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Posts with term Cigarette Recycling Program X

Butt of the problem: Hazardous dropped cigarettes could be recycled

Sean Prockter – Special to the Fitzhugh   Did you know that cigarette butts are considered litter?   OK, perhaps you knew that one, but did you also know that you can recycle them here in Canada?   It’s true, and given that cigarettes are toxic, non-biodegradable and made of plastic means tossing them on the sidewalk does a significant amount of harm to our environment.   So, if you are a smoker, know someone who smokes, or just simply cares about our environment, please read on to find out how hazardous a single cigarette butt can be.   Cigarettes are the number one source of litter in Canada and has been for over 20 years, according to the Great Canadian Shoreline Cleanup. In fact, there were more than 500,000 butts collected in 2018 alone.   Why? Well, it’s still largely considered a socially acceptable action, which it shouldn’t be. A tossed cigarette butt is an act of littering.   How can one cigarette butt be a problem?   Well, other than the cumulative effects of multiple people thinking that way about a tossed cigarette, it’s also toxic to the environment.   A variety of chemicals are added to cigarettes to make them more appealing, control the burn rate, and promote addiction.   Often the cigarette is not entirely smoked and the nicotine that still remains is extremely poisonous to all organisms.   Then there’s the cigarette filter, which is designed to do exactly what its name suggests, filter and absorb the toxins in cigarette smoke and collect solid particles known as tar. Most cigarette filters have an inner core composed of cellulose acetate, a form of plastic.   Here in Jasper, a cigarette butt may take five to ten years to break apart; however, that does not mean that it biodegrades. It simply breaks apart into tiny pieces.   The toxins then spread into our waterways, poisoning our fish and other aquatic species while the acetate turns into microplastics.   Ocean Wise, a conservation organization based in British Columbia, has done extensive research on microplastics in our marine environment and the findings are not good.   The fish off our coasts are consuming these microplastics at an alarming rate, causing a multitude of health problems.   Microplastics also act as binding agents to chemical pollutants, and guess what happens to those chemicals if the fish are harvested? They wind up on our plates and in our restaurants as a wicked full circle.   What can we do about this? First of all, don’t litter.   However, there is something else we can do here in Jasper that not only prevents the littering of cigarette butts, but can also support our community at the same time.   It’s called TerraCycle and to date, they have recycled nearly 150 million cigarette butts right here in Canada.   Basically, an individual, organization or municipality can sign up with the company, print off a free shipping label and once they’ve collected enough butts, ship them off to Mississauga where the box is weighed.   One pound is worth $1 starting at three pounds, and all the funds go towards a charity of your choice.   The butts are zapped with gamma rays to remove the toxicity, processed into tiny plastic balls and then morphed into industrial plastics used for railway ties and plastic pallets.   Businesses and municipalities all across Canada have been erecting these metal receptacles ($100) designed to collect cigarettes in downtown areas for this cause.   With many of our community groups struggling due to funding cuts, this could be an amazing way to give back to the town in several positive ways.   For some reason, our society continues to see the tossing of cigarette butts as socially acceptable.   We are trying to break that social barrier through education. It’s considered pollution and the most common form of littering in this country.   The indigenous people of Canada have long said that the health of our land is the health of our people. They are absolutely right.   Don’t be part of the problem; be part of the solution, one cigarette butt at a time.  

Earth Day Across America! 50 Earth-Saving Projects From Every State

  Good citizens in every state—from New York to Wyoming—are helping save the environment. In honor of Earth Day, we’re highlighting some of the best Earth Day activities across America. We’re inspired, and we hope you are too! Click launch gallery to see these amazing people and projects. Plus, find out how you can pitch in and do your part to protect the planet.        

Alabama

  We live in divisive times, but “there is an essential element that can unite us: water.” So believes Charles Scribner, executive director of Black Warrior Riverkeeper, a nonprofit committed to cleaning up and protecting the 6,276 square miles of Black Warrior River watershed in the state. Over the past year, the organization has investigated a wastewater spill that killed some 175,000 fish in one of the Black Warrior’s three major tributaries; monitored 73 facilities in 17 counties; and won a ruling against a mine company that was violating the Clean Water Act.   What you can do Get info from Waterkeepers Alliance on groups in your area that work to protect watersheds.      

Alaska

  Who is more invested in saving the planet than the generation that’s going to be around the longest? Alaska Youth for Environmental Action (AYEA) offers leadership skills training to rural and urban young people, and support for youth-led community action projects and campaigns. Last year AYEA youth held climate strikes in nine cities and towns across Alaska, carrying signs with slogans like “Keep Alaska Freezin’” and “Don’t You Want Grandchildren?” An annual Civics & Conservation Summit in Juneau trains youth delegates in how to talk to the media, how to communicate with elected officials and how to read a bill, as well as offering info on the tribal resolution process and environmental justice. “I couldn’t be more thankful to know such a special group of people and we refuse to give up until our voices are heard. As the youth of Alaska, we are strength, we are unity, we are the future of our state, and we are worth it,” says AYEA alum Cassidy Austin from McCarthy.   What you can do Go to earthday.org for ideas.        

Arizona

  The mighty Colorado River, which carved the Grand Canyon, has some powerful offshoots, including the 649-mile long Gila River, home to Native American tribes for 2,000-plus years. Dams and flood-control projects have diminished the Gila’s flow, even as its watershed provides water to more than 5 million in Phoenix and Tuscon. A new interpretive trail and education center in the Gila River Indian Community (GRIC) reservation (where some 11,000 members of the Pima and Maricopa tribes live) offers visitors a chance to learn about the river, about replenishment of the watershed with a managed aquifer recharge (MAR) project and how to find sustainable ways to provide water for farming and materials (like willow trees) for native artisans. The new center “will be a living tribute to our water rights, our huhugam [ancestors] and teaching our future generations our historic and ongoing ties to the Gila River,” GRIC governor Stephen Roe Lewis said.   What you can do Find out more about protecting Native American water rights through the Native American Rights Fund.      

Arkansas

  There are very few things in life you can do in a quarter of an hour that are going to have a long-term effect, says Little Rock lawyer John Baker. One thing that does: planting a tree. “It takes 15 minutes to plant and mulch it, and that tree is going to pay dividends for 80 to 100 years,” says Baker. Tree Streets, the nonprofit he cofounded in 1997, was created to plant trees in Little Rock’s urban neighborhoods and help educate residents about their benefits, from providing cooling shade (and lowering air-conditioning bills) to reducing air pollution and storm runoff. Tree Streets volunteers have planted almost 2,000 trees—including oaks, maples, tulip poplars and other hardwoods—on more than 175 different city blocks.   What you can do Learn more about tree planting in your own community from the Arbor Day Foundation.        

California

  Can we eat our way out of the climate crisis? San Francisco restaurateurs Karen Leibowitz and Anthony Myint think so. That’s why they launched Restore California. The project gives restaurant diners the option to pay an additional 1 percent of their bill; that money goes directly to farmers who practice regenerative farming—techniques like composting and crop rotation, which pull carbon out of the atmosphere and hold it in the soil. Almost 30 California restaurants (including Leibowitz and Myint’s Mission Chinese Food) participate in the program.   What you can do Find a participating restaurant near you with Zero Foodprint.      

Colorado

  When excess food remains after a catered event at Colorado State University, a text message notifies those who’ve signed up for the “Ram Food Recovery” program where to get leftovers. The pickup period is 30 minutes after the end of the event, to ensure food stays fresh. More than 1,300 people have signed up for the texting alert system since it launched a year ago, and the university has had 78 pickup events.   What you can do Learn more about reducing food waste from the Food Waste Reduction Alliance.   Composting Tip   Keeping a small container in your freezer for leftover food scraps = no-smell and no fruit fries. Dump into your compost pile outside when full. Check out more composting tips.        

Connecticut

  North American monarch butterfly populations have plummeted 90 percent in the past 20 years. Enter Pollinator Pathways. Created by Wilton environmentalist Donna Merrill, the project brings together volunteers from neighboring towns to create habitats and food sources for pollinating insects and wildlife along a series of continuous, pesticide-free corridors. The goal is to connect properties within 750 meters or less of each other—the range of most native bees. The project began in 2017; since then pathways have been established in more than 85 towns in Connecticut and New York.   What you can do Find info from Pollinator Pathways on planting for pollinators.        

Delaware

  The 600-plus volunteer members of the Delaware Center for Horticulture (DCH) plant native trees, flowers, bushes, shrubs and grasses in “challenging urban grow zones”—on traffic islands, along busy streets and sidewalks, and in empty lots. They also help residents construct urban gardens, container gardens, and school and institutional gardens.   What you can do Check out Keep America Beautiful for volunteer opportunities near you.      

Florida

  When Erika Zambello heard about the Tempestry Project—an ongoing creation of “temperature tapestries” or wall hangings that chart daily high temperatures for given years and locations—she was all in to craft one herself. Her first tempestry documented temperatures in a New Hampshire forest, which got her thinking about how changing temperatures might affect U.S. national parks. With the blessings of the Tempestry Project’s founders, Zambello started to organize volunteers to record temperature changes at national parks. Now knitters, crocheters and cross-stitchers have created tempestries on behalf of more than 30 national parks across the U.S. Zambello, who lives on the Emerald Coast, claimed Gulf Islands National Seashore as her personal piece of the project because it’s “the park I am most familiar with and close to my head and heart,” she wrote in National Parks Traveler magazine.   What you can do Learn more about the Tempestry Project.   A note from Erika: The tempestries on my left represent Joshua Tree National Park, knit by Sharon Speich. I am holding two tempestry kits for Gulf Islands National Seashore in the Florida Panhandle. To my right is Voyageurs National Park, knit by Deb Ceci   photo courtesy Erika Zambello/Tempestry Project          

Georgia

  With more than a million cubic feet of water and more than 100,000 fish, Atlanta’s Georgia Aquarium is the largest in the world. Over the last decade, the nonprofit has helped map the genome of endangered whale sharks, studied the health of captive bottlenose dolphins and wild dolphins and created a program (Seafood Savvy) to help consumers figure out how to choose seafood from sustainable sources—a critical task given that some 67 percent of seafood in the U.S. moves through restaurants and another 24 percent sells through retail outlets. And, even though the aquarium’s tanks hold 10 million gallons of water, it uses only as much water as an average grocery store, thanks to high-tech systems for treating and recycling the water. The Aquarium even has its own TV show, Animal Planet’s The Aquarium, which documents behind-the-scenes life and the key role the aquarium plays in conservation around the world.   What you can do Learn more, plan a visit or donate at the Georgia Aquarium.        

Hawaii

  When you visit a tourism hot spot, like Hawaii (where Jurassic Park and Jumanji were filmed), you can learn how to be kind to the environment while seeing the sights. At Kualoa Ranch, tours (on horseback or ATV) are limited to small groups and include info about the geology, flora and fauna. The ranch’s plant protection program protects rare and vanishing species while weeding out invasive species like albizia trees, which grow quickly and shade out native Hawaiian forest plants. Kualoa’s education programs host some 14,000 Hawaiian schoolchildren every year who learn how to be good stewards of the land, and the ranch relies heavily on locally sourced products and services.   What you can do Make sure your next Hawaiian vacation is eco-friendly by finding a certified “sustainable tourism” operator with the Sustainable Tourism Association of Hawaii. When traveling elsewhere, look for hotels accredited by respectable certification programs, such as Green Key, the Global Sustainable Tourism Council and the U.S. Green Building Council, which oversees LEED certification.      

Idaho

  It’s hard to want to preserve and protect the environment if you’ve never experienced the rich complexity and diversity of the natural world. Selkirk Outdoor Leadership & Education (SOLE) provides a range of  “experiences” to help underserved rural youth learn about the wilderness. Summer camps for kids as young as 4 teach children how to identify various tree species, for example, and outdoor leadership days for older kids offer training on everything from using a compass to Leave No Trace ethics. More than 70 percent of the kids who participate in SOLE are exploring and learning about the wilderness for the first time.   What you can do Find out more about SOLE.      

Illinois

  An estimated 90,000 different animal species around the globe stand on the brink of extinction. The best way to figure out which species are at risk and what we can do to save them is to collect massive amounts of data—where animals are born, how many survive, where they travel, etc. Wildbook, the brainchild of University of Illinois at Chicago computer science professor Tanya Berger-Wolf, uses algorithms to digitally tag animals (“like a human fingerprint”) and track locations, dates of sighting, migration patterns and even an animal’s social group. The data helps create accurate estimates of population sizes and other factors, what Berger-Wolf calls “a comprehensive view of the planet’s biodiversity.” The hope is that quick assessment of the health of various species will help scientists respond in time to ward off extinction.   What you can do Follow, donate or contribute data of your own with Wildbook. Find a list of endangered species in your state through the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service.   Tanya is on leave from UIC currently but all this work was done while she was at UIC. Two of their most iconic species (for different reasons) are whale sharks and Grevy's zebra.      

Indiana

  Green Tree Plastics’ ABC Promise Partnership program encourages kids to collect plastic caps and lids (from butter tubs, coffee cans, milk cartons, laundry detergent), sort them and deliver them to Green Tree’s Evansville headquarters. The caps are made into recycled lumber used to make benches, picnic tables and trash receptacles. Each ABC Promise group gets a bench (in their choice of color) in exchange for 200 pounds of plastic caps.   What you can do Learn more about the ABC Promise program and check out more recycling ideas.      

Iowa

  Matt Russell is a fifth-generation Iowa farmer who grows heirloom tomatoes and fresh produce from spinach to brussels sprouts on the 110-acre farm he shares with his husband in Lacona. He also preaches the gospel of healthy soil to farmers statewide as executive director of Iowa Interfaith Power and Light, a nonprofit that encourages people of faith to become leaders in the fight against climate change. “How is God calling you to use your farm to improve the world?” he asks. Since conventional farming techniques have stripped much of the carbon content from soil, he suggests alternative techniques, such as growing carbon-absorbing crops and planting without tilling, which help preserve and sequester carbon.   What you can do Find out more about Interfaith Power and Light in your state.   Note from Matt: In the photo is Dr. Emily Heaton, professor of Agronomy at Iowa State University. Man with camera is Dave Timko, producer, cinematographer and editor with This American Land, and the other [man] is Gary Strieker, Executive Producer at This American Land.   Iowa IPL has been working with Iowa farmers to help them provide leadership and on-farm solutions to the climate crisis. We’ve helped dozens of farmers connect with scores of media outlets (state, national, and international), nearly all of the presidential candidates during the Iowa Caucus, and Iowa elected leaders to share how farmers can help solve climate change. This is an interview that will be aired soon on This American Land later this year. Dr. Heaton is developing perennial systems that can provide the ecological services and agricultural products to reduce emissions and capture carbon. She is standing in her research field of Miscanthus giganteus.   photo courtesy Iowa Interfaith Power and Light      

Kansas

  For more than 40 years, artist Terry Evans has explored and photographed the prairies near her home in Salina to raise awareness of their fragility. Tallgrass prairie once covered 170 million acres of North America; humans have destroyed or altered 95 percent of that, plowing to make way for wheat and corn. Evans photographs pieces of the prairie—wildflowers like silverleaf scurfpea and milkweeds like green antelopehorn—then puts the individual photos together into large-scale images that show the prairie’s incredible complexity.   What you can do Learn more about protecting prairies from The Nature Conservancy.      

Kentucky

  The largest greenhouse in the U.S.—all 2.76 million square feet of it—will start shipping some 40 million pounds of fresh produce to grocery stores this summer. Morehead’s AppHarvest, the brainchild of Kentucky native Jonathan Webb, will grow pesticide-free tomatoes and cucumbers, relying on the sun and LED lighting and a recycled rainwater system that uses 90 percent less water than traditional farming. It’s also within a day’s drive of 70 percent of the U.S. population, slashing the amount of gas typically used to truck produce across the county from California or Mexico. Another plus: AppHarvest will employ some 285 people in a part of the country hit hardest by the collapse of the coal industry. Webb hopes to expand and build greenhouses in other locations in eastern Kentucky too. “We need to talk about bringing food production home regionally,” Webb told CNBC recently. “Just one in 10 Americans eat enough fruit and vegetables. We’re focused on getting fresh fruit and vegetables on the tables of everyday Americans.”   What you can do Buy local!      

Louisiana

  St. James Parish sits on the banks of an 85-mile stretch of the Mississippi River between Baton Rouge and New Orleans known as “Cancer Alley” because of the more than 150 fossil fuel and petrochemical plants scattered throughout the area. It’s home to seven of the 10 census tracts with the highest cancer risk in the U.S. Most of those are in the predominantly African American 4th and 5th districts. Now RISE St. James, a grassroots activist group founded by Sharon Lavigne in 2018, is taking on one of the world’s largest companies, Formosa Plastics, which has plans to build an industrial complex less than two miles from a local elementary school. The complex would double the amount of toxic chemicals currently released into the air in the area. Rolling Stone called St. James “the frontline of environmental racism.” RISE St. James is holding protests and partnering with several legal organizations (Tulane Environmental Law Clinic and Earthjustice, among others) to present legal challenges to plans for more petrochemical facilities and pipelines in the parish.   What you can do Learn more about RISE St. James and more about environmental justice nationwide through Communities for a Better Environment.      

Maine

  What’s the most-littered item found on beaches? It’s not plastic straws, it’s cigarette butts, the single greatest source of trash in the oceans. Cigarette filters are made of a form of plastic that can take decades to decompose and carry a load of toxic materials, including heavy metals. When people flick butts out car windows or drop them on city streets, they end up in sewers, and washed out into rivers, lakes and oceans. Enter Maine businessman Mike Roylos and his Sidewalk Buttler, an aluminum canister (either stand-alone or attachable to a pole) for disposing of cigarette butts. Full cannisters are collected and emptied into boxes; the plastic in the filters is recycled into pellets used for park benches, railroad ties and shipping pallets. In 2015, after Roylos installed some 70 Sidewalk Buttlers in Portland, more than 300,000 butts were collected in less than five months. Now they’re in 49 states and have kept more than 1.2 million butts off the streets.   What you can do Learn more about getting rid of tobacco waste with the Cigarette Butt Pollution Project. Or recycle cigarette waste with TerraCycle.      

Maryland

  The environmental problems that plague the planet didn’t come about because a small group of people polluted, “it was all of us doing small acts every day that got us where we are,” says Stacy Hennessey (right), who founded the Annapolis-based Just One global initiative to “do the opposite, starting today.” That could mean picking up a piece of trash, bringing a refillable water bottle to work or turning off the lights when you leave the house. “If you make small changes, it has a ripple effect,” Hennessey says. Remembering your water bottle or metal straw may remind you to bring your reusable shopping bags too.   What you can do Sign up for the Just One Challenge and challenge your friends, family and co-workers to do the same.      

Massachusetts

  Have you ever thought, There should be an app for that? That’s what three Cambridge-based entrepreneurs (David RodriguezSabine Valenga and Victor Carreño) thought when they heard that U.S. restaurants throw away more than 22 billion pounds of food every year. In 2017, they launched FoodForAll, an app that puts restaurants with surplus food in touch with hungry customers eager to buy at a discount of 50 percent or more. Customers pick up meals at the restaurants usually within an hour before closing time. “Our restaurants generate extra income and reach new clients, our users get delicious meals for less than $5 and we all help our environment by avoiding wasting food,” Valenga says. The app is partnered with more than 200 restaurants in Boston and New York City.   What you can do Read more about the app.      

Michigan

  The #WednesdaysForWater Twitter hashtag was created by 12-year-old Mari Copeny who was 8 when she became concerned about the water in her hometown of Flint. High bacteria levels in 2014 and 2015 killed 12 and sickened dozens more. And during that time, some 8,000 children absorbed levels of lead high enough to cause long-term developmental problems. Copeny wrote to President Obama, who met with her in 2016 and ultimately authorized $100 million to repair Flint’s water system. Now an experienced activist, Mari is focused on other cities with water problems. Every week, her Twitter campaign highlights communities without clean water and offers info on how to help. She works with Hydroviv, a company that builds custom water filters, to provide filters to homes in high-risk cities. Her long-term goal? President of the United States in 2042.   What you can do Donate to Mari’s campaign. Every dollar donated provides the equivalent of 160 bottles of clean drinking water.      

Minnesota

  The U.S. toy industry racks up $27 billion in sales every year and many of those toys—like recent holiday best-sellers Ryan’s World Mega Mystery Treasure Chest and Playmobil’s Mars Mission Play Box—are made of plastic. The Minneapolis Toy Library aims to interrupt the cycle of buy-play-throw away by providing a place where families can check out toys, play with them for two to four weeks, then exchange them for different toys when they bring the others back. The toy library (in the basement of the Richfield Lutheran Church) was launched in 2014 after two moms brainstormed how to share their kids’ toys on a larger scale. Families pay a fee of $40–$100 per year for membership, depending on what fits their budget.   What you can do Find a toy library near you through the U.S. Toy Library Association.      

Mississippi

  Greenville native Heather McTeer Toney (inset, in front of the U.S. Capitol) has three children (ages 3, 14 and 23) and a commitment to making people realize how climate change affects kids’ health. She was Greenville’s first female, first African American and youngest mayor (from 2002 to 2012), and now she’s national field director of Moms Clean Air Force, a group of more than a million parents fighting for clean air to ensure their kids and grandkids don’t suffer from pollution-related health problems. “It’s critically important to be aware of how our children’s health is being greatly impacted just by the air we breathe,” she told Mississippi Today in November. “It’s one of those basic functions we take for granted, but it’s hugely impacted by the environment in which we live and the climate impacts taking place across the globe. Just think of the number of children who have asthma, or are impacted by climate-related health disparities. These are things that parents are staying up at night worrying about.”   What you can do Learn more about local projects in your area that help reduce air pollution, fight climate change and improve the health of kids and families with Moms Clean Air Force, and through their Twitter and Facebook accounts.   Moms Clean Air Force member Rachel Heaton (second from left) of the Muckleshoot Tribe of Auburn, Wash., and two of her three children meet with Congresswoman Kim Schrier, M.D. (WA-08), on Capitol Hill to deliver the message that families across the country want leadership to get serious about addressing climate change.   photo by Kalita Conley for Moms Clean Air Force/inset photo of Heather McTeer Toney by Jose Luis Magana for Moms Clean Air Force      

Missouri

  A haircut, some highlights, maybe a Brazilian blowout—ever think about the effect your beauty salon routines have on the environment? The average salon produces more than 1,800 pounds of waste every year, not to mention the often-toxic chemicals poured down drains. Kansas City “green” stylist Lexi Smith uses zero waste, nontoxic, vegan products packaged in recyclable materials. She’s a member of Green Circle Salons, which helps her recover or repurpose 95 percent of the waste her business generates—leftover hair color, foils, color tubes, aerosol cans, paper and plastics. Hair is recycled and made into boons to absorb oil in oil spills. Smith is committed to making the beauty business as sustainable as possible; she even uses reusable K-Cups for her in-shop Keurig coffee maker.   What you can do Find an earth-friendly salon near you through Green Circle Salons.  

Montana

  Gregg Treinish is pretty much the kind of person the word “Montana” evokes—an avid outdoorsman who’s thru-hiked the Appalachian Trail, trekked 7,800 miles in the Andes and led expeditions all over the world for National Geographic. But he wanted to do more than indulge his love of the outdoors with ever more amazing hikes, so in 2011 he founded Adventure Scientists, which connects trekkers with scientists who need data. So far, Adventure Scientists volunteers have collected animal scat samples that were used to examine the natural roots of antibiotic resistance; documented “hot spots” where wildlife and vehicles collide; and collected the largest dataset on microplastic pollution around the globe. This year, the non-profit is looking for hikers in Northern California, the Pacific Northwest and Alaska to collect specimens of cedar and redwood. Don’t worry about added weight in your pack; samples are put in tiny vials that weigh almost nothing, with desiccant to keep the samples dry.   What you can do Sign up to collect data on your next hike with Adventure Scientists.   Gregg examines animal hairs from a fallen log while on a carnivore tracking expedition in Montana.      

Nebraska

  “I love them all; they’re like my kids,” says National Geographic photographer (and Nebraska native) Joel Sartore, who created the Photo Ark to capture every species in captivity before some of them become extinct. Sartore got the idea for the Photo Ark 15 years ago, when his wife’s bout with breast cancer kept him close to home in Lincoln for a year. (She’s fine now.) During that year he decided he wanted to dig in on a project that could make a difference. He came up with the idea of photographing animals in zoos and wildlife sanctuaries around the world in a series of portraits, “made as simply and cleanly as possible,” that would allow viewers to see the unique beauty and intelligence in every species. He uses black and white backgrounds so there’s nothing to distract from the animal itself, and because without a background for scale, every animal appears equal in size and “has equal voice.” He’s photographed nearly 10,000 species and estimates it will take another 10 years to document the rest. “That’s my job,” he said in a recent interview with the Weather Channel, “to tell their stories and hope that the world cares in time.”   What you can do Learn more about the Photo Ark.      

Nevada

  Latino voters helped sweep Bernie Sanders to victory in Nevada’s Democratic caucuses. And while Sanders’ stance on health care, jobs and immigration were important, his policies on the environment were critical. Chispa Nevada (from the Spanish word for “spark”) organizes Latino communities to press policy makers and polluters to protect their rights to clean air, water, and healthy neighborhoods. People of color are much more likely to live near polluters and breathe polluted air, says a 2018 EPA study. Chispa Nevada’s Clean Buses for Healthy Niños campaign convinced lawmakers to provide funding to transition from diesel school buses to electric school buses. More than one in 12 children in Nevada suffer from asthma (a number that’s higher in lower-income urban neighborhoods).   What you can do Find out about Chispa organizations in six different states.   Chispa volunteers touring an electric school bus.      

New Hampshire

  New Hampshire is home to 186 species of native nesting birds, and 65 of those are in decline. Some species—like nighthawks, chimney swifts and swallows—are declining rapidly. New Hampshire Audubon is leading the charge to bring awareness to the rapid loss of native birds, including mobilizing local citizens to advocate for strong national environmental policies (New Hampshire is part of the Atlantic Flyway, a major migratory route for birds) and educating people on everything from how to create a bird-friendly yard to buying coffee produced in bird-friendly habitats.   What you can do Find out how to help birds where you are through Audubon.      

New Jersey

  The New Jersey Turnpike is one of the busiest thoroughfares in the U.S., so it’s fitting that a state known for its superhighways is now one of the leaders in the push for electric vehicles (EVs). In January, Governor Phil Murphy signed into law a bill boosting EVs, with goals including getting 330,000 electric cars on the road in New Jersey by 2025, as well as 400 public fast-charging stations at 200 locations along major highways and in communities. (The state will pay rebates up to $5,000 to people who buy electric cars, and $500 rebates for home charging stations.) The state also committed to completely electrifying New Jersey Transit’s bus fleet by 2032.   What you can do: Learn more about electric cars from the Office of Energy Efficiency & Renewable Energy.      

New Mexico

  Santa Fe artist Diana Stetson has spent more than 30 years traveling the globe and studying calligraphy, printmaking, drawing and painting. Yet for Stetson, the purpose of her art is to highlight the profound connection between humans and the natural world. She’s created woodblock prints of native New Mexican trees to help raise funds for Tree New Mexico, an urban and rural tree-planting effort, and has exhibited her art all over the country. Trees, flowers, animals, plants, even fruits bloom in Stetson’s art, a constant reminder of the wild diversity, beauty and fragility of nature.   What you can do Support artists all over the world who create art to raise awareness about and create connections with the natural world. Learn more at earthday.org.      

New York

  Americans throw away 2.5 million plastic water bottles per hour. Yup, per hour. Single-use plastic bottles—those bottles of spring water and sports drinks and iced tea sold everywhere—are clogging our oceans and landfills. (Only 14 percent of all plastic gets recycled.) So where better to start cutting back on plastic than in the U.S.A.’s most populous city? In February, NYC mayor Bill de Blasio signed an executive order banning the sale of single-use plastic beverage bottles on city properties. The ban covers bottles of 21 ounces or less. The order calls for every city agency to develop plans to phase out single-use plastic bottles by June 2020, with the goal of eliminating the purchase and sale of plastic bottles on city property by Jan. 1, 2021. “Plastic bottles are made of fossil fuels, they’re hurting the Earth, we don’t need ’em, it’s time to get rid of ’em,” de Blasio tweeted the day he signed the order.   What you can do Get more info on single use plastics at earthday.org.      

North Carolina

  Twenty million is a big number, so when Greenville’s Jimmy Donaldson, 21, (aka “MrBeast”), amassed 20 million YouTube followers last year, he decided to celebrate by doing something big: collecting enough money to plant 20 million trees. Donaldson is known for creating viral videos of himself doing unique stunts (reading the entire dictionary aloud, watching paint dry or building a house from 1 million pieces of Lego) and for giving away the money he makes in brand deals—a $10,000 tip to a waitress, a house to a homeless man, a new car to his mom. #TeamTrees, MrBeast’s joint venture with fellow YouTuber Mark Rober and the Arbor Day Foundation, launched in October of 2019; by Dec. 19 fans had donated $20 million, enough to plant 20 million trees around the globe. Now they’re up to almost $22 million and plan to keep going.   What you can do Donate to #TeamTrees and check out the Arbor Day Foundation.   MrBeast poses next to one of the 20 million trees he funded through #TeamTrees with fellow YouTuber Mark Rober and the Arbor Day Foundation.      

North Dakota

  When the Standing Rock Sioux tribe protested the construction of the Dakota Access Pipeline in 2016, they were fighting to protect sacred lands and were concerned that the pipeline might threaten the safety of their water supply from the Missouri River. The pipeline became operational in 2017, and now the Sioux have fought back in their own way: by building the largest solar energy farm in North Dakota, the CannonBall Community Solar Farm. The farm went live a year ago; the solar farm will save the community some $7,000 to $10,000 per year in energy costs.   What you can do: Learn more from GivePower about providing solar energy to developing areas.      

Ohio

  Some 400,000 people in Cleveland—one in three—live in a “food desert,” a neighborhood without a supermarket within a half mile. Enter the Rid-All Green Partnership, a community organization founded by three childhood buddies that’s turned a former illegal dumping ground in the struggling Kinsman neighborhood into an eight-acre urban farm. Rid-All’s new learning center helps locals learn how to grow their own produce, take care of the environment and turn fallow urban fields into productive farmland. They recycle and compost too: Rid-All creates their own soil from discarded produce, wood chips and coffee grounds. Extra soil is sold or donated. Two greenhouses and four hoop houses ensure that crops of fresh produce are available year-round, and a 40,000-square-foot aquaponics fishery provides an opportunity to learn about aqua farming (black tilapia are the current “crop,” with perch, bluegill and bass coming soon). Rid-All’s biggest achievement is the community that’s sprung up because of the farm; hundreds have taken urban farming training programs there, and the farm hosts weddings, school visits, food festivals and tours.   What you can do Check out Urban Farming for info on farms nationwide.   From left to right: Damien ForsheRandy McShepardKeymah Durden   courtesy Rid-All Green Partnership    

Oklahoma

  Cattle, cowboys and earth-friendly aren’t words you find often in the same sentence. Peach Crest Ranch in Mill Creek, about 100 miles southeast of Oklahoma City, bucks that conventional wisdom, practicing chemical-free, sustainable farming and ranching. Cows graze freely on the ranch’s 20,000 acres of untreated land, providing local customers (including the University of Oklahoma) with pasture-fed beef free of hormones and antibiotics. Cattle are slaughtered at an Animal Welfare Approved location. Ranch owner Susan Bergen began to rethink conventional agriculture years ago every time she watched her workers put on full hazmat suits before spraying the peaches. “I decided there had to be a better way than using so many chemicals,” Bergen told the Oklahoma Council of Public Affairs.   What you can do Find sources for and info about Animal Welfare Approved, grass-fed meat and organic foods at A Greener World.    

Oregon

  The average American throws away about 81 pounds of clothing a year, and then there’s the clothing we buy and return, the jackets with broken zippers or the jeans that never fit quite right. Retailers toss many of those returns or send them back to manufacturers in a landfill-clogging cycle. Hood River’s Renewal Workshop is breaking that cycle. The Workshop cleans and fixes clothes that have been returned to companies they’re partnered with, like North Face and prAna, then sells the like-new garments on their website. A state-of-the-art cleaning machine scours clothes, handbags and other items inside and out, although many items have never been used or worn. Any needed repairs “respect the original design and quality standards of the garment,” and any repairs to tears, holes or snags are made on the inside of garments or in linings so they’re invisible.   What you can do Buy good-as-new clothes, handbags, luggage and more that’s been renewed from the Renewal Workshop.    

Pennsylvania

  The EPA estimates that Americans threw 30.6 million tons of food waste into landfills in 2017. Composting (everything from newspaper to nut shells) is one answer, but that can be tough if you live, say, in a second-story apartment in South Philly, as Tim Bennett did in 2009. That’s when and how he came up with the idea for Bennett Compost which collects kitchen waste (via bicycle as well as truck) from more than 2,000 households in North Philadelphia. Customers each get a 5-gallon covered bucket that’s picked up every week; the list of compostable items is longer than you’d think and includes tea bags, sawdust, hair and fur in addition to the usual fruits, vegetables, eggshells and coffee grounds. The company keeps some 52 tons of stuff out of landfills every month.   What you can do Learn more about composting your own food waste from the EPA.    

Rhode Island

  Think toys and it’s hard not to think “plastic,” from My Little Pony to Transformers. And all those toys arrive encased in plastic packaging, from the shrink-wrap around a new Monopoly game to the plastic windows on boxes. In 2017 alone, U.S. landfills received 26.8 million tons of plastic, according to the EPA. Providence-based toymaker Hasbro has spent more than six years trying to lessen the impact of its plastic packaging, making it one of the USA’s “Greenest” publicly traded companies in a Newsweek ranking. In 2013, Hasbro switched from using polyvinyl chloride (PVC) in its packaging to the more easily recyclable polyethylene terephthalate (PET). They now use bioPET, which is made with 30 percent plant-based material. Other small changes add up to big differences: The company saves 2,000 trees a year just by printing info about Play-Doh on the container instead of on a paper label, and they work with TerraCycle to convert old toys into building materials for playgrounds.   What you can do Follow the directions from TerraCycle to recycle old toys to keep plastic out of landfills.    

South Carolina

  Charleston’s Spectator Hotel is beloved by travelers, appearing every year in the top rankings of “best hotel” lists on Trip Advisor, Travel + Leisure, AAA and others. But while customers swoon over amenities like personal butler service and specialty welcome cocktails, one real draw of the Spectator may be something visitors never see: a food digester that converts half-eaten seasonal tartlets and leftover fruit into reusable water that goes back into the city’s sewer system. As of February 2020, the hotel had diverted more than 26,000 pounds of food waste from landfills while creating over 2,200 gallons of water.   What you can do Look for hotels accredited by respectable certification programs, such as Green Key, the Global Sustainable Tourism Council and the U.S. Green Building Council, which oversees LEED certification.    

South Dakota

  Vermillion, S.D., has a population of around 10,700, the University of South Dakota and an ambition to become “the greenest town in South Dakota.” Greening Vermillion, a six-year-old nonprofit, is working to help the town “grow through projects that bring people together to conserve our natural resources.” Thus far they’ve organized local hikes and developed a canoe/kayak trail to give residents an increased appreciation for the area’s rich natural resources, led a movement to reduce plastic straws and painted drains and sewer covers around town to remind residents that everything that goes into storm drains and sewers ends up in the Vermillion and Missouri Rivers.   What you can do Learn more about helping your own community go green with Circles of Sustainability.    

Tennessee

  Chick’n fried chick’n, BBQ sliders and glazed doughnuts are a comfort-food lover’s dream. And they’re a planet lover’s dream too when they’re not only tasty but vegan. The meat industry is the largest source of greenhouse gas emissions in the world, according to the United Nations. Beef and milk cattle are the animals responsible for some 65 percent of the livestock sector’s emissions. Husband-and-wife team Tiffany and Clifton Hancock began experimenting with vegan recipes in 2015 when they discovered their oldest daughter, Eden, had a dairy intolerance. Tiffany’s vegan doughnuts were so good they started selling them at a local farmers market, then the couple created a broader menu for a walk-up stand on Fisk Street. They opened their brick-and-mortar dine-in restaurant, the Southern V, in North Nashville in 2018. “Everything is one thousand hundred percent vegan,” Tiffany says.   What you can do Find vegan and vegetarian restaurants in your own community through HappyCow, a worldwide guide.    

Texas

  Nurdle—it’s a cute name for an insidious environmental threat: the tiny lentil-size plastic pellets that go into the making of almost all plastic goods. Manufacturers lose, spill or illegally dump nurdles, and some 250,000 tons every year end up in oceans, where they soak up toxic pollutants and are eaten by marine animals and birds. When marine biologist Jace Tunnell ran across millions of nurdles covering a beach on Texas’ Padre Island (a haven for more than 380 bird species), he activated Nurdle Patrol volunteers, a group of local citizen scientists who survey beaches or coastal areas, collecting as many nurdles as they see in a 10-minute time period. Then they send the location, date and count of nurdles (plus pictures) to Tunnell, who maps all the info. From November 2018 to July 2019, 543 Nurdle Patrollers removed 172,952 nurdles from Texas beaches. The data they collect give state environmental agencies the info they need to see where the nurdles are coming from, and stop the polluters.   What you can do Find out more about cleaning up and stopping nurdles with Nurdle Patrol.   The Nurdle Patrol is a citizen science project at the University of Texas at Austin Marine Science Institute.    

Utah

  Utah’s Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument is a hot spot of bee diversity. In an area the size of Delaware there are almost as many different kinds of bees as the entire eastern U.S. The monument is a natural lab for studying bees—a study that’s increasingly important as honey bee colonies die off and insect populations decline. Pollinators like bees are responsible for one out of every three bites of food we take. But honey bees are just one of around 4,000 different kinds of bees in North America. What do we know about the others? Now a team of filmmakers is working on a research and documentary film project about these bees—The Bees of Grand Staircase-Escalante—that follows two of the nation’s most prominent bee researchers as they return to southern Utah fifteen years after their original work there. They hope to draw attention to the importance of protecting diversity in the face of species loss.   What you can do Learn more about the bees of Grand Staircase.    

Vermont

  Americans throw away 11 million tons of glass every year, and only a third of it gets recycled. Now a Burlington-based start-up plans to turn discarded glass into nuggets of a foam-glass aggregate that can be used as insulation in buildings. Entrepreneur Rob Conboy calls the product “Glavel” (glass + gravel), and he hopes his new glavel plant will eventually convert 9,000 tons of thrown-away glass each year. Many U.S. recycling centers have struggled with what to do with glass since 2018, when China stopped accepting most recyclables from other countries. “We’re going to have to find solutions here and not ship off our waste,” Conboy told Seven Days.   What you can do Find out more about Glavel and learn more about glass recycling in the U.S. from the Glass Recycling Foundation.    

Virginia

  Soccer trophies, MVP plaques, employee awards—we all have drawers, closets and shelves of mostly plastic items meant to recognize our achievements. But what if they weren’t made of plastic? Richmond-based Rivanna Natural Designs makes planet-friendly awards, plaques and gifts from bamboo, recycled glass, Forest Stewardship Council–certified wood and other environmentally friendly materials. The women-owned company was launched in 2001 and now has customers in 48 states and Canada.   What you can do Learn more about Rivanna’s eco-friendly products.    

Washington

  Love the wilderness? So do hundreds of thousands of other Americans, and there’s the problem. Every single one of them needs to answer when nature calls, which means beloved hiking trails, national parks, seashores, forests, and other wilderness area can be marred with human waste. Rocky Mountain National Park saw 4.67 million visitors in 2019 and the attendant waste in the backcountry, where there are no flush toilets or plumbing. Pit toilets (holes in the ground covered by a wooden seat) can fill up in two years or less; vault toilets (outhouses with giant containers for waste) require regular emptying and cleaning. And cat holes (holes you dig yourself) and pit toilets can also send pathogens deep into the groundwater—yuck. Enter Toilet Tech Solutions, a Seattle-based company that makes toilets designed to minimize the impact of human waste on the environment. The idea is to separate liquid waste from solid. Urine is funneled to the side, to a septic field, where it’s treated and disposed of; poop is collected on a conveyor belt and dropped into a decompose vault, where invertebrates eat the dung.   What you can do Learn more about what to do with waste when you hike from Outward Bound.    

West Virginia

  If you live in a state where coal is king, what do you do when that king is deposed? The number of coal jobs in West Virginia dropped from more than 23,000 in 2011 to fewer than 14,000 in 2018. Enter Solar Holler, a solar installation company with the motto “Mine the Sun” and a logo featuring a shirtless laborer driving a lightning-bolt-shaped pickax into a mountain with a radiant sun inside. Founded by Shepherdstown native Dan Conant, Solar Holler offers financing for solar panels with no upfront cost and a low monthly loan payment “that looks a lot like your old utility bill.” Conant hopes to bring more solar jobs to communities hit hard by coal’s decline. In addition to helping convert homes to solar energy, Solar Holler works with local nonprofits to help them lower their energy bills: Last year, the company installed a roof-mounted solar energy system at Habitat for Humanity’s ReStore and administrative building in Huntington. The system will save $500 a month and $150,000 over the 25-year life span of the solar panels.   What you can do Learn more about going solar in your own home from the Office of Energy Efficiency & Renewable Energy.    

Wisconsin

  From the energy consumed by power lights and equipment to the tons of medical waste and garbage produced every day, hospitals and medical centers often leave big carbon footprints. But nonprofit Gundersen Health has taken a different approach, using solar energy and wind power to create electricity and become the first health system in the U.S. to produce more energy that it consumes. Gundersen recycles everything from X-ray film to the lead vests and gloves used in imaging tests to construction waste. (It recently recycled 98 percent of the 18,700 tons of construction waste on a new hospital project.) Food isn’t wasted either: Gundersen donates more than 500 leftover meals a month to the Salvation Army.   What you can do Find info about “green” hospitals in your area with Becker's Hospital Review.    

Wyoming

  The word “pollution” conjures up belching smokestacks, littered beaches and rivers choked with debris. But what about light? Running unneeded lights wastes an estimated $3 billion a year in the U.S., and light pollution can have a negative impact on human health, wildlife and the ecosystem. Samuel Singer founded the nonprofit Wyoming Stargazing in 2014 to offer public stargazing and astronomy programs and to educate people about the risks of light pollution. The organization’s Save Our Night Skies campaign hopes to introduce the city of Jackson to shielded lights that point down, minimizing what goes up in to the sky. It also aims to get Dark Sky certification for Jackson, Yellowstone and Grand Teton National Park to decrease the level of light pollution in those areas. “Dark night skies are the national parks above our heads,” Singer has said.   What you can do Learn more about light pollution from the International Dark-Sky Association.

Long Beach Groups Look To Eliminate Cigarette Butts

The Long Beach Environmental Alliance (LBEA) began with a cigarette butt clean-up in downtown Long Beach.   The focus has been on collecting discarded cigarettes, a ubiquitous element of refuse that litters streets and ultimately washes out into the ocean.   “All of the cigarette butts are so easy to miss, if you’re driving on the street or walking too fast. If you stop and look closely, they’re there, on the sidewalks, in the gutters and all around our public bus stops,” John Kindred, co-founder of LBEA, said.   Cigarettes pose a huge detriment to both local and global marine life. According to the FDA, cigarettes contain as many as 93 potentially harmful constituents that are either carcinogens, respiratory toxicants, cardiovascular toxicants, reproductive or developmental toxicants, or addictive. In 2018, the Ocean Conservancy group recovered 2,412,151 cigarette butts as part of their International Coastal Cleanup effort. 842,837 of those were collected on American shores.   A study paid for by the University of California Tobacco Related Disease Research Program found that “leachate from cigarette butts is acutely toxic to representative marine and freshwater fish species” through a number of controlled tests.   “All of that gets in the food we eat,” Kindred said.   Kindred started the Long Beach Environmental Alliance in 2017 with co-founder Sokha Ny. Their mission statement reads, “Working together for local solutions to environmental issues through action, passion, and advocacy in the city of Long Beach.”   A cigarette but collection planned this coming Saturday, March 28, was canceled after "Safer At Home" restrictions prompted by the coronavirus pandemic was put into place. When collected, cigarette butts are sent to TerraCycle, a waste recycling organization. The residual tobacco from the refuse is used to make compost, while the non-biodegradable plastic filters in cigarettes are repurposed into construction pallets and other industrial products.   Before the ban on gatherings, the Long Beach Environmental Alliance conducted a beach clean-up event every fourth Sunday at Alamitos Beach. Kindred said cleanups are a great opportunity for students to log service hours.   “I tell the students that there is no greater way to see the impact we make on our environment than volunteering,” Kindred said.   LBEA will be attending a variety of Earth Month events at Cal State Long Beach in April. Events are posted to the group’s Facebook page at www.facebook.com/LBEnvironmentalAlliance.  

From litter to lumber: Clean St. John's plans cigarette butt recycling project

They might not be as noticeable as coffee cups or plastic bags, but when it comes to trash in the city of St. John's, cigarette butts are a huge problem, according to one litter prevention group.   According to a report from the Multi-Materials Stewardship Board for 2016-17, there were an estimated 66 million cigarette butts littered around the province.   Each of those filters is made of tiny strands of plastic that pose a danger to wildlife, especially when they break down in a marine environment.   The not-for-profit organization Clean St. John's is currently working on a way to turn those numbers around — and turn all those discarded butts into something useful.   The group is in the process of securing funding to buy 25 cigarette butt recycling receptacles that would be installed downtown, in popular smoking hot spots like George Street, and busy pedestrian areas along Duckworth Street and Water Street.   "Our goal is to see cigarette butt receptacles the same as you would see a garbage container, so people would become aware that cigarette butts are litter and they should be disposed of properly," said Karen Hickman, executive director of Clean St. John's.   The slim receptacles can be fixed to buildings or poles, and the butts would be collected once a week, dried and then sent in bulk to a company called TerraCycle in New Jersey.   "They take whatever tobacco is left in the cigarette and they use that for compost, and then the rest of the cigarette is used for plastic lumber. So plastic for park benches, things like that, as well as pallets," she told The St. John's Morning Show.   "That's sort of just as exciting as [getting] cigarettes off the ground, knowing that they could be recycled into other materials."  

'Your butt would look good in this'

    Hickman said there would be no cost to send the butts to TerraCycle, as the company provides prepaid shipping labels that can be used for loads up to 30 kilograms.   The target start date for the six-month pilot project is July 1. Each receptacle will be branded with the Clean St. John's logo and the slogan, "Your Butt Would Look Good in This."   Hickman said Clean St. John's has a limited budget, but if the pilot project is successful she hopes the city will take over and put money into expanding the program to other areas where butts tend to be discarded, such as bus shelters.

Recycling cigarette butts in Berlin

(Jan. 30, 2020) Twenty cigarette butt recycling receptacles are expected to be installed in Berlin, according to Economic and Community Director Ivy Wells.   Wells informed the Berlin mayor and town council on Monday that the installation of the receptacles, which will bear the town’s logo, is nearly complete.   Wells had applied for a Main Street Improvement grant from the Department of Housing and Community Development last May for the cigarette butt hut project and learned the town had received a $10,000 grant for the project in the fall.   “This was fully grant funded,” Well said. “It will also save on trash as well.”   “We received [these huts] and Dave Wheaton put those up last week,” she continued. “I have contracted with a company in Trenton, New Jersey, called TerraCycle, it’s all free. We collect the cigarette butts out of these receptacles and we bag them and put them in a box we send them.   Once the butts are collected, they’ll be mailed to TerraCycle, which provides free shipping and donates a dollar to the Keep America Beautiful Cigarette Litter Prevention Program for every pound of discarded cigarettes collected.   In addition, the butts used for smoking will be recycled into something human butts can be used for sittings.   “The butts that are put into these are used to make benches for our butts to sit on,” Wells said.

Berlin Looks To Offer Cigarette Butt Recycling

BERLIN – Berlin will soon join the growing number of municipalities working to reduce pollution through cigarette butt recycling.   Thanks to a grant, the town has purchased 20 cigarette butt disposal canisters that could be installed as soon as this week. As they’re emptied, butts will be sent to TerraCycle, a company that offers free recycling.   “The beauty of it, it’s not your average butt collector,” said Ivy Wells, the town’s economic and community development director. “There’s a very easy cannister to unlock. We put them in a bag and box and mail them to TerraCycle. They recycle them.”   According to Wells, she applied for a Main Street Improvement grant from the Department of Housing and Community Development in May. She asked for funding to allow the town to buy new trash cans and recycling receptacles as well as butt disposal containers. The town learned it had received a $10,000 grant for the project in the fall.   Wells said the butt containers first caught her eye at a Main Street conference she attended.   “I met the manufacturer and learned about them,” she said.   Cigarette butt recycling has also been in the news, as Ocean City began efforts to collect and recycle butts in 2019. While Berlin doesn’t host the number of people Ocean City does, Wells said there was still a butt pollution problem. Prior to applying for the grant, she walked through town and photographed areas where cigarette butts tended to pile up. Those are the places she plans to have staff install the disposal canisters. Her department and the town’s public works team will coordinate efforts to ensure the canisters are emptied as needed.   “We will make sure it’s done,” she said.   Once the butts are collected, they’ll be mailed to TerraCycle, which provides free shipping and donates a dollar to the Keep America Beautiful Cigarette Litter Prevention Program for every pound of discarded cigarettes collected. According to the company’s website, waste collected through the program is recycled into a variety of industrial products while any remaining tobacco is recycled as compost.   As far as the new trash cans and recycling receptacles, Wells said they were currently under production. The stone colored cans will feature an embedded Berlin logo—the same one found on the town’s wayfinding signs.   “The town logo on these is embedded so it takes longer to produce them,” she said, adding that they’d be installed once they arrived.

Philly boots Mummer in blackface | Turkeys and Trophies

Boy Scout Troop 317 from Bethlehem Township, Pa., spent a day serving food to homeless persons at the Safe Harbor shelter in Easton. Nineteen Scouts dished out chicken soup, hot chocolate, snacks and s’mores, according to scoutmaster Larry Finnegan, and later served up hamburgers, hot dogs and macaroni and cheese for dinner. The food was paid for by the Scouts’ parents; the troop members unloaded it, cooked it, served it and cleaned up afterward. Finnegan said the activity counted toward some of the Scouts’ community service badges or school credit, but also gave them an up-close look at people dealing with life’s hardships.   The voice of former Easton High football player Kyle Bambary, an associate producer at Easton’s Lou Reda Productions, will be heard in 160 countries as part of a National Geographic special. The 23-year-old Kutztown University graduate won a competition for the voice-acting role in a Reda film about World War II, using color archival footage. It’s expected to air worldwide later this year. Bambary said his knowledge of the project and relationships with the writer and director helped him win the part, which called for several days of recording in New York City. Another Reda editor, Bath resident Peter Blair, is doing voices for some smaller parts.  

The City of Easton isn’t throwing away cigarette butts collected in receptacles around the city, it’s recycling them. The Easton Ambassadors — the red-clad helpers who pick up litter, maintain planters, help with security and assist tourists — estimate they have collected more than half a million cigarette butts since the receptacles were placed in the downtown in 2015. Now the butts will be sent to TerraCycle, a company that converts them into shipping pallets and park benches. The city recently received a grant from Keep Pennsylvania Beautiful to purchase more receptacles, and plans to extend the recycling program to other neighborhoods.

Shore town joins forces with recycling company to repurpose cigarette butts

A Jersey Shore community is undertaking an innovation solution to a problem that has long plagued beaches: cigarette butts. Cape May County’s North Wildwood is partnering with TerraCycle, the world’s leader in the collection and repurposing of complex waste streams, to recycle the cigarette butts, which the company says it the world’s most littered item. According to officials, North Wildwood will collect and ship the cigarette butts to TerraCycle, which will then process them into plastic pellets for use in a variety of recycled products — like shipping pallets, ashtrays, and park benches — while the remaining tobacco will enter a composter. If not recycled, plastic cigarette filters will remain in the environment long after the paper and tobacco has decomposed, according to the company. To encourage the proper disposal — and then easy collection — of cigarette butts, the municipality has installed receptacles at each of the city’s beach and boardwalk entrances. The city decided to install the receptacles after smoking was prohibited on North Wildwood’s boardwalk and in-response to the statewide smoking ban recently implemented on New Jersey beaches. The project was funded by a small grant from Sustainable Jersey, a nonprofit organization that provides tools, training and financial incentives to support community sustainability programs. In 2017, Clean Ocean Action volunteers found 29,000 cigarette butts, 7,172 cigar tips, 1,900 empty cigarette packs, and 1,150 lighters on the state’s beaches.

North Wildwood Links with Recycling Firm to Rid Beaches, 'Walk of Cigarette Butts

image.png NORTH WILDWOOD - The City of North Wildwood has joined forces with TerraCycle, the world’s leader in the collection and repurposing of complex waste streams, to recycle the world’s most littered item – cigarette butts.
According to a release, after being shipped to TerraCycle, the waste collected through the program is processed into plastic pellets for use in a variety of recycled products while the remaining tobacco is composted.
Through this program, North Wildwood is not only addressing the nation’s most commonly littered item but also a form of potentially harmful waste since plastic cigarette filters persist in the environment long after the associated paper and tobacco has decomposed. Since implementing the program, cigarette collection receptacles have been installed at each of the city’s beach and boardwalk entrances to divert toxic cigarette waste from shared waterways while preserving the area’s beauty.
The city decided to install the receptacles after smoking was prohibited on North Wildwood’s boardwalk and in-response to the state-wide smoking ban recently implemented on New Jersey beaches.
The initiative was funded by a small project grant provided by Sustainable Jersey, a nonprofit organization that provides tools, training and financial incentives to support community sustainability programs.
"With the recent state-wide beach smoking ban, The City of North Wildwood had to do something with the waste that would most certainly be littered on our beach, ocean, and piled at every beach entrance," stated Mayor Patrick Rosenello. "We have known about TerraCycle for some time now, and I am grateful for their partnership, as well as Sustainable Jersey for funding to make this project a reality," continued Rosenello. "Cigarette butts are the largest contamination in our oceans, and North Wildwood was able to combat that waste by recycling over 38,000 cigarette butts through a partnership with TerraCycle and Sustainable Jersey.”
All of the collected waste is shipped to TerraCycle for recycling. When processed, the paper and tobacco is separated from the filter and composted. The filter is recycled into plastic pellets which can be used by manufacturers to make a number of products such as shipping pallets, ashtrays and park benches.
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Thousands of cigarette butts recycled in Florida through new program

The city of Delray Beach is on a major mission to clean up cigarette butts.   In March, the city installed "cigarette butlers" along Atlantic Avenue from Swinton Avenue to U.S. 1. The butlers are little boxes where smokers can drop the end of their cigarettes and cigars.   "Those who are wanting to use it know what to look for," said Amanda Skeberis, the city’s Clean and Safe Administrator.   Skeberis said Delray Beach made the butlers easy to find, but tried to make them not noticeable for those who don’t know what they are. The butlers serve a purpose, and the used butts are passed on to be recycled.   Skeberis said the city has collected 23,000 butts since the program started.   "The paper in the tobacco, they break down, but then the filter has a lot of plastic fiber and that is the part they meltdown to create plastic," Skeberis said.   The butts get mailed to Terracycle at no cost to the city. Skaberis said Delray Beach is looking to add more butlers next year.