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Posts with term Cigarette Waste Brigade X

New Orleans Putting Smoked Butts in Better Place

NEW ORLEANS – In New Orleans, discarded butts are being turned into something useful.   The first of 50 cigarette butt recycling receptacles was installed at a downtown intersection Monday. Developers of the program say New Orleans is the first U.S. city to participate in a large-scale recycling effort launched in Canada last year.   Trenton, New Jersey-based recycling company TerraCycle Inc. developed the program in 2012. The first citywide receptacles were placed in Vancouver, B.C., in November 2013.   “Globally we have collected 25 million butts since November of 2012,” said company spokesman Albe Zakes, adding that the company is in talks with officials in Toronto, Sydney, Tokyo, Phoenix and Atlantic City, New Jersey.   Officials with the New Orleans Downtown Development District said joining the program was a no-brainer. Smokers flock to curbside trash bins and public benches for nicotine fixes, and smoking is still allowed in bars that do not serve food. The downtown area is just blocks from the French Quarter and is home to the huge Harrah’s Casino.   That adds up to a lot of cigarette butts.   Kurt Weigle, district president and CEO, said a one-day sweep in 2011 turned up nearly 7,000 cigarette butts downtown.   According to TerraCycle, New Orleans will be paid $4 for each pound of cigarette waste collected.   The organic materials, such as tobacco and paper, are composted.   Cigarette filters, though they look and feel like fiber, are made of cellulose acetate, a plastic. Once collected, they are shredded and bio-toxins removed with the use of gamma radiation, Zakes said.   “It’s the same exact process used on fish and other meats to assure there are no bio-contaminants, so it is very safe,” Zakes said.   The filters are then melted into plastic pellets for industrial use in the same way a plastic bottle would be recycled, Zakes said.   “We only use the pellets for industrial applications, such as plastic lumber and plastic shipping pallets,” he said. “We don’t make any consumer products from this material, mostly because of the stigma around butts.”   Outside a patio bar and restaurant about a block from where the first receptacle was installed Monday, 23-year-old Ryan Schumacher puffed on a cigarette and said the receptacles may help break some “bad habits.” Schumacher said he’s among many smokers guilty of throwing cigarette butts on the ground.   “I’m happy that we have somewhere to put our cigarette butts, now,” he said, but added that there will be smokers who just don’t care. “There’s still going to be the people who are stubborn about it and just throw it on the ground because that’s what they’re used to doing.”   Weigle said he is hopeful the receptacles will get used to help keep downtown clean, improve the quality of life for residents and visitors alike and promote environmental awareness.   “That’s something that’s important to us and our stakeholders, so every chance we get to become a greener downtown, we grasp it,” he said.

Editorial: Recycling, From Butts To New Boards

Count on good old American innovation for a way to recycle cigarette butts. A New Jersey-based company called TerraCycle recently launched such a program in New Orleans, installing 50 cigarette butt recycling receptacles in the downtown. New Orleans is the first U.S. city to offer the service, but TerraCycle already collects butts in cities in Canada, France, Germany and Scandinavia. The company composts the tobacco, shreds and cleans the fiber-like plastic filters and melts them into plastic pellets for use in plastic lumber or pallets. TerraCycle refers to this program as its Cigarette Waste Brigade. On the company website, CEO and founder Tom Szaky claims TerraCycle collected more than 10 million cigarette butts in the first year in Canada. In New Orleans, TerraCycle will even pay for the butts, $4 a pound. Butt brigade is but one TerraCycle program. Szaky began the company while he was a freshman at Princeton University, entering a business-idea contest with a plan to feed earthworms on organic food waste and use their castings as plant food. The idea gained a foothold. Today TerraCycle, the self-described "Outsmart Waste" company, specializes in providing free waste collection programs for hard-to-recycle materials, then converting them into affordable, green products. Anyone who's ever gone on litter patrol knows that cigarette butts are everywhere. They're dirty and they seem to last forever. Installing receptacles on downtown utility poles makes sense, because most public places don't allow smoking inside any more, and smokers typically sit on benches or stand outside to puff. Having designated receptacles might help keep the streets a bit cleaner. If TerraCycle can make even a small dent in these unwelcome castoffs, it will be a boon to the communities that embrace the program. Next challenge: used chewing gum!

New Orleans Putting Discarded Cigarette Butts in Better Place with Rollout of Recycling Effort

NEW ORLEANS – In New Orleans, discarded butts are being turned into something useful.   The first of 50 cigarette butt recycling receptacles was installed at a downtown intersection Monday. Developers of the program say New Orleans is the first U.S. city to participate in a large-scale recycling effort launched in Canada last year.   Trenton, New Jersey-based recycling company TerraCycle Inc. developed the program in 2012. The first citywide receptacles were placed in Vancouver, B.C., in November 2013.   “Globally we have collected 25 million butts since November of 2012,” said company spokesman Albe Zakes, adding that the company is in talks with officials in Toronto, Sydney, Tokyo, Phoenix and Atlantic City, New Jersey.   Officials with the New Orleans Downtown Development District said joining the program was a no-brainer. Smokers flock to curbside trash bins and public benches for nicotine fixes, and smoking is still allowed in bars that do not serve food. The downtown area is just blocks from the French Quarter and is home to the huge Harrah’s Casino.   That adds up to a lot of cigarette butts.   Kurt Weigle, district president and CEO, said a one-day sweep in 2011 turned up nearly 7,000 cigarette butts downtown.   According to TerraCycle, New Orleans will be paid $4 for each pound of cigarette waste collected.   The organic materials, such as tobacco and paper, are composted.   Cigarette filters, though they look and feel like fiber, are made of cellulose acetate, a plastic. Once collected, they are shredded and bio-toxins removed with the use of gamma radiation, Zakes said.   “It’s the same exact process used on fish and other meats to assure there are no bio-contaminants, so it is very safe,” Zakes said.   The filters are then melted into plastic pellets for industrial use in the same way a plastic bottle would be recycled, Zakes said.   “We only use the pellets for industrial applications, such as plastic lumber and plastic shipping pallets,” he said. “We don’t make any consumer products from this material, mostly because of the stigma around butts.”   Outside a patio bar and restaurant about a block from where the first receptacle was installed Monday, 23-year-old Ryan Schumacher puffed on a cigarette and said the receptacles may help break some “bad habits.” Schumacher said he’s among many smokers guilty of throwing cigarette butts on the ground.   “I’m happy that we have somewhere to put our cigarette butts, now,” he said, but added that there will be smokers who just don’t care. “There’s still going to be the people who are stubborn about it and just throw it on the ground because that’s what they’re used to doing.”   Weigle said he is hopeful the receptacles will get used to help keep downtown clean, improve the quality of life for residents and visitors alike and promote environmental awareness.   “That’s something that’s important to us and our stakeholders, so every chance we get to become a greener downtown, we grasp it,” he said.

New Orleans Putting Smoked Butts in a Better Place

NEW ORLEANS – In New Orleans, discarded butts are being turned into something useful.   The first of 50 cigarette butt recycling receptacles was installed at a downtown intersection Monday. Developers of the program say New Orleans is the first U.S. city to participate in a large-scale recycling effort launched in Canada last year.   Trenton, New Jersey-based recycling company TerraCycle Inc. developed the program in 2012. The first citywide receptacles were placed in Vancouver, B.C., in November 2013.   “Globally we have collected 25 million butts since November of 2012,” said company spokesman Albe Zakes, adding that the company is in talks with officials in Toronto, Sydney, Tokyo, Phoenix and Atlantic City, New Jersey.   Officials with the New Orleans Downtown Development District said joining the program was a no-brainer. Smokers flock to curbside trash bins and public benches for nicotine fixes, and smoking is still allowed in bars that do not serve food. The downtown area is just blocks from the French Quarter and is home to the huge Harrah’s Casino.   That adds up to a lot of cigarette butts.   Kurt Weigle, district president and CEO, said a one-day sweep in 2011 turned up nearly 7,000 cigarette butts downtown.   According to TerraCycle, New Orleans will be paid $4 for each pound of cigarette waste collected.   The organic materials, such as tobacco and paper, are composted.   Cigarette filters, though they look and feel like fiber, are made of cellulose acetate, a plastic. Once collected, they are shredded and bio-toxins removed with the use of gamma radiation, Zakes said.   “It’s the same exact process used on fish and other meats to assure there are no bio-contaminants, so it is very safe,” Zakes said.   The filters are then melted into plastic pellets for industrial use in the same way a plastic bottle would be recycled, Zakes said.   “We only use the pellets for industrial applications, such as plastic lumber and plastic shipping pallets,” he said. “We don’t make any consumer products from this material, mostly because of the stigma around butts.”   Outside a patio bar and restaurant about a block from where the first receptacle was installed Monday, 23-year-old Ryan Schumacher puffed on a cigarette and said the receptacles may help break some “bad habits.” Schumacher said he’s among many smokers guilty of throwing cigarette butts on the ground.   “I’m happy that we have somewhere to put our cigarette butts, now,” he said, but added that there will be smokers who just don’t care. “There’s still going to be the people who are stubborn about it and just throw it on the ground because that’s what they’re used to doing.”   Weigle said he is hopeful the receptacles will get used to help keep downtown clean, improve the quality of life for residents and visitors alike and promote environmental awareness.   “That’s something that’s important to us and our stakeholders, so every chance we get to become a greener downtown, we grasp it,” he said.

New Orleans Putting Discarded Cigarette Butts in Better Place with Rollout of Recycling Effort

NEW ORLEANS – In New Orleans, discarded butts are being turned into something useful.   The first of 50 cigarette butt recycling receptacles was installed at a downtown intersection Monday. Developers of the program say New Orleans is the first U.S. city to participate in a large-scale recycling effort launched in Canada last year.   Trenton, New Jersey-based recycling company TerraCycle Inc. developed the program in 2012. The first citywide receptacles were placed in Vancouver, B.C., in November 2013.   “Globally we have collected 25 million butts since November of 2012,” said company spokesman Albe Zakes, adding that the company is in talks with officials in Toronto, Sydney, Tokyo, Phoenix and Atlantic City, New Jersey.   Officials with the New Orleans Downtown Development District said joining the program was a no-brainer. Smokers flock to curbside trash bins and public benches for nicotine fixes, and smoking is still allowed in bars that do not serve food. The downtown area is just blocks from the French Quarter and is home to the huge Harrah’s Casino.   That adds up to a lot of cigarette butts.   Kurt Weigle, district president and CEO, said a one-day sweep in 2011 turned up nearly 7,000 cigarette butts downtown.   According to TerraCycle, New Orleans will be paid $4 for each pound of cigarette waste collected.   The organic materials, such as tobacco and paper, are composted.   Cigarette filters, though they look and feel like fiber, are made of cellulose acetate, a plastic. Once collected, they are shredded and bio-toxins removed with the use of gamma radiation, Zakes said.   “It’s the same exact process used on fish and other meats to assure there are no bio-contaminants, so it is very safe,” Zakes said.   The filters are then melted into plastic pellets for industrial use in the same way a plastic bottle would be recycled, Zakes said.   “We only use the pellets for industrial applications, such as plastic lumber and plastic shipping pallets,” he said. “We don’t make any consumer products from this material, mostly because of the stigma around butts.”   Outside a patio bar and restaurant about a block from where the first receptacle was installed Monday, 23-year-old Ryan Schumacher puffed on a cigarette and said the receptacles may help break some “bad habits.” Schumacher said he’s among many smokers guilty of throwing cigarette butts on the ground.   “I’m happy that we have somewhere to put our cigarette butts, now,” he said, but added that there will be smokers who just don’t care. “There’s still going to be the people who are stubborn about it and just throw it on the ground because that’s what they’re used to doing.”   Weigle said he is hopeful the receptacles will get used to help keep downtown clean, improve the quality of life for residents and visitors alike and promote environmental awareness.   “That’s something that’s important to us and our stakeholders, so every chance we get to become a greener downtown, we grasp it,” he said.

New Orleans Putting Discarded Cigarette Butts in Better Place with Rollout of Recycling Effort

NEW ORLEANS – In New Orleans, discarded butts are being turned into something useful.   The first of 50 cigarette butt recycling receptacles was installed at a downtown intersection Monday. Developers of the program say New Orleans is the first U.S. city to participate in a large-scale recycling effort launched in Canada last year.   Trenton, New Jersey-based recycling company TerraCycle Inc. developed the program in 2012. The first citywide receptacles were placed in Vancouver, B.C., in November 2013.   “Globally we have collected 25 million butts since November of 2012,” said company spokesman Albe Zakes, adding that the company is in talks with officials in Toronto, Sydney, Tokyo, Phoenix and Atlantic City, New Jersey.   Officials with the New Orleans Downtown Development District said joining the program was a no-brainer. Smokers flock to curbside trash bins and public benches for nicotine fixes, and smoking is still allowed in bars that do not serve food. The downtown area is just blocks from the French Quarter and is home to the huge Harrah’s Casino.   That adds up to a lot of cigarette butts.   Kurt Weigle, district president and CEO, said a one-day sweep in 2011 turned up nearly 7,000 cigarette butts downtown.   According to TerraCycle, New Orleans will be paid $4 for each pound of cigarette waste collected.   The organic materials, such as tobacco and paper, are composted.   Cigarette filters, though they look and feel like fiber, are made of cellulose acetate, a plastic. Once collected, they are shredded and bio-toxins removed with the use of gamma radiation, Zakes said.   “It’s the same exact process used on fish and other meats to assure there are no bio-contaminants, so it is very safe,” Zakes said.   The filters are then melted into plastic pellets for industrial use in the same way a plastic bottle would be recycled, Zakes said.   “We only use the pellets for industrial applications, such as plastic lumber and plastic shipping pallets,” he said. “We don’t make any consumer products from this material, mostly because of the stigma around butts.”   Outside a patio bar and restaurant about a block from where the first receptacle was installed Monday, 23-year-old Ryan Schumacher puffed on a cigarette and said the receptacles may help break some “bad habits.” Schumacher said he’s among many smokers guilty of throwing cigarette butts on the ground.   “I’m happy that we have somewhere to put our cigarette butts, now,” he said, but added that there will be smokers who just don’t care. “There’s still going to be the people who are stubborn about it and just throw it on the ground because that’s what they’re used to doing.”   Weigle said he is hopeful the receptacles will get used to help keep downtown clean, improve the quality of life for residents and visitors alike and promote environmental awareness.   “That’s something that’s important to us and our stakeholders, so every chance we get to become a greener downtown, we grasp it,” he said.

New Orleans Putting Smoked Butts in a Better Place

NEW ORLEANS – In New Orleans, discarded butts are being turned into something useful.   The first of 50 cigarette butt recycling receptacles was installed at a downtown intersection Monday. Developers of the program say New Orleans is the first U.S. city to participate in a large-scale recycling effort launched in Canada last year.   Trenton, New Jersey-based recycling company TerraCycle Inc. developed the program in 2012. The first citywide receptacles were placed in Vancouver, B.C., in November 2013.   “Globally we have collected 25 million butts since November of 2012,” said company spokesman Albe Zakes, adding that the company is in talks with officials in Toronto, Sydney, Tokyo, Phoenix and Atlantic City, New Jersey.   Officials with the New Orleans Downtown Development District said joining the program was a no-brainer. Smokers flock to curbside trash bins and public benches for nicotine fixes, and smoking is still allowed in bars that do not serve food. The downtown area is just blocks from the French Quarter and is home to the huge Harrah’s Casino.   That adds up to a lot of cigarette butts.   Kurt Weigle, district president and CEO, said a one-day sweep in 2011 turned up nearly 7,000 cigarette butts downtown.   According to TerraCycle, New Orleans will be paid $4 for each pound of cigarette waste collected.   The organic materials, such as tobacco and paper, are composted.   Cigarette filters, though they look and feel like fiber, are made of cellulose acetate, a plastic. Once collected, they are shredded and bio-toxins removed with the use of gamma radiation, Zakes said.   “It’s the same exact process used on fish and other meats to assure there are no bio-contaminants, so it is very safe,” Zakes said.   The filters are then melted into plastic pellets for industrial use in the same way a plastic bottle would be recycled, Zakes said.   “We only use the pellets for industrial applications, such as plastic lumber and plastic shipping pallets,” he said. “We don’t make any consumer products from this material, mostly because of the stigma around butts.”   Outside a patio bar and restaurant about a block from where the first receptacle was installed Monday, 23-year-old Ryan Schumacher puffed on a cigarette and said the receptacles may help break some “bad habits.” Schumacher said he’s among many smokers guilty of throwing cigarette butts on the ground.   “I’m happy that we have somewhere to put our cigarette butts, now,” he said, but added that there will be smokers who just don’t care. “There’s still going to be the people who are stubborn about it and just throw it on the ground because that’s what they’re used to doing.”   Weigle said he is hopeful the receptacles will get used to help keep downtown clean, improve the quality of life for residents and visitors alike and promote environmental awareness.   “That’s something that’s important to us and our stakeholders, so every chance we get to become a greener downtown, we grasp it,” he said.

NEW ORLEANS LAUNCHES CIGARETTE BUTT RECYCLING PROGRAM

NEW ORLEANS – The City of New Orleans and the city’s Downtown Development District are launching a pilot program to collect and recycle cigarette butts, via an extension of TerraCycle’s Cigarette Waste Brigade — a nationwide, mail-in recycling program that is sponsored by Santa Fe Natural Tobacco Company. New Orleans is the first city in the United States to implement a city-wide collection system, which launched this week with the installation of 50 new cigarette-recycling receptacles on several blocks in the city’s Downtown District. The receptacles will be easily identified with stickers that say “Recycle Your Butts Here.” Cigarette butts collected through the nationwide program are recycled into a variety of industrial products, such as plastic pallets. Any remaining tobacco is repurposed via tobacco-specific composting methods. The entire program is free to the city and its tax-payers, as TerraCycle supplies the receptacles and Santa Fe Natural Tobacco Company, through the Cigarette Waste Brigade, covers the ongoing program costs. Additionally, for every pound of cigarette waste collected, $4 will be donated to the DDD to help fund green jobs throughout the city.

New Orleans Putting Smoked Butts in a Better Place

NEW ORLEANS – In New Orleans, discarded butts are being turned into something useful.   The first of 50 cigarette butt recycling receptacles was installed at a downtown intersection Monday. Developers of the program say New Orleans is the first U.S. city to participate in a large-scale recycling effort launched in Canada last year.   Trenton, New Jersey-based recycling company TerraCycle Inc. developed the program in 2012. The first citywide receptacles were placed in Vancouver, B.C., in November 2013.   “Globally we have collected 25 million butts since November of 2012,” said company spokesman Albe Zakes, adding that the company is in talks with officials in Toronto, Sydney, Tokyo, Phoenix and Atlantic City, New Jersey.   Officials with the New Orleans Downtown Development District said joining the program was a no-brainer. Smokers flock to curbside trash bins and public benches for nicotine fixes, and smoking is still allowed in bars that do not serve food. The downtown area is just blocks from the French Quarter and is home to the huge Harrah’s Casino.   That adds up to a lot of cigarette butts.   Kurt Weigle, district president and CEO, said a one-day sweep in 2011 turned up nearly 7,000 cigarette butts downtown.   According to TerraCycle, New Orleans will be paid $4 for each pound of cigarette waste collected.   The organic materials, such as tobacco and paper, are composted.   Cigarette filters, though they look and feel like fiber, are made of cellulose acetate, a plastic. Once collected, they are shredded and bio-toxins removed with the use of gamma radiation, Zakes said.   “It’s the same exact process used on fish and other meats to assure there are no bio-contaminants, so it is very safe,” Zakes said.   The filters are then melted into plastic pellets for industrial use in the same way a plastic bottle would be recycled, Zakes said.   “We only use the pellets for industrial applications, such as plastic lumber and plastic shipping pallets,” he said. “We don’t make any consumer products from this material, mostly because of the stigma around butts.”   Outside a patio bar and restaurant about a block from where the first receptacle was installed Monday, 23-year-old Ryan Schumacher puffed on a cigarette and said the receptacles may help break some “bad habits.” Schumacher said he’s among many smokers guilty of throwing cigarette butts on the ground.   “I’m happy that we have somewhere to put our cigarette butts, now,” he said, but added that there will be smokers who just don’t care. “There’s still going to be the people who are stubborn about it and just throw it on the ground because that’s what they’re used to doing.”   Weigle said he is hopeful the receptacles will get used to help keep downtown clean, improve the quality of life for residents and visitors alike and promote environmental awareness.   “That’s something that’s important to us and our stakeholders, so every chance we get to become a greener downtown, we grasp it,” he said.