For today's post during this TerraCycle Refresher week on our blog, I'm sharing a list and description of what items we collect for TerraCycle here at Blue Ridge.
Glue Bottles/Sticks
Any size Elmer's brand glue sticks and plastic glue bottles are acceptable. Only Elmer's please!
We earn $0.02 per item.ri
REESE - Just by eating lunch, students at St. Elizabeth Area Catholic School are fundraising for their school.
The students separate their Capri Sun pouches from the rest of their waste and send the popular juice containers to TerraCycle of Trenton, N.J., which in return gives the school 2 cents for every juice pouch recycled.
Mark Fritzler, 8th grade, left, and Zack Parman, 7th grade, right, count the recycled Capri Sun juice concentrate drink during her lunch hour at St. Elizabeth School in Reese. Students are encouraged to recycle their Capri Sun drink containers after use for a school recycling program.
REESE — Just by eating lunch, students at St. Elizabeth Area Catholic School are fundraising for their school.
The students separate their Capri Sun pouches from the rest of their waste and send the popular juice boxes to TerraCycle, who in return give the school $0.02 for every juice pouch recycled.
St. Elizabeth is among 40,000 organizations participating in the TerraCycle program.
After two weeks of lunches, St. Elizabeth collected about 270 juice pouches, said Gabriela Marguery, school principal.
They have participated in the program for eighteen months.
While the $5.40 collected does not seem like much raised over two weeks, Marguery said, but the amount adds up.
“With $5, there’s something we can do,” she said. “It helps pay for a field trip. The important thing for them is you’re recycling and helping the school.”
The school has even incorporated recycling into their curriculum, with a “Take Care of God’s Creation” unit.
Luke Holtz, son of Nicki and Todd Holtz of Reese said he brings a juice pouch nearly every day for the school’s fundraiser.
“(Recycling) is fun, you can help pick up at your house,” he said.
Alyssa Brow, the daughter of Todd and Cheryl Brow of Buena Vista Township said she recycles her juice pouches at school, and her food and canned goods at home “so it doesn’t make the world dirty.”
The recycling program at St. Elizabeth Area Catholic School doubles as a fundraiser. The students separate their Capri Sun juice pouches from the rest of their refuse and each pouch generates 2 cents for the school. The day this was filmed, the school earned $5.40 from the 270 pouches over a two-week period.
Zack Parman, son of Kathy and Stan Parman of Bridgeport Township, a 7th grader at the school helps count the recycled packages every two weeks. He said he doesn’t mind helping out because fundraising ultimately helps the school, paying for field trips, balls and lighting in the gymnasium.
“We partner with these companies, these brands, to provide a solution for their packaging at the end of its life,” said Lauren Taylor, director, U.S. public relations for TerraCycle.
The company partners with many companies like Kraft Foods, Frito Lay, Revolution Foods, Bare Naked, Colgate, Elmers and Logitech.
They recycle and “upcycle” the discarded packaging. Recycling turns the product into something new and unrecognizable from its original form, but upcycling creates something recognizable from a product’s original form, like a Capri Sun purse or pencil case, or a backpack made out of chip bags.
“We have a lot of schools that participate, but anyone can get involved,” Taylor said. “Offices, community groups, anybody can get involved to make a difference.”
Are you looking for a great earth-friendly gift for your friends and family? Well a backpack made out of juice pouches, or a wallet made out of candy wrappers would be perfect for this holiday season. Lucky for you, TerraCycle makes those kind of products.
TerraCycle is a company that diverts trash from landfills and creates new products out of it. Terra means earth, so TerraCycle is earth-cycling. TerraCyclewas founded in 2006 by Tom Szaky, 29.
It all started in college when Tom and his friends started feeding the leftovers from their cafeteria to worms, and selling liquid worm poop in used bottles at hardware stores. Since then, they have grown to become "one of the fastest growing eco-friendly manufacturers in the world." In only three years, more than 20 million people are helping to collect trash in more than 70 thousand worldwide locations. In 2006, Inc. Magazine named TerraCycle "The Coolest Little Start-Up in America!"
No matter what kinds of beauty and personal care products you like to use, there’s a good chance you could also use some of those same products to do something good for the environment.
TerraCycle is a company that specializes in creating consumer products from post-consumer materials. Garnier, a brand owned by L’Oreal, is partnering with TerraCycle, who is collecting packaging from Garnier and Maybelline beauty products and recycling it, using it to create eco-friendly playgrounds all over the United States. If you use Colgate Wisp and Colgate Oral Care products, TerraCycle is also recycling packaging from those items and creating cool items out of them, like Colgate cosmetics cases, coin pouches, toothbrush cases, and a really nifty retro duffle bag.
After a night of Halloween trick-or-treating, there is a lot of candy-wrapper trash, and the wrappers usually end up in a landfill.
TerraCycle is offering a recycling solution: kids and adults can collect Halloween candy wrappers and send them to the company, which makes things like tote bags, speakers and plastic lumber out of the waste. Kids also can send in toothpaste tubes and toothbrushes as part of the Colgate Oral Care Brigade. For every wrapper sent in to TerraCycle, the sender receives points, which can be converted to cash and donated to a kid's school, a local charity or a nonprofit.
PHOENIX (Oct. 27, 2:30 p.m. ET) -- Backyard composters know red worms are masters of turning banana peels and coffee grounds efficiently into fertilizer. Increasingly, brands are turning to Terracycle as the “red worm” of the marketing ecosystem -- converting the effluvia of such heavy hitters as Coca-Cola Co., Kraft Foods, L’Oreal and Colgate-Palmolive Co. into new products and green-marketing initiatives.
At the Association of National Advertisers conference, Terracycle VP-Global Media Albe Zakes recounted a story that’s now widely familiar thanks to his own PR efforts that make up the bulk of the brand’s marketing.
PHOENIX (Oct. 27, 2:30 p.m. ET) -- Backyard composters know red worms are masters of turning banana peels and coffee grounds efficiently into fertilizer. Increasingly, brands are turning to Terracycle as the “red worm” of the marketing ecosystem -- converting the effluvia of such heavy hitters as Coca-Cola Co., Kraft Foods, L’Oreal and Colgate-Palmolive Co. into new products and green-marketing initiatives.
At the Association of National Advertisers conference, Terracycle VP-Global Media Albe Zakes recounted a story that’s now widely familiar thanks to his own PR efforts that make up the bulk of the brand’s marketing.
And there was more: Neosporin tubes, tortilla bags and all types of pen and markers. In all, parents collected and sorted into 37 bins items from both home and school, and sent them to TerraCycle, a not-for-profit New Jersey company dedicated to recycling the previously unrecyclable.