TERRACYCLE NEWS

ELIMINATING THE IDEA OF WASTE®

On a mission to save the Earth: 4 Quad-Citians tell their stories

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Karen Neder, of Moline, is passionate about recycling, going as far as finding places to send toothpaste tubes, coffee bags and blue jeans.
Tara Witherow, of Davenport, plants native coreopsis and purple coneflowers in her front yard, saying a green lawn is "just a waste" because it provides nothing for birds or insects.
Rod Saelens, of Fyre Lake, gives money to Planned Parenthood because he considers overpopulation the globe's biggest challenge.
Sandy Stanley, of Muscatine, is board president of Clean Air Muscatine, a nonprofit group organized in 2011 to prod Grain Processing Co. to stop polluting the city's air with particulate matter and sulfur dioxide.
These are the stories of four of the 20 to 25 Quad-Cities area residents who showed up March 25 at a gathering of environmentally minded people at a Davenport restaurant.
The event was organized by members of Progressive Action for the Common Good, a nonprofit group that aims to educate, engage and empower for the common good. But the goal was to launch a different, informal group called Green Drinks.
The aim of Green Drinks is to bring together like-minded people to share interests and socialize. It targets people who work in environmental fields, but anyone interested is welcome. The first group was organized in London in 1989.
Climate change was high on the minds of everyone at the Davenport meeting, but participants also had personal stories — things they're worried about, things they're doing in their own lives.
Here are four of their stories.

Karen Neder, passionate recycler

Neder got started on her recycling path in 2007 when she joined an Earth Keepers group at Trinity Lutheran Church, Moline. The group was organized to figure out ways the congregation could be more environmentally responsible.
Going online, Neder located TerraCycle, a private U.S. recycling business headquartered in Trenton, N.J. According to its website, it collects what is essentially nonrecyclable waste and partners with corporate donors to turn it into raw materials to be used in new products.
There's even a rebate program in which recycling can be a fundraiser.
One of the items Neder recycles is chip bags, the foil-lined bags in which Fritos or similar snacks are packaged. Forty pounds is the minimum amount accepted for credit; the last time Neder sent in a shipment, she had 54 pounds.
"That is a lot of snack bags," she said. "And you have to have a gigantic box. I went to Menards and got a refrigerator box." For her efforts, she received two cents per bag, or $84.
Neder has her pastor's enthusiastic blessing, and he has given her a room in the church complex where she can sort and box her recyclables. (She previously did everything at home.) The church has sorting parties once a month.
Neder has expanded her reach beyond TerraCycle, thanks to ferreting out programs on the internet that allow recycling of glue sticks, crayons, blue jeans, floppy discs, old sports trophies — all sorts of things.
She speaks to various groups to spread the word and is heartened by the support she is getting.
"Over the last year, this program has taken off like you wouldn't believe," she said.
Ultimately, though, society's goal should be to slash its dependence on plastic, which is infecting every place on Earth, including the human body, she said.
To reduce her own use of plastic, she has adopted a habit that she recommends to others: She always carries a reusable straw, at least two reusable bags, and a reusable drinking container.
That way, she can turn down single-use plastic straws and bags and when buying a beverage, she can ask to have it poured into her own reusable container rather than a single-use cup.
Neder also keeps a container in her car trunk to take with her into restaurants in case she has leftover food.
"The hardest part is remembering," she said.