TERRACYCLE NEWS

ELIMINATING THE IDEA OF WASTE®

Cheers for Monday, July 28, 2014

TerraCycle Capri Sun (Kraft) Include USA drink pouch brigade
- To the trustees of the Mof­fat Library in Washingtonville who are working on plans to restore the building and to the members of the community for their support. Damage from storms several years ago forced the 127-year-old building to close and books and items were relocated to a tem­porary home. But the library, one of the most charming in the area and certainly the most attractive building in Washing­tonville, deserves to occupy its historic place in the heart of the community. If all goes well, and all the money that is necessary can be found, the books and the patrons should be back where they belong in a few years. - To Ellenville Elementary School for teaching students about two of the other Rs – recycling and raising funds. Ellenville is one of thousands of schools across the country earning money by collect­ing and recycling the drink pouches they use at home and in the lunchroom. So far, they have earned more than $1,200 for the school through the Ter­raCycle and Capri Sun’s Drink Pouch Brigade. While it is true that this program is good for the company because it encour­ages students to buy this brand, there is nothing stopping others from launching similar re­wards programs to encourage recycling and promote their own products. - To the SUNY New Paltz 3-D printing program, formally known as the Hudson Valley Advanced Manufacturing Cen­ter, for putting new technology to use in a very dramatic way. Using about $20 in materials, one of the center’s MakerBot tabletop 3-D printers created a prosthetic hand for a local 6-year-old who was born with­out fingers on his left hand. The technique holds great promise because while such prosthet­ics can cost tens of thousands of dollars and children can outgrow them quickly, the 3-D printers can quickly and inexpensively make them as needed. - To St. Luke’s Cornwall Hospital for earning the “Most Wired” award from Hospitals & Health Networks magazine, the only hospital in the Hudson Valley to receive the distinc­tion. The hospital was recog­nized for its electronic data sharing and its participation in the New York State Patient Portal as well as the use of technology to reduce medical errors. - To the passersby who acted quickly to rescue a baby ac­cidentally locked inside a car and to the others who have reported some not-so-acciden­tal cases, ones where parents have left children inside hot cars on hot days despite all of the warning about the dangers involved. If parents know no better or do not care enough, they deserve to be reported and the children deserve to be rescued. - To Kittatinny Canoes, its employees and the hundreds of volunteers who paddled out from Matamoras, Pa., last week and helped pull up piles of trash from Barryville to Dingmans Ferry, Pa., during the 25th annual On and Under the Delaware River Cleanup. Since 1990, the annual effort has removed 440 tons of trash from the river, including 8,547 tires and 8,544 pounds of alu­minum cans. - To Boice Brothers Dairy of Kingston and all of its hungry helpers who set a record for creating the world’s longest sundae, a concoction of vanilla ice cream, sprinkles, chocolate sauce and whipped cream more than 1,600 feet long.