste prices to recycle the
leaded glass, but getting the lead out
is a place where I think we can all
support the costs. I’m also very active
on state and regional solutions to
expand electronics recycling and work on
a permanent funding mechanism – no easy
task, with lots of varied stakeholders
and many different legislative
approaches popping up.
Mixing
recyclables with trash:
This part of
your note is extremely disturbing to
me. Our hauler also recognizes that
mixing separated recyclables back into
trash is the worst sort of sabotage, and
they are working with me to identify the
crew members responsible. Please keep
in touch if this has not been resolved.
They do face penalties for this
violation of law and of their contract.
60 pounds
or 50 %:
Allow me to
clarify the flyer. What I’m asking for
is 60 pounds more than each
person is already doing. If everyone in
the state did that, our recycling rate
would be at about 49%. The debate at
the state level is whether the goal
should be 49% or 61% by 2024. I’m
saying let’s get Branford up there
now, not just over the next 20
years.
How we get
there is up to all of us. As with most
environmental issues, we all play a
part. I am a great advocate for doing
the pieces that are under our control.
It’s easy to feel overwhelmed by the
magnitude of some of our local,
national, or global problems. It’s easy
to point fingers at this or that level
or branch of government. It’s easy to
demand other people do something. But
we are each consumers. Some of us are
parents. Some of us choose not to have
children. Many of us work outside the
home. Many of us vote. Some of us work
for government. All of us make
garbage. All of us interact with our
environment. All of us should work on
the parts of the problem that are under
our control to be a part of the
solution. There’s that bumper sticker
again: think globally; act locally.
For more ideas, follow some of the links
off my web page.
Plastic Bag Recycling 10/06
BTW, I had a coupe of other thoughts.
We always recycle plastic grocery bags.
Stop and Shop and Wal Mart take them but
A&P does not. Is there any way of
incenting grocery stores to recycle the
bags? Perhaps provide advertisements on
the town site for those that do? My
cleaner (A&A) takes plastic bags but I
don’t know if all do. If not, that
would be another thing to encourage
somehow.
Thank you,
Paul