Friday, July 2, 2010

MLK Memorial Close to Finishing!

When I made forays into Washington DC from Maryland with my friends in high school, sometimes with the intent to protest or hand out PB+J sandwiches to the homeless, our paths would often take us past various statues that dotted the circles and avenues of the center of the city. Most of the time, we would either make jokes about some long-forgotten geezer given a memorial for some long-forgotten deeds in long-forgotten wars. Sometimes we would just pass by without even thinking twice about what we had just seen. We were concerned about the problems of the day. We would not care to ask our history teachers later about the figures in question. Even when we made it to the Mall and the larger monuments, we would spend little time, if any, admiring the scenery. This was due, perhaps, to adolescent indifference, or the fact that most of us had seen all the big attractions (most of us had been subjected to the routine round of historical sites) every time relatives came to visit.

I can think of two statues which prompted different behavior, however, and these are probably my favorite symbolic pieces of metal and stone in D.C. First, the ten foot high stone statue of Mohatma Gandhi striding with his walking stick (Q St. across from the Indian Embassy). Gandhi is well known to many for his non-violent resistance to the British and his role in helping to end British colonial rule. Secondly, the Guns into Plowshares sculpture, formerly located in front of the municipal court building at Judiciary Square. Few know about the District's Guns for Cash program in the 1990s that turned hundreds of used firearms into a modern interpretation of Isaiah 2:4: They shall beat their swords into plowshares, and their spears into pruning hooks: nation shall not lift up sword against nation, neither shall they learn war any more. Both of these sculptures represent aspects of peace or hope for the future, things I believe should be memorialized more than any war, war hero(es), or presidents. We have memorials to every extended conflict in American history, but the grandiose memorials to the men and women of peaceful struggle, loving compassion, and conflict resolution are missing. What does this say about our country, the dream?

"A nation that continues year after year to spend more money on military defense than on programs of social uplift is approaching spiritual doom."

A memorial which has great potential and the promise of exemplifying values of love and peace, and has been in the works for nearly 16 years, is the Martin Luther King, Jr. Memorial. Groundbreaking and preliminary construction has already commenced, and the full memorial is expected to be done and dedicated in fall 2011. The steering committee is currently $6 million off it's target of $120 million, and appreciates individual donations as well as larger fundraising commitments or ideas. You can donate and learn more at www.mlkmemorial.org.

The site lies among the cherry trees of the Tidal Basin, directly in the middle of the Lincoln and Jefferson Memorials. It is fitting for King's memorial to lie between two presidents who directly impacted the Civil Rights movement, one who owned slaves yet helped lay the foundation for equality and justice between all Americans, and one who freed African-Americans by signing the Emancipation Proclamation. The site is also close to the Korean War memorial, and relatively close to the Vietnam War memorial, two wars that King protested and preached against fervently. It would be fitting to find a site close by to move the Guns into Plowshares sculpture, for while it was created to shed light on the need to stop gun violence in our cities, it was created, nonetheless, out of guns from the capital city of the government that King declared to be "the greatest purveyor of violence in the world."

"And I knew I could never again raise my voice against the violence of the oppressed, in the ghettos without having first opened clearly, the greatest purveyor of violence in the world today: my own government."

I have not seen the list of quotes that will be inscripted on the memorial wall; there are almost too many good ones to use, but it is doubtful that such radical quotes like the ones above will be included, a most unfortunate tragedy but predictable considering the official dignitaries and corporate sponsors involved. For indeed, there are Americans today that still don't agree with King's politics, and not just with regards to racial equality. How many Americans would react negatively to King's scathing disapproval of two ongoing wars (of empire some would say), a bill that racially profiles Americans of Latino origin, the lack of a living wage bill, the failures of our public health and social services sectors in the face of a staggering defense budget??

King preached about a radical Christ; one who disrupted the status quo and disturbed his neighbor by speaking truth to power, raining down compassion on the poor, and loving his enemies. More so than studying Gandhi's tactics, King's theological studies and faith in the true words of Jesus Christ laid the foundation for his inspiring rhetoric of nonviolent resistance to war, imperialism and discrimination. His last words in public, from his speech "I Have Seen the Mountaintop" in Memphis the night before he was assassinated, are "I'm not fearing any man! Mine eyes have seen the glory of the coming of the Lord!"

It was this radical Gospel, and the radical dreams it inspired, which made King, just like Jesus, a threat to the existing system, and that's why he was eliminated, just like Jesus, just like Gandhi, just like a host of other 20th century cultural icons and movement leaders. If you consider yourself a follower of King, you may ask yourself, am I a threat to the existing system? In what I do every day, do I challenge the orthodoxy of injustice, the conformity of apathy? While some would argue human relations and our standard of living have never been greater, we still have immense problems to take care of and sacrifice for.

"It is not enough to say we must not wage war. It is necessary to love peace and sacrifice for it."

Considering the amount of young Americans who will see this memorial, it seems pertinent to inspire in them a radical desire for change, not just teach them the standard, watered-down versions of this trying chapter in our history. Because if the record is not set straight, and young Americans continue to fall into despair, and don't have honest beacons of hope and inspiration, then history will repeat itself, violence will not be eradicated, and injustice will continue. Because after all, to paraphrase King again, out of a respect for the law, unjust laws need to be broken, and violence has failed us. Nonviolence is the only way.

The memorial needs to be (and will hopefully be) exciting and ring true for future generations, so as not to pass the memorial off as another insignificant statue in a succession of long-forgotten men who may or may not have affected positive change for our country, the dream and our world.

Wednesday, June 2, 2010

The Advent of Reverse Vending Machines

Initiatives to increase recycling rates through logistical partnerships and innovative marketing are cropping up everywhere, but perhaps none of the proposals have the potential or incentives to capture more of the recyclable waste stream than Reverse Vending Machines (RVMs). These somewhat-portable machines look like your average pop machine, but instead of putting money in to receive that dose of high fructose, you put your empty soda bottle or aluminum can in and receive money, or at least redeemable gift cards, coupons or online points. Invented in the mid-eighties, (the nineteen-eighties), RVMs have come a long way, and are ready for widespread usage. Check out what they used to look like (and still do in some places) and what they look like now. Some have flashy LED displays capable of advertising, while others have larger container capacities, crushing mechanisms or accept other materials like glass and electronics.

The idea for RVMs stems from research showing that people are more likely to recycle if a) there's fun, interactive rewards involved and 2) there's a close location nearby to toss that on-the-go container. This video provided by TheFunTheory.com shows an experiment involving a RVM wired like an arcade placed in a highly visible public place, and the resulting interest of people passing by. It's amazing what flashy, colorful lights and synthetic sounds can do; just look at Vegas. These reverse vending machines also address the issue of contamination by scanning each package that they receive, sorting the material into its proper pile, making it easier for pick-up to a transfer station or recycling center. While some of these machines are privately-contracted in bottle bill states, they will have more of an impact in deposit-less states (IMO) by providing access and a reason for recycling.

The new generation of RVMs is quite impressive. Norway-based TOMRA is a vendor of at least five different types of RVMs, which have appeared in stadiums and college campuses across the U.S. The start-up company ecoATM, Inc. has developed a machine that accepts cell phones, and has plans to accept other electronics such as laptops and mp3 players, providing a good e-waste solution. They currently only operate RVMs at the Nebraska Furniture Mart in Omaha and Kansas City, and about seven different Westfield malls in southern California. Pepsico and Waste Management have teamed up with GreenOps to manufacture what they call The Dream Machine in hopes of reaching a recovery goal of 400 million containers annually. This RVM accepts PET bottles and aluminum cans and there are plans for several thousand of them to be distributed across the country. Currently, there are only 150 in Rite Aids across North Cackalacky (random right?) as a trial program. You can redeem rewards with an account at Greenopolis.com or sometimes the host venue, I guess in this case, Rite Aid.

The potential locations for RVMs are endless. College campuses could put them in high-density locations like food courts, and the students could redeem containers for points/dollars (I believe they were called TerpBucks at UMD) on their university cards to buy that overpriced, late-night, C-store snack. Stadiums could have RVMs that give you discounts on that even-more-overpriced-than-campus-C-store food and drink. Hospitals produce tons of plastic and aluminum from patients' meal trays every day and would greatly decrease their waste disposal costs with RVMs. State and national parks could have them at their campgrounds keeping containers off trails. Festivals and big, public celebrations could have them to collect the tons of container waste that they produce. Boardwalks and beaches would benefit immensely by a RVM collecting empties from all raging going on; just imagine one in walking distance from that over-crowded rental you stayed in at Beach Week. Putting one side-by-side wherever there's a real vending machine would go a long way as well.

Hopefully, we will start seeing reverse vending machines and other fun, collection technologies become ingrained in our culture. I have yet to see one in action in my own daily experience, possibly showing that they still have a long way to go, but perhaps I don't get out enough. I'd love hearing from people who have used one.

What does all this mean for municipal recycling programs? If enough aluminum and glass, which are high-value materials, are diverted from normal recycling centers, it's possible the economic feasibility of operations would suffer, since newspaper consumption is rapidly declining and plastic pays shit. However, a lot of these machines need a place to transport and recycle their containers, and the closest place would be the local recycling center. The verdict is still out on the impact and future RVMs will have, but I suspect they won't affect municipal recycling operations adversely, and might even benefit them by increasing material coming in. Without a doubt though, reverse vending machines will increase recycling and waste diversion rates, thereby benefitting our Earth.

Wednesday, May 26, 2010

My Journey Thus Far

(written for and orated at BMC Service-11/29/09)

My faith journey can be summarized into two main areas: music, and a commitment to peace and social justice, and yet I cannot begin to think about my faith without acknowledging the presence of family, specifically parents and grandparents. I come from a family long-rooted in the Mennonite tradition. Both my grandpas were heavily involved in some aspect of the church. My grandpa on the Goering side was involved with lobbying President Roosevelt to legalize conscientious objector status for Anabaptists during World War 2 and afterwards became a pastor at churches in Witchita and Goshen. My grandpa on the Fretz side was a sociologist who studied and wrote books on Mennonites in Canada and Paraguay, and helped start Conrad Grebel college in Waterloo, Ontario. He was the acting president there for several years as well as interim president of Bethel College for a year. I will always remember two walks I had with each; one with Grandpa Goering along the shores of the Outer Banks in North Carolina when I was just becoming a teenager, and one with Grandpa Fretz, probably the last walk I took with him, taking place along the wooded path that leads from Bethel past the Kaufmann museum on to Kidron, right around the time I was starting college. Both walks I was not inclined to offer or accept any profound utterances on the nature of the world, due to a period of adolescent silence although I was always a good listener, leading my Grandpa Fretz to declare for me that "it's better to remain silent than be thought a fool."

My whole family went to Bethel College; mother, father, brother, aunts, uncles, several cousins, and so I was always around Newton in the summers for reunions and other such activities. As I grew up, I became bored with small town life, a fact which led to my announcement that I would be the first in the family not to attend Bethel, and ended up graduating with an English major/Philosophy minor from the University of Maryland in addition to a Freshman year stopover at Loyola University in New Orleans. Big city living was fun while it lasted but ultimately not healthy or sustainable, and now I realize I would have been perfectly fine following my parents and attending Bethel. My recent change of opinion is due in part to sharing some good times with Bethel alums, particularly my brother's graduation party and wedding out among the wheat fields of Kansas. It reminds me of a scene from Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man by James Joyce, where a priest asks young Stephen Dedalus if he loves his mother, why doesn't he just follow what she wants for him?

I was quite the stubborn and rebellious spirit growing up, always trying to get what I wanted and questioning the norm. When we went to church, I was the younger brother from "A River Runs Through It," slouching against my mother asking for candy, or heavily invested in whatever book I had at the time, and only paying attention when it came to singing hymns and the childrens story. To this day, hymns are my favorite part of worship, but I can't say I get much from the childrens time anymore. Fortunately, I found vectors to soothe my rebellious inclinations in picking up the saxophone in the 4th grade and co-founding a student group in high school called Students for Social Change.

Music was encouraged through the Goering side. My Grandpa plays Joy to the World on piano every Christmas morning to wake everybody up. He forced my dad and his sister and brother to pick up instruments throughout their schooling. My dad chose the Tenor saxophone and still plays, although with not as much tenacity as earlier on in his career. We actually have a small jazz combo that plays periodically at Hyattsville Mennonite Church and around the Washington, D.C. area. My brother and I were similarly forced to pick up instruments, and while I loathed practicing every day, picking up a new instrument is frustrating and requires discipline!, I'd say one of the greatest gifts a parent can give and teach to a child is an artistic outlet. Music for me is spiritual, relaxing yet stimulating, satisfying yet mystifying and always calling to me. I couldn't get rid of it if I tried, like God. I wouldn't want to live in a world without it, like God.

Students for Social Change, or SFSC as we called it, was entirely student-run and organized around different issues we felt strongly about including homelessness, globalization, political prisoners, the death penalty and the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. We would make sandwiches and walk around our nation's capital with a boombox feeding the homeless. We were involved with numerous protests, including the World Bank/IMF struggles of the early 2000s, and the massive anti-war marches that failed to stop the inevitable tragedy from unfolding. The height of Students for Social Change consisted of a county-wide walkout in 2003, linking up with our brethren from the D.C. school system, and followed up by a Valentine's Day concert featuring the movement-encompassing message Make Love, Not War.

The middle years of this decade were some of the darkest for me spiritually. Don't get me wrong. I had tons of fun in high school and college playing in different bands, traveling on sporadic road trips, writing and organizing, and other rawkusing in general, but I was always haunted by the question of how could God allow so much suffering in the world? Why were the people in power so heartless and greedy? I still struggle with these questions but several developments have alleviated the pessimism. While my faith was virtually absent during this period, I took solace in words, reading whatever professors would throw my way, and I began writing my feelings through poetry and song lyrics. Writing comforts and strengthens me, gives me a sense of achievement, and perhaps led to where I am currently. The election of Barack Obama also helped, and was literally like a candle snuffer being pulled back to reveal the candle still lit, although some of the promised changes seem to be taking awhile...

Studying philosophy and literature led me to the conclusion that everything is determined, everything is meant to happen. God has a plan, and God is the dramatist. All the world's a stage and God is the audience. In the words of Gandalf from the movie versions of Lord of the Rings, Bilbo was meant to find the ring, in which case, you were also meant to have the ring. I was meant to come to Boulder, I don't know what for exactly, but from an objective bystander observing the time line and subsequent unfolding of the universe, it was not my choice. Each of you were meant to be sitting in the chairs that you're seated in. All you have to do is decide what to do with the time you're given. God not only has a plan, God is the plan. I once asked my mother at a young age what and where God was and she responded "God is everywhere. God is everything." This befuddled me for awhile (many years), but with my realization that determinism and creation go hand in hand, that there is an illusion of free will that veils us from the true spiritual realm, and everything is in God's hands, allowed for this reality to set in. All you have to do is walk in the light, show some love, forgive others, resist temptation, be a witness to God's creation. God will take care of the rest. This doesn't exactly take care of the poor people suffering, but spreading the message of love and forgiveness like Christ did before us will hopefully change something in the world. I've also learned that its better to lead by example, rather than by telling someone how to live.

Two international trips helped me come to this conclusion, one having to do with peace and justice studies and the other having to do with music. They both happened in the month of January, two years apart. The first was a sojourn study group with Patty Shelley and Bethel College Winter Term to Israel, Palestine and Jordan in 2007. Seeing the Holy Land, and locations where events in the Bible take place really strengthened my faith and belief in God. I recommend a similar trip to everyone here. While violence is a reality there, life is fairly normal and safety as an American is generally ensured. Patty Shelley is a voracious singer for those that may know her. We would usually sing a hymn at significant sites and churches in the area, sometimes to the applause of other tourists, and we sang the hymn "Seek Ye First" in a church on the Mount of Olives, which had a tear-shaped window that overlooked Jerusalem. The occupation that Israel lords over the Palestinians, the discrimination shown to Arabs, even Israeli Arabs, the racist government that claims to be democratic, frankly needs to stop, and the conflict is in my prayers daily. When I saw for the first time the giant security wall that tore through the olive fields of Bethlehem, I nearly broke into tears. I hope that one day it will be torn down in similar fashion to the Berlin wall.

The second trip I took was with friends this past January to the mystical island of Jamaica. This was the first time I had traveled south of Orlando, Florida, and while I was somewhat worried going to a third world country, everyone was friendly, sometimes too friendly, but nonetheless warm, genuine, and possessing spates of wisdom that made you rethink outlooks on life. Everything is about respect and no worries, keeping the faith in Jah, meditating daily, dancing and playing music. The language, and music for that matter, once you can decipher it, is uniquely colorful and illustrative, preserving social integrity and promoting moral revolution. Words like Babylon, bredren, inity, respect, ovastanding all play into the spiritual mix. Rastafarianism takes its roots from Ethiopian Orthodox Christianity, and my explorations into it have delivered me to a strong and positive place in life that enrich the rebel soul within me.

Clearly, freedom of religion and general social acceptance have not been extended to Rastafarian brothers and sisters. Like Anabaptists and Palestinians, Rastafari stems from a theology of protest and martyrdom in refusing to be enslaved to authorities, specifically White male authorities. And while there are similar struggles to the Mennonite church in regards to the question of homosexuality and women empowerment, the language of liberation and personal empowerment and happiness is prevalent throughout rasta, a lot of who follow the teachings of Christ and debate scriptures with each other over games of Dominoes. Survival. Sacrifice. Solidarity. As the legendary Jamaican singer Peter Tosh sang, "If He was here, right now, he'd go to the jail the same."

While hybridization of religion and worldviews is possible from an individual standpoint, I don't know what do you think of Mennonite Rastas, I must admit I feel more attached to the Mennonite church because of my roots there within, but I am always curious to explore deeper meditations. I am glad that you all have accepted me here at Boulder Mennonite. I've made many friends here in colorful Colorado, and I look forward to meeting those that I haven't already.

In conclusion, it is what it is. I am what I am. Take it for what it's worth. And yet it can't be an individual effort, strength comes from togetherness and community. "For where two or three are gathered in my name, I am there among them." And I can't tell you what is needed to be done. I feel like the pulpit shouldn't be used for politicking and yet as Newt Gingrich put it in a recent Meet the Press interview on education, "Politics is the art of the possible." And God is what's possible. To quote Matthew 18 again, "Truly I will tell you, whatever you bind on earth will be bound in heaven, and whatever you loose on earth will be loosed in heaven." If that is the case, I pledge to fight for equal rights, spread the message of love and peace, and to incorporate music into everything I do.

And I leave you with a quote from Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man. "I will tell you what I will do and what I will not do. I will not serve that in which I no longer believe whether it call itself my home, my fatherland or my church: and I will try to express myself in some mode of life or art as freely as I can and as wholly as I can, using for my defense the only arms I allow myself to use, silence, exile, and cunning."

Thursday, April 8, 2010

Airline Recycling Moving at a Snail's Pace

One thing volunteers and members of Pick Up America do not have to worry about as they trek along our nation's highways is trash falling from the sky, although I've always wondered what happens to the things flushed down an airplane's toilet... While the state of airline recycling is not nearly where it should be, the 800 million pounds of waste generated each year by the airline industry is at least being contained until the end of each flight and not ending up as litter along the road. What's not gravy boats is that 75% of this waste could be recycled, and only 20% is currently being reclaimed. A significant portion of the remaining 25% could be composted as well.

ResponsibleShopper.org, Green America's consumer watchdog group, released a report last month entitled "What Goes Up Must Come Down: The Sorry State of Recycling in the Airline Industry," which outlines these findings, and evaluates airlines on the current and future status of their recycling initiatives. The report found that airlines could recycle nearly 500 million more pounds of waste each year if they simply instituted standard recycling practices on the ground. These would include employee and passenger education, efficient hauler-airport partnerships, and collecting recyclables that fit within current single-stream guidelines. Implementing such measures seems like a simple task; common airplane items like aluminum cans, plastic and glass bottles, paper and magazines are all fairly easy materials to collect. However, coordinating a hauler to pick up recyclables at every airport and training employees on proper collection methods would probably take a few years to get down smoothly.

The report used a grading system to evaluate airlines on the state of their recycling, with Delta receiving the highest grade of B- and United flunking completely with an F. As it is, "no airline recycles all the major recyclables: aluminum cans, glass, plastic, and paper. No airline has a comprehensive program for minimizing or composting food waste or waste from snack packages, provides good public information about their recycling program, or reports out on progress in relation to any stated goals. In addition, all airlines provide over-packaged snacks and meals and none of the airlines are working with manufacturers to reduce this waste."

This may be changing as you read this since this report will hopefully stir some within the industry to boost their material recovery performance. Consumer pressure always helps, and it wouldn't hurt to ask the flight attendant the next time you fly, "Is this Dr. Pepper/Pinot Grigio/water bottle going to be recycled?" Then, depending on the response, engage with them about the need for recycling and that you've been hearing nasty rumors about the sorry state of airline recycling. You can also fill out a report to Green America to make the airlines accountable for what they say they are doing: http://www.greenamericatoday.org/takeaction/airline/airline_recycling.cfm

The good news is that airlines can have a huge impact on decreasing waste that goes to landfills, about 500 million pounds of impact annually, and they are starting to get saavy with the cause. Midwest Express Airlines claims to have the first on-flight bins dedicated to recycling, and some airlines are following suit. Some airlines do seperate recyclables from trash in-flight but if an airport doesn't have a recycling apparatus, then these materials all end up in the same place. Airport Recycling Specialists, which set up the first independent MRF at the Fort Lauderdale airport and claims the highest recycling rate for an international airport, is helping other airports set up recycling solutions. Seattle, Portland, Denver and Boston airport authorities are all engaged in considering different waste management solutions. While there is no standard for airports to follow, almost all airports are finding themselves subject to new municipal solid waste guidelines and legislation, and if that isn't enough to change the modus operandi, almost all airports are revamping their waste management strategies to include more recycling because of ever-increasing waste disposal costs due to decreasing landfill space. The possibility of energy generated from airline and terminal waste is also an option for airports.

Major airports have sizable operations and autonomy comparable to a small city, so it is vital that resource conservation be a staple of day-to-day operations. According to research published by the Natural Resource Defense Council, annually, airlines throw away 9,000 tons of plastic, enough aluminum cans to build 58 Boeing 747 jets, and enough newspaper and magazines to cover a football field 230 meters deep. The energy savings from recycling this waste would represent a contribution by the airlines to reducing their environmental impact in the face of the considerable climate impact of jet fuel, including 600 million tons of carbon dioxide per year pumped into the atmosphere by commercial jets alone. In order for clear skies to emerge, we must start with the facts on the ground.

Tuesday, April 6, 2010

Offshore Drilling A Bad Idea

President Obama's proposal to remove the twenty year-old moratorium for some regions on offshore drilling and to expand it in existing drilling areas is ill-conceived, dangerous and inconsiderate to the millions of young people who helped elect him. When the world, especially America, is looking to decrease its dependence on a dirty fossil fuel in favor of cleaner, renewable energies, the expansion of drilling in the Gulf Coast, Arctic and newly-opened Atlantic seaboard to eke out only a few years worth of fuel is ridiculously unsustainable.

Regardless of numbers, the environmental hazards involved are enough to make a sensible person reject such proposals. Hurricanes, which have increased in strength and number over the past few years, roll through the Gulf Coast and Atlantic Ocean with enough frequency and force to almost guarantee a future oil rig disaster. Oil rigs can blowout on their own if their drill ruptures, a possibility backed by historical reality when an oil platform in the Pacific blew out in 1969, leaking 200,000 gallons of oil that eventually covered an 800 square mile area. The possibility of ships crashing and spilling oil in the water and on beaches is also backed by historical examples, need I remind you of the Exxon Valdez spill in the 90s.

I can't lie; I only became really concerned about this issue when I learned my stretch of the Atlantic Ocean would be included in new leasing. Say goodbye to the pristine coasts of the Outer Banks and Assateague Island; the dolphins will probably have to migrate (or worse) since the noisy underwater drilling will fuck with their sonar and give them headaches. The seagulls, herons, pelicans and other seafaring birds will live in fear of their habitats getting covered in black ooze, and will see their food supplies diminish. Humans swimming close to oil rigs will enjoy an increase in cancer and other mysterious diseases. And the sea turtles are simply too old for this shit anymore.

Solutions on halting this potentially destructive practice abound, but to stop a fast-moving train, you'll probably need the consent of the conductor. While Obama did state his position on offshore drilling during the campaign, he did not outline this specific proposal clearly, and it comes as a slap in the face to many environmentalists. I have heard that most drilling won't start until 2012 (get your clean beach time in while you can!), but this doesn't excuse Obama from continuing where the Bush Administration left off (and I thought we were voting for change in how business was done!). Perhaps state legislatures will actively try and prevent this, or the states in affected regions will band together and pass congressional bans on new leasing in their waters. Or the people will mobilize in enough numbers to make Obama reconsider. Whatever the case, action must be taken and the word must be spread that the future of our beaches and coastal waters is in danger all because of our reliance on oil, imperial budgeting and corporate greed.

Friday, April 2, 2010

Hard-to-Recycle Item #7: Asphalt Concrete

There has been some recent speculation over whether recycling is the best answer for reducing our global carbon footprint. While I agree reduction and reuse are the stronger of the three R's, recycling makes economic sense while simultaneously slowing down the Earth's aging rate by cutting down on the use of limited virgin resources. This is becoming more and more evident in sectors of the economy you wouldn't originally think would be down, like transportation, specifically road construction. While this article isn't a spirited defense of recycling over other green practices (stay tuned for that, this one's supposed to be about asphalt), I will say that recycling creates profits out of what would be trash, creates six times as many jobs as landfilling, and cuts material acquisition costs for production companies anywhere from 30 to 50%. When reducing and reusing fails, recycling provides the safety net for materials that would otherwise end up in a landfill, or worse...

As the green paradigm shift begins to be actualized, many industries are realizing the economic and environmental benefits of recycling. If we must make something, we should defer and prefer to defer to making that item with recovered materials. The haunting notion of necessary evil seems to reoccur throughout America's history: indigenous displacement, Hiroshima, the death penalty, defense spending and every war we've fought, preemptive strikes, voting for a major political party, etc. In an overwhelming amount of the cases, the situation could have been avoided through more constructive solutions, but the reactionary political machine and special interests of groups within that machine spun the necessity of action as greater than inaction. With the recent Supreme Court ruling in Citizens United essentially granting corporations the same rights as individuals, this trend is even more disturbing.

Recycling is not a necessary evil; it's necessary but not evil no matter where you stand on green issues, no matter how much you hate the smell of wet cardboard. My point is that if we must grow as part of our national economic stability, we should do so in the most sustainable, efficient and organized ways possible. This isn't a call for Big Brother mandates and cap-and-trade legislation. Institutionalizing sustainability measures throughout industry on a volunteer basis is already steamrolling its way to corporate boardrooms and legislative bodies as simple matters of bottom lines and future existence. Let's explore one of these volunteer partnerships between industry and government more thoroughly through an example: the asphalt concrete industry (finally getting to the crux!).

For nearly 140 years, the United States has continually developed a system of paved roads and highways, which blows the accomplishments of the impressive (for its time) Incan road system out of the water. Nearly two million miles of roads exist in the United States with 94% of them paved by asphalt concrete (PtD in Motion). While the ever-increasing concrete jungle has decreased the amount of green jungles (there are more roads in our National Forests than the entire interstate system according to the National Forest Protection Alliance), and has led to unsustainable community development based around a car economy, readers will be surprised to learn that asphalt is the number one reclaimed material in the United States by tonnage and percentage, with a recovery rate around 90% responsible for recycling 100 million tons each year (PtD in Motion). Even with this staggering fact, according to Blount Construction, only 3% of roads are recycled, again underlining the immensity of our road system.

Asphalt is a petroleum product, a thick liquid that is a byproduct found in crude oil, which makes the importance of recycling it paramount. Incentives need to be increased for companies bidding on transportation projects that pledge to use recycled materials. The Nevada DOT alone has saved $600 million over 20 years using recycled asphalt (Roads & Bridges). The voluntary introduction of warm-mix technologies (rather than hot-mix) and better ventilation systems in work site machinery have improved working conditions and cut down on toxic fumes emitted at the work site. The higher the temperature asphalt is mixed at, the more fumes are produced, so cooler temperatures make it a cleaner product to use. Warm-mix has also proven to be a longer-lasting grade of pavement, cutting down on the use of resources and improving the quality of roads (PtD in Motion).

As Pick Up America makes its way along our extensive highway system, they can appreciate the fact that the surface they walk on is being continually upgraded through recycling, cleaner technologies and public funding. While many of us environmentalists would prefer communities in the future to have less roads, more green spaces and easier public transportation options, the necessary evil of road construction and improvement is vital to our current infrastructure. One wonders what future historians will note about our road system, whether it was too extensive and ill-advised or whether it was a solid and durable accomplishment for a fast-growing civilization becoming ever greener, or both.

Wednesday, March 24, 2010

Hard-to-Recycle Item #6: Medical Waste

With the passage of health care reform and rising prescription drug use, increased focus on national health systems should be accompanied by discussion of safe disposal options for this immense industry. Medicines come in a variety of forms; from pills to injections to salves to radiation treatment. All produce discards inevitably from their applications, and the utmost concern and scrutiny needs to be employed in handling these potentially hazardous and infectious wastes.

For the most part, training and public health guidelines for health professionals have kept the problems at a minimal level. However, the amount of household generators and private practices has risen in the past couple decades, simply from the development and propagation of new medicines and treatments. The EPA estimates that 45 million Americans are drinking water with traces of medications flushed down the toilet that don’t get filtered at water treatment facilities. Home care nurses, private vets, self-medicators, all fly under the radar, which is better at preventing large-scale generators like hospitals and pharmaceutical factories from improper disposal.

I’ve had several sorters tell me their greatest fear is reaching into a pile of recyclables only to have their hand come back out with needles stuck in it. We average one or two gallon jugs full of used needles a month here at the Boulder County MRF, not to mention the free-floating needles that pass through the system. We’ve had scalpels and IV tubes make appearances, leading me to believe some commercial generators are not following the guidelines. We’ve had one or two sticks in the past before my time here, and the resulting hospital visits and bills accompanying them were not gravy, let alone the fear of the punctured worker. The cost of those bills is more than enough to set up a public drop-off box at the county’s hazardous waste facility, which I am currently lobbying for. There are other options communities across the country have employed. You can see these and more at http://www.safeneedledisposal.org/assets/pdf/med-govt.pdf.

So what are you supposed to do with your old prescriptions, used insulin needles and bloody gloves..? Well, first you should be familiar with your municipality’s hazardous waste guidelines. Most will tell you where certain items need to go; pills and outdated medicines need to go in the trash, needles should be put in a puncture-proof screw-on container like a milk gallon or coffee container and then thrown in the trash, BUT NEVER THE RECYCLING! It should be noted that those little orange pill bottles are made of a recyclable plastic (medical marijuana patients rejoice!), but never leave anything in them. Needles can also be collected through private take-back programs, or incinerated with home devices. Bloody objects should go in the trash, but if they’re big like a mattress for instance, you should call your county’s accident clean-up people. If this is not possible, wrap the object in layers of plastic and drive it to the landfill, checking their list of accepted materials beforehand.

It sucks that the majority of medical waste needs to be landfilled, but at the moment there aren’t any better options; no one wants to recycle contaminated materials. Waste-to-energy incinerators are used by private take-back companies; incineration is generally a better look than landfilling. Perhaps the biggest problem with the medical waste stream is that the compositions of its materials are rarely known, usually involving crazy chemicals, micro-bacteria, viruses and heavy metals. I am not familiar with what is done to discards from radiology clinics, MRI rooms, chemotherapy machines and the like, but you would hope that someone has implemented safe disposal measures. Considering some of the decisions made before my generation though, you never know.

Tuesday, February 23, 2010

Hard-to-Recycle Item #5: Wine Corks

A hard-to-recycle item because they don't fit into any single-stream recycling category, wine corks have wide reuse potential and are actually compostable if creativity or collecting things isn't your strong point. Harvested sustainably mostly in the Mediterranean region (but can be found in Maryland!), corks come from the bark of cork oak trees, which can be harvested every 9 years, live up to 200 years, and are an important part of carbon sequestration in their region (ReCORK). It is estimated that 13 billion corks are manufactured and sold annually (ReCORK), so it is important that we divert this biodegradable and useful material from entering the landfill. Start collecting your corks, and when you have the right amount, try one of the options below.

The easiest way to get rid of corks is to find a friend who likes to pursue some of the artistic activities in this article. Otherwise, you could send them to ReCORK, run by Amorim, one of the largest producers of cork wine closures. They've partnered with SOLE, a leading footwear manufacturer, to grind corks they receive into, most notably, sandals, but also gets mixed in unique blends developed by SOLE to produce all types of shoes and comfy footpads. SOLE claims to have distribution with REI and Zappos, as well as with numerous professional sports teams, and claim their cork material products will hit stores in Spring 2010. Unfortunately, you have to pay to ship your corks unless you have a minimum of 15 lbs., in which case they will send you a prepaid mailing label. You could partner with other wine-loving friends to accomplish this, or you may be lucky to find one of their public collection partners in your area, like a winery or restaurant or alternative recycling center.

If you're ambitious and possess the technical know-how, in which case you probably wouldn't need to read this, you could create your own boat out of wine corks! Since corks naturally float, someone with engineering skills and dreams like former White House speechwriter John Pollack can create an amphibious vessel for an old school voyage down a cherished waterway, like the Douro River in Portugal, which Pollack successfully navigated and wrote a book about. If, like most of us, you find yourself less inclined to attempt such a journey, the buoyant qualities of cork also allow other nautical accessories to be created. Try fastening one or two to a key chain or sunglasses strap (I believe the official word is crockers) so they'll float if you or your boat gets sacked by a particularly tremendous wave.

Another brilliant, engineering feat accomplished with cork reuse, but with grander implications than Pollack's boat, is Corky, a battery-less mouse that runs on the continuous motion of ones hand, similar to windable flashlights. Created by Adele Peters for the Greener Gadgets convention going down this week in New York City, it is unclear when such a magnificent product will hit stores, and whether its positive response will garner revamping efforts in offices across the world.

I guess you could say my personal interest with corks (other than drinking wine, obviously, although I've had my share of corkless wines) began when my dad started collecting them to create trivets/hot pads with wooden frames for gifts. This activity requires some woodworking experience and/or equipment. Simply measure the size of several rows of corks, depending on your preference or design you can arrange in a similar design to this picture (alternating horizontal and vertical like the center gives the plate more frictional support), and then cut a flat wood piece (stained/treated wood provides aesthetic enhancement) that will allow all the corks to fit. Use wood glue to make the corks stick, and four side pieces are optional to frame the hot plate. Let the piece dry and then try it out with your favorite dish!

Other reuse options include running dull razors through a cork to get a few more uses out of it, creating your own cork board for posting notes and other things, cutting a slit in the top of a cork to hold recipes, slicing into thin circles and gluing to chair/table legs to prevent wood floor degradation, making coasters, picture frames, glass-covered coffee tables, igloo lanterns?, candle bases, wreaths, holders on fishing hats, hanging fly-swatters on hiking hats, flooring, the list goes on. The internet abounds with helpful hints on any of these activities, but you can also let your own creative synergies guide you.

With all these options for corks, there should be no reason to throw them in the trash. In compost, cork acts like wood chips, aerating the pile and breaking down over several compost cycles (Dan Matsch). If a reuse or recycling option can't be achieved, go ahead and throw your corks in that compost pile. Remember that wine bottles also have reuse potential in the home/garden, as either hanging scarecrow glass to shoo away birds and other critters, or as fruit-fly traps. If you keep a little wine (I hear fruit flies prefer red) or vinegar in the bottom of a bottle, and keep the bottle near the center of fruit fly activity, like a kitchen sink, fruit flies will be naturally attracted to the liquid and usually end up over-indulging, getting stuck or drowning, leaving them, indubitably, worse off than someone with a wine hangover.

Monday, February 15, 2010

Ambition - Labor pt. 4

With the Winter Olympics in full swing up in Vancouver, the culmination of four years of training is coming to fruition for Olympic athletes. Some have only this platform to showcase their talents and unique sports, giving a new meaning to the sporting mantra of pacing yourself. The desire for gold drives the ambitions of many like American Hannah Kearney, but for a lot of athletes, including the Jamaican bobsled team of '88 (strangely denied participation in the past few games), just getting to the games and crossing the finish line is a victory in itself.

Recently, in a rare, warm spell here in Colorado, I played basketball with a blind student on CU's campus. His name was Ethan, and he came up to me and asked if I wanted to play one-on-one. Hungry for some real competition, I, of course, indulged. He wanted me to play him like I would anyone else, but I couldn't bring myself to unleashing my normal buffalo mode. I did have an impressively hot hand from the perimeter that day, however.

Surprisingly, the final score was not a shutout. Ethan was able to dribble the ball to within four feet of the basket and make lay-ups and baby hook shots even with my arms stretched in the air scoring around seven points. This was possible due to his ability to distinguish black and white shapes, and shadows of movement. When he was guarding me, he was able to tell when I dribbled the ball through my legs or when I posited a spin move. He was also able to tell when I swished a shot calling it "the greatest sound in basketball." His sense of hearing helped him identify a stray rebound, closing in on the bouncing object, or when he wanted to pass it to me, he asked that I clap, and he would sling the ball with decent accuracy in my direction. He asked for any tips, but sadly, because I've never sat and thought about such a dilemma, I was unable to offer any enlightenment other than practicing free throws because of the straight-on, fixed nature of the shot. I also said something about the practicality of handoff plays if we were playing a team game. (I will save these tips for my coaching debut at the special Olympics).

Ethan's favorite team was the Lakers, his favorite players Kobe and Shaq, hearing of their dominant exploits back in the early 2000's when he arrived in America from Ethiopia. He's gone to games, where he listens to the commentators with headphones, hopefully sitting close enough to hear actual sounds from the game e.g. shoes squeaking, players and coaches calling out plays, the substitution and shot clock buzzers, and of course, the rim shots and nothing-but-nets. Above all else, Ethan is a successful example of being able to follow your passions with the proper drive and confidence in your abilities just like the Olympic athletes.

Now that the inmates are gone, the ghosts here in MRFtown are whispering. They're saying we need to start hiring some folks to reward production goals met and to boost our product quality. Somewhere in the last couple weeks we were able to diminish our tipping floor piles, monstrous mountains of trash, that when I arrived and up until a couple weeks ago, were overflowing out the door. I'd like to think that my gophering efforts to help fix machinery, (and the massive dent I put in Eco-Cycle's shop maintenance budget), had a hand in this, but the true saviors of MRFland are the laborers who put work in to catch up with the production curve. I'm hoping a worker appreciation barbecue is in order. Somehow finding myself in charge of the employment task force and with this lull in material coming in, I need to keep pushing the Operations Manager, Jerry, on the bbq, but mostly to hire a few of the better contract workers, some who've been here for nearly a year still technically working for a labor source. These guys are determined to have a job, and if the recession has had any visual impact for me, it is most evident in the struggles of our workers.

I can't tell you how many little struggles I've heard when a worker comes in to the production office with a story. One forklift operator had something stuck in his eye for two weeks, and the dusty environs of the MRF irritated it even further. One of the line leaders didn't come in to work for a week with mental health problems amounting to depression and suicidal thoughts. Another guy whos been here for a year is considering another job that pays a dollar more an hour, but hates starting new jobs, especially when his wife's ex-husband is the business owner. Misplaced checks, multiple family members working different shifts, lunch/small theft are all a reality of working here. These guys must have immense determination to come back to work here every day amidst all their personal problems. Struggle brings strength, and what doesn't kill you makes you stronger. It has yet to be seen whether this saying applies to economic theory, or perhaps even labor relations.

In other news, a massive flock of blackbirds returns daily to feed on our outdoor glass piles where we dump our compactor residue around lunchtime. One has to wonder if or when the little bits of glass cullet, inseparable from any existing food residue, will kill them.

Wednesday, February 10, 2010

Sustainability Conference Debates Eco-Business

The University of Texas at Austin held its 2010 Sustainability Conference this past Friday, Feb. 5th, featuring keynote speakers a.k.a. corporate PR representatives from Walmart and Frito-Lay, as well as an impressive array of panel speakers comprised of local political and business leaders, professors, nonprofit managers, and other green company reps. Hosted by the McCombs School of Business for the third year in a row, the conference provided an intimate atmosphere for sustainability professionals and environmental newbies alike to discuss current and past trends in business and government sectors with regards to improving our world through sustainable recommendations. The conference was well-run and provides a working model for similar events to be hosted by other schools, but improvements could still be made. A lot of the attendees, and speakers even, seemed more concerned with helping their bottom lines through sustainability initiatives than actually helping the environment. Ironically, the billionaire figurehead for the business school, Red McCombs, has had his share of the negative environmental spotlight. See Jeff's piece in High Country News.

The abundance of topics covered (all interesting to me) had to be split into two separate, unofficial tracks of panels, policy and marketing (I chose policy), so that two panels were always going on at the same time. This led to the frustration of not being able to be in two places at once, alas Superman, and my idea for the suggestion box for next year: to spread the conference out over two days. I told this to my brother, a McCombs student and planning committee member, so hopefully this will be addressed next year. In honor of doppleganger week (I think Facebook should now have dopplegangbanger week) and continuing the Just the Two of Us theme, this dilemma also inspired a brilliant coaching strategy if you have identical twins on your team (Bill Self may already employ this with the Morris brothers); switch the two players' jerseys in select games so the defense never knows the strengths of which player is coming at them. Wise and otherwise, my two aliases, and the name of a Baldurdash spin-off, by far the silliest thing about the conference had to be the use of compostable cups, napkins and utensils... but with the absence of compost bins. This is not good since trade shows and conferences have an enormous impact on waste emissions. People like the Frito-Lay representative are under the impression that these bioplastics made from corn stock will degrade in landfills, but simply put, sun, oxygen and microorganisms that eat that material are not permitted in the sealed landfills. The lack of available recycling bins also irked me, a campus-wide problem needing to be addressed by green groups at UT.

The conference and surrounding campus weren't the only people with waste management problems; I and I fell victim to some strange stomach bug. While fighting dysentery from either my breakfast taco or something I ate at lunch, your resilient and fearless reporter was able to keep a critical eye on the events, however. The Walmart (Warmall?) representative was not as convincing a speaker as the chum from Frito-Lay, perhaps because he was younger and it was the first thing in the morning when he spoke. Nonetheless, both companies have set global goals of using renewable energy, being zero waste, decreasing their supply footprint, and selling products that sustain people and the environment. This last goal is laughable considering their current globalized manifestations as two of the biggest companies exemplifying the consumeristic American lifestyle, obesity, plastics and all. Walmart has over 8,000 stores worldwide registering two million customers weekly, and Pepsico, which owns Frito-Lay, is a $43-60 billion dollar company that produces the two largest subsets of landfill items, food/chip bags and beverage containers. While it's true their green initiatives combined with the scale of their companies have the chance to make a huge impact, that same ginormous scale of production places them in league with some of the largest waste-producers and is enough to make myself force vomit saturated fats all over their corporate jets.

One panel was smart to raise the point that while they should be congratulated for taking steps to alleviate their footprints, for something is better than nothing, they still should be avoided by conscientious consumers since they aren't sourcing locally through their support of national distribution systems and factory farming, putting small businesses and local entrepreneurs in jeopardy. Their companies are so big that it's impossible to keep track of all their practices, have a small footprint, and "sell products that sustain people and the environment." To be fair, I've listed some of their initiatives and statistics in a Word document, although a lot of them are buried in the percentage game. Notable improvements being made by both companies include modifying their distribution trucks to get better gas mileage, reducing waste sent to landfills from their outlets and factories, and using less or alternatively sourced energies. Frito-Lay should be commended for developing a compostable bag for their Sun Chips line, their "Prius brand" produced in solar-powered factories, while overcoming the necessity for an oxygen barrier by inserting a nano-thin aluminum barrier between two layers of PLA (biodegradable plastic). They plan to showcase this technology in the future by wrapping a building in Arizona and California with the material so daily travelers can see the degradation over time created by exposure to the elements. This technology will have tremendous benefits for end-of-life consumer packaging; now they just need to extend it to all their product lines.

As far as sustainable policy trends, urban planners are realizing the need for a transport mode shift, more public transportation options, sourcing fresh food within 100 miles of a city, and building communities in walking distance of shops and restaurants in what is called an "urban village" model. Portland is the Mecca of this model, where nearly 50% of the population uses public transportation or bikes to work, and progressive communities across the country are increasingly following their lead. This main recommendation stems from the suburban sprawl development of the past half century, hence our reliance on cars to get around. In the future, people will hopefully be able to walk/bike to wherever they need to go. The call for a national building code to make buildings more energy-efficient was echoed as was the need for toxic releases laws for companies to disclose any toxic waste or ingredients they may be producing. The innovative ways businesses are starting to achieve standards without legislation is remarkable, but without some government or outside pressure, markets can deviate substantially from what free market theory suggests. The line between ethics and economic theory has grown thinner from generations ago. Tim Mohin from AMD brought up the point that young people are increasingly graduating into the workplace looking to devote their careers to jobs that have redeeming value, and businesses are having to accomodate that if they want talented workers. Way to go Generation X, Y and Millenials! Keep up the pressure on the oppressor!

Unfortunately, this recession has not been good on small businesses and nonprofits, leaders of innovation and sustainable thinking. It has forced companies to make more efficient use of their resources, but has stymied investment in new products and research. While green products have definitely begun to dominate a share of the marketplace, consumers and businesses with tight budgets are choosing cheaper alternatives. Countries without as many regulations as America, due in part to free trade legislation, have cheaper resources to exploit and price those resources below their true values, and so rainforests and other diverse habitats are continuing to disappear, and fossil fuels are continuing to be extracted and used up. However, businesses employing these practices with no regard for the environment or communities around them will ultimately fail because they are not sustainable. Hope lies in communicating the science available to endangered or impoverished communities across the globe as well as supporting microfinancing, small interest-free loans to poor people in developing countries looking to start their own businesses. Going back in time, ancient communities had sustainable systems, and somewhere along the way that systems link was broken and was replaced by this industrial mega-rape in the name of more profits. That link needs to be repaired by voting with our dollars to support transparent, localized production based in sound science and human rights.

Thursday, February 4, 2010

5 Steps to Divert Your Super Bowl Waste

Over 100 million Americans and international viewers will gear up to watch this year's Super Bowl featuring Peyton's Colts versus Payton's Saints, the two best NFL teams from this season, both possessing tricky offenses and superior defensive capabilities, going head to head in a brutal, four hour match up that could be one of the best Super Bowls ever (although the last two are pretty hard to beat). This grand fiesta de football Americain may qualify as a national holiday, yet no matter what team you're rooting for, everyone involved must realize the huge environmental toll Super Bowl parties place on the Earth.

Like a lot of other holidays, consumption increases. Americans drink around 10.5 million barrels of beer that Sunday (Oregon Department of Agriculture). 14,500 tons of chips are consumed (About.com). To compliment those chips, twelve million pounds of guacamole is devoured (California Avocado Commission). TV sales rise 60% in the week before the game (Earth911.org). The Super Bowl as a national marketing event and all the man-hours going into it grosses nearly $10 billion, a good thing for our rebounding economy.

To balance this increased consumption, hosts and attendees should strive to make their Super Bowl parties zero waste events. Here are some tips to consider to help you with this effort.

1. Set up recycling bins and compost bags throughout the party. Depending on the size of your house, you may only need one of each or several.

2. All beverage containers should be recycled! This is a no-brainer. If you don't have curbside collection in your municipality, collect the cans and bottles and drop them off at your nearest recycling facility. Buying bulk containers like two liter sodas and mini-kegs (full kegs if you're gnarly) and serving in glasses is even better. Some red Solo cups claim to be made of recyclable plastic, but make sure your local recycling center takes these before you buy them. Reuse plastic as much as possible.

3. Try to avoid buying anything with plastic in it or around it. The only trash you should have at the end of the night is empty food bags. One of Eco-Cycle's clients is a sub shop in Boulder called Cheba Hut that gives us chip bags as their only waste. If they can do it, you can too!

4. Make as much fresh food as possible like chili, dips or casseroles. Compost all food waste if it can't be saved for later. Similarly, if you're buying disposable plates and utensils, try to buy those manufactured with recycled content. Most paper plates can be composted, but a lot of the ones with painted designs have an oily layer on them that can't be recycled/composted. There are compostable plastic utensils made out of biodegradable corn stock; try to find these at your local supermarket. Of course, the better option is to use washable plates, utensils and bowls.

5. To offset the enormous energy all those big-screen HD TVs across the nation use, turn off as many lights in the house as possible. Turn off your computers and other appliances that may require lots of power.

Following these tips should boost your waste diversion rate to 80-90%, which qualifies as zero waste ("or darn near!"). Remember to have a designated driver or couch to crash on if you're going somewhere and plan to drink a lot. Watch those commercials but don't believe everything you see. Pepsi's hyped their decision to forego their usual tacky Britney Spears spots with some green messages. There will probably be some other companies that decide to do the same. While many of these green initiatives are well-intentioned, a lot just want you to buy their product because you think they are changing the world. Until our consumption rate goes down, and our reuse and waste diversion rates go up, the environmental health of our world will continue to worsen. As Margaret Mead put it, "Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens watching the Super Bowl can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has." Go Saints!

Tuesday, January 26, 2010

Hard-to-Recycle Item #4: TP, SP?

Warning! Don't eat while reading this!

This week's Hard-to-Recycle item is one of the most difficult materials to recycle by the sheer nature of its use and our consumption of it, but it's cost to the environment is one of the highest out there, and therefore makes it deserving of discussion. Toilet paper, tissues, moist toilettes, napkins, diapers and tampons can all be lumped into a category I will call sanitary paper/fiber. With a pun about how it's literally a pain in the ass to recycle out of the way, (everyone say poop!) I will try to address the most eco-friendly choices you can make regarding these products. By NO means should any of these used products be put in the recycling! Some things were meant to be disposed of. I can't tell you how many diapers come out on the sorting lines every day. Hopefully, the offending young parents of Boulder County will read this post and this particular contamination problem will be allayed, but doubts remain.

Toilet paper can be traced back to ancient times, mainly from quotes about the Far East (leave it to the Chinese to invent all the necessary things in life), but its modern commercial use and production only goes back as far as the late 19th century. Benjamin Franklin and the rest of the founding fathers must have been struggling; you would think the developer of electricity and libraries would have thought of a clever way to clean his arse. Conversely, bidets were around as early as 1700, but only for royalty or noble usage (I feel like I should put quotes around noble usage), and for some reason never caught on in America, unfortunately (yes, I am a fan). History majors would have a unique and fascinating thesis in studying bathroom habits for the last few hundred years, but I digress.

The convenience of disposability and the fact that soiled sanitary paper can't really be reused makes it near impossible to recycle. The eco rule holds that one should use cloth napkins instead of paper ones, handkerchiefs instead of Kleenex, and even cloth diapers if possible. Cloth toilet paper (and tampons) would just be disgusting unless one washed them right after use, but this extra water usage would negate the positive impact you'd be having on the environment for using the cloth in the first place. Still, one can decrease the pain inflicted on forests by buying and using less sanitary paper in general. The rule (from Elaine on Seinfeld) is three good sheets, and when I say good, I mean the multi-layered kush stuff not the sandpaper single-layer stuff (please ask Matthew Sanchez for his opinion on cheap toilet paper which he turned into a song accompanied by Davey Rogner on guitar). I would also argue that the multi-layered toilet paper is not only more comfortable but more eco-friendly than the cheaper, single layered rolls (lord knows I've bought my share of .99 cent 4-packs) because you use less sheets as the multi-layered absorbs more. All college students should take this into consideration.

I haven't really counted this past year, or any year for that matter, but each American uses about 24 rolls of toilet paper annually on average, which leads to an astounding sum of 26 billion toilet rolls consumed as a nation, yielding $2.4-5.7 billion each year (Wikipedia). That's a lot of money, and that's a lot of trees, seven million to be exact. Luckily, a growing number of those toilet paper rolls are being manufactured using post-consumer fiber, or in layman's terms, recycled paper. Look for labels that may include the recycling loop, or say somewhere the product is made using post-consumer fiber. Abbreviations such as PCF or TCF mean the paper is totally/partially chlorine-free, chlorinated paper being another leachate problem that affects septic tanks and landfills once the soiled paper in question reaches there. If you need further help, all those street canvassers from Greenpeace asking for your donations and signatures were able to pull together this guide to sustainable tissue paper purchasing. Greenpeace was also able to take a break from aggravating whale hunters and launched a successful campaign against Kimberly-Clarke, one of the largest tissue paper corporations in the world and the maker of Kleenex, that effectively compels the company to stop using trees from Canada's ancient Boreal forests, the world's largest terrestial storehouse of natural carbon and a sacred habitat for caribou and migratory birds, as well as a commitment not to use virgin fiber wherever possible. Greenpeace kept up extraordinary pressure on the company throughout the 5-year campaign and was able to move from conflict to agreement. This is the type of pressure needed to persuade unruly companies employing harmful environmental practices for profit. Next up is Georgia-Pacific, but the Boreal forests of Ontario are still in danger from other lumber practices.

One brilliant but expensive idea that's highly unlikely to catch on is a machine that converts office paper into toilet paper all at the office! For $95,000, a Japanese company will send you a ginormous machine that will convert 16 pounds of 8x11" printer paper into two rolls of toilet paper. If that last sentence didn't describe enough logistical problems with the machine, then imagine having to wait two hours for the whole process to complete itself when you're trying to answer nature's call.

So remember, when you're wiping up whatever bodily fluid, secretion or excretion that decides to make a journey from one of your orifices, try to use cloth/fabric instead of paper wherever possible. As Douglas Adams writes in The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy, "the towel is about the most massively useful thing an interstellar hitchhiker can have." If necessity requires that you use paper, use as little as possible; or in other words take what you want, but use (efficiently and effectively) all that you take. The plus side of sanitary paper is that it will decompose, eventually, somewhere far from home, and so should not pose a waste stream problem unless wrongfully disposed of in the recycling (in which case I've trained a pack of wolves that will track the scent of you and your baby's waste back to you for an unpleasant reckoning). However, the threat to forests like the Boreal and Central American rain forests by using virgin fiber is real. Look for the paper brands that have post-consumer content in them, or buy the toilet paper converter machine, but never, ever, buy that cheap sandpaper substance. The eradication of single layer toilet paper must be a goal for all of us, as should changing the financial incentive to use virgin materials by buying recycled products.

Tuesday, January 19, 2010

MLK Day of Service

Recycling program kicks off at Casa de la Esperanza on Day of Service

By Magdalena Wegrzyn
© 2010 Longmont Times-Call

LONGMONT — Jose Jimenez, 11, held up a dirty diaper with one glove-encased hand.

“I’m brave,” he called out as the other volunteers at Monday’s clean up of Casa de la Esperanza inched away from the offending piece of garbage.

Jimenez grimaced and gingerly threw the bundle into an outstretched trash bag.

At the end of the day, 16 trash bags of assorted litter — including plenty of diapers that had just missed the Dumpster — were collected by children in Casa de la Esperanza’s resident services program.

The cleanup was part of a new campaign sponsored by Eco-Cycle and the city’s public works department to encourage recycling at apartments. During the next 10 months, Eco-Cycle will provide residents at 10 apartment complexes in Longmont education and resources to recycle.

The first site was Casa de la Esperanza, a 32-unit community that houses migrant farm workers and their families. The rest of the sites have not yet been determined.

Eco-Cycle launched the campaign Monday to coincide with the Martin Luther King Jr. holiday, which Congress designated a National Day of Service in 1994. It was also a day off for students in the St. Vrain Valley School District.

As part of the program, volunteers helped sort the collected litter into recycled items and trash. The children also painted blue single-steam recycling bins, which will be distributed to each family.

Javier Gonzalez, 9, painted “Recycling Only” on his bin in olive green paint. The third-grader at Indian Peaks Elementary said his teachers have taught him about the importance of recycling.

“Trash makes landfills, which sometimes produce the greenhouse effect,” he said, never taking his eyes off his bin.

Western Disposal will provide four bins for recycling alongside the Dumpsters at Casa de la Esperanza. Eco-Cycle will monitor both the trash and recycling bins for two months to see if the approach is working, said Cynthia Ashley, community campaign manager for Eco-Cycle.

“Our goal is to have as much in the recycling bins as in the garbage,” she said.

Apartment recycling can be difficult because property management companies don’t always provide residents with accessible resources, Ashley said. And even if they do, education is essential.

“It’s very hard to get residents to do it without education, and that doesn’t happen just by sticking a sign on a bin,” she said.

Casa de la Esperanza, which is owned and operated by the Boulder County Housing Authority, supplied recycling bins for residents years ago, said program coordinator Carlota Loya-Hernandez. But the recycling program was canceled because it wasn’t working, she said.

“The education component was missing,” she said.

Children of residents are now “immersed in recycling” at school and bring that knowledge home to parents, she said.

“We are definitely ready for it,” she said. “It’s something that has been missing for a while.”

Role Models - No Agent for Agent Zero

With all the hoopla over Wizard's star Gilbert Arenas, I figured it was time to take a break from recycling matters and weigh in with my own thoughts regarding Secret Agent Zero. The conflict over bringing unloaded firearms into the team's locker room, and using them as a prank against teammate Javaris Crittenton, and then going so far as to present a gunslinger pose in the pregame huddle for cameras in Philadelphia following the incident, is naturally, a serious violation of league rules, not to mention a breach of standard conduct for normal human beings. What made the superstar athlete commit such hasty, ill-advised "jokes" can be found in the impulsive, answer-to-no-one, goofball nature that is Gilbert Arenas. The fact that Agent Zero has no agent, no publicist, no one telling him what to do but himself, is probably the uttermost reason for why he went through with the act, and all the other obscure dramas that have dotted his career.

While substitute teaching a couple years ago, I couldn't help but feel hometown pride when I saw all the youts sporting Arenas jerseys. At the time, it seemed like Washington had a bright future ahead of them, but now it looks like the purchase of a Jamison or Butler jersey (yeah Sanchez) would have been more prudent. It disheartens me to think how those students are making sense of this situation now (as we all are), but those who worry about all the kids who looked up to Gil as a role model should sit back and contemplate the fact that Gil himself seemingly has no role models. His mother was a drug addict that left him and his father, Gil Sr., at a young age. While Senior-Junior nomenclature is usually a sign of strong family ties and affection, it can often leave the younger individual with a sense of abjection and a desire to be different. A "no heroes," "look what I can do" sentimentality seems to course through Gil's veins, a similar vein of thought attributed to feisty teenagers who make rash decisions, perhaps highlighting his appeal to youngsters and noncomformist ballers like myself. It's not quite immaturity, but rather a Clint Richie "everybody needs a gimmick" mixed with a Deshawn Stevenson/Magic Man "now you see me, now you don't" mentality. Combine this history and personality traits with the calculating will and talent to succeed at the game of basketball and you get Agent Zero.

There's no doubt in my mind that Arenas was, is, and will still be an amazing basketball player, despite this season's mishaps. I'd pick him up on my squad any day, and if the NBA/Wizards don't forgive him in time, then Europe will pay him to play. This is why this whole fiasco is so bittersweet; another Washington sports star taken down in his prime. And this time, it is all his fault, but this infraction is so minor compared to other crimes in the world. People seemed to forgive Dick Cheney for actually shooting somebody. Police get acquitted every year for shooting young black men in the back of the head. The NRA is a cherished American institution (I guess basketball players don't have the right to bear arms). Referees regularly gamble on NBA games, making calls that change the course of the game, yet only one has eve received punishment while the practice is still running rampant. People seem to forget Gil's appearances at street ball games in underserved neighborhoods across the area, his monetary donations to local schools in the 06-07 season, as well as his mentoring of a ten year-old D.C. orphan. It is in these acts that Arenas' redemption lies, not in the bragging rights of Hibachi and Agent Zero.

Unloaded gun pranks are forgivable in my book and the suspension at most should have been 10 games. The fact that this man spent the last two seasons benched with a horrendous knee injury/surgeries makes the cause for forgiveness and reconciliation even more arguable. I've run the whole gambit of the stages of grief for this episode: anger (at the league), denial (nothing's going to happen), bargaining (if he sits out, other Wizards will step up) depression (the Wizards are utterly hopeless), and hopefully this note will lead to acceptance, but at this point, the NBA is not very fun to watch anymore. Our sports teams could be a whole lot worse, but this does not comfort fans of such a fluke professional sports scene. Thank God for the Caps. Thank God for college basketball, although even colleges are seeing gun charges with the recent Tennessee scandal. Is stability and success such a hard thing to grasp for a city that transitions and leads so well?