TERRACYCLE NEWS

ELIMINATING THE IDEA OF WASTE®

Posts with term school X

TerraCycle Tote Giveaway - ends Oct. 11

Congratulations to TerraCycle Drink Pouch Brigrade Progam - they have saved 50 million pouches from being put in landfills and contributed a MILLION dollars to schools and non-profits!! Students and teachers at over 30,000 schools nation wide have collected 50 million drink pouches for the program over the past two years resulting in the 1 million dollars milestone donation! AMAZING!!!

TerraCycle Drink Puch Tote Bag Giveaway ENDS 10/11 at 9:00 CST

Congratulations to TerraCycle Drink Pouch Brigrade Program they have saved 50 million pouches from being put in landfills and contributed a MILLION dollars to schools and non-profits!! The Capri Sun beverage brand was one of the earliest supporters of TerraCycle, a company that collects would-be trash and turns it into useful items. The collection program, called the Drink Pouch Brigade, takes place mostly in schools, where children choose to deposit used pouches in special receptacles rather than throw them away. In participating schools, each used drink pouch collected and sent to TerraCycle earns two cents, with the funds going toward needed educational programs and resources. Does your school participate in this program, let us know? Together, students and teachers at over 30,000 schools nation wide have collected 50 million drink pouches for the program over the past two years resulting in the 1 million dollars milestone donation! AMAZING!!!

TerraCycle Celebrates 50 Million Pouches Saved + Tote Bag Giveaway

If you follow My SLC Mommy you've noticed that I've been posting about TerraCycle in hopes to get you and your schools involved and help reduce the amount of waste leaving our homes and heading to the local landfill.  Well TerraCycle is celebrating the Drink Pouch Brigade for hitting over 1 Million paid and over 50 million drink pouches saved fromgoing into a landfill.  TerraCycle is celebrating by thanking the top 100 collecting schools with a very special and unique certificate of recognition framed in a limited edition wrapper frame!

TerraCycle Reusable Bag Giveaway - Ends Today

If you follow My South Central Texas Mommy you've noticed that I've been posting about TerraCycle in hopes to get you and your schools involved and help reduce the amount of waste leaving our homes and heading to the local landfill.  Well TerraCycle is celebrating the Drink Pouch Brigade for hitting over 1 Million paid and over 50 million drink pouches saved fromgoing into a landfill.  TerraCycle is celebrating by thanking the top 100 collecting schools with a very special and unique certificate of recognition framed in a limited edition wrapper frame! You can view past TerraCycle post HERE to see all the many ways you can get involved!

TERRACYCLE GIVEAWAY

Congratulations to TerraCycle Drink Pouch Brigrade Progam they have save 50 million pouches from being put in landfills and contributed a MILLION dollars to schools and non-profits!! The Capri Sun beverage brand was one of the earliest supporters of TerraCycle, a company that collects would-be trash and turns it into useful items. The collection program, called the Drink Pouch Brigade, takes place mostly in schools, where children choose to deposit used pouches in special receptacles rather than throw them away. In participating schools, each used drink pouch collected and sent to TerraCycle earns two cents, with the funds going toward needed educational programs and resources. Does your school participate in this program, let us know? Together, students and teachers at over 30,000 schools nation wide have collected 50 million drink pouches for the program over the past two years resulting in the 1 million dollars milestone donation! AMAZING!!!

TERRACYCLE $1 Million Drink Pouches

Have you heard of TERRACYCLE? If not you need to check them out. They take trash and Terracycle it into really cool items TerraCycle runs national programs called Brigades, each of which is for a specific waste stream (like the Drink Pouch Brigade, or the Cookie Wrapper Brigade). TerraCycle Brigades are national programs where you can earn cash for your trash (all money is paid to schools and non profits) TerraCycle is excited to celebrate the Drink Pouch Brigade hitting the $1 million mark for schools. That means 50 million drink pouches have been redeemed through TerraCycle fund local school programs nationwide.

Helping Shrewsbury Go GREEN! The Dumpster Divers “your eco-friendly trash team”

Jackie Fashjian became very passionate about spreading awareness to future generations on this very serious environmental issue.  She began working with a company called Terracycle.  Terracycle creates new products from non-recyclable trash that would otherwise end up in the landfills.  They resell these innovative products to major retailers like Wal-Mart, K-Mart and Home Depot just to name a few.  The best part about this program is Terracycle donates 2 cents to a school or charity for every piece of trash sent in.  So far The Dumpster Divers have diverted thousands of pieces of trash from the landfills and raised well over $100 for Floral Street School.  They have also opened a new account to raise $$ for a local Girl Scout troop.  Their hope in the future is to spread this program throughout Central MA and raise a lot more money for local schools and other non profit charities.

A School Fundraiser Worth Sharing

Just about every school - public or private - needs money. And I'm not against it by any means. This year I'm chairing the fund raising committee for my younger son's school. My goal is to incorporate projects that teach as well as bring in money. But In my quest, I've found another that I must share. The company is called TerraCycle, and its aim is to make eco-friendly, affordable consumer products from waste.

Upcycling Waste through TerraCycle

That’s where TerraCycle comes into play. The goal of TerraCycle is to prevent snack and drink containers from ending up in landfills or being incinerated. TerraCycle helps band consumers together into groups — called “Brigades” — to return used packaging in bulk to TerraCycle. Returned goods are then cleaned out and transformed into new products including bags, coolers, clip boards, picture frames and kites. In addition, for every package returned the brigade earns money to put towards a charity of their choice or, if the team is from a school or non-profit organization, they can keep the money to further their mission.  It is a win-win program: people can reduce their waste while raising money for a good cause. As word spreads about TerraCycle more and more snack and beverage companies are joining the program, meaning even more packaging can be returned and re-purposed. Some major companies whose wrappers can be sent back to TerraCycle include: Stonyfield, Capri Sun, Frito Lay, Kraft, Mars Wrigley, Kashi, Aveeno, Colgate, and Ziploc. The recycled products that TerraCycle produces are then sold at major retailers, including Walmart, Target, Home Depot, and K-Mart. The end products are labeled as TerraCycle products, so consumers know they are supporting a good cause and creating demand for the program. According to the TerraCycle website, there are 11,597,783 people collecting trash with TerraCycle brigades, and over one billion units of waste have already been collected and re-purposed into 186 different products. If that doesn’t already sound good enough, these efforts also helped raise $1.2 Million for various schools, non profits, and charities across the country.

Back to School Check-up ~ Terracycle Review and Giveway

Do you remember our last post about TerraCycle called Making Trash Green? You should definitely check it out if you didn't already read it. Basically, schools, churches and groups of all kinds form a brigade and start collecting! There are brigades for drink pouches, Bear Naked, Huggies, and Ziploc bags- to name a few. You simply collect and send- then TerraCycle makes a donation to your non-profit or a charity of your choice. TerraCycle then takes the trash and makes it into something not-so-trashy.