Hickory Church of Christ in North Carolina is the national winner of cash and prizes in a contest run by Kraft Cheese and recycling pioneer TerraCycle. - See more at: http://www.faithfulnews.com/main/view/307565/say-cheese-north-carolina-congregation-wins-national-recycling-contest?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+FaithfulnewsLatestRssFeed-AllContents+%28FaithfulNews+Latest+RSS+Feed+-+All+Contents%29#sthash.ALrn6z9o.dpuf
HICKORY, N.C. — Hickory Church of Christ is the national winner of cash and prizes in a contest run by Kraft Cheese and recycling pioneer TerraCycle.
The Kraft Barbecue Bash contest gave entrants a chance to win by recycling the most used cheese wrappers June 1-July 31. Hickory Church of Christ sent in 9,000 wrappers as part of The Cheese Packaging Brigade, TerraCycle’s nationwide collection program to keep cheese wrappers from going to landfills while earning money for charity at the same time.
Hickory Church of Christ is the national winner of cash and prizes in a contest run by Kraft Cheese and recycling pioneer TerraCycle. The Kraft Barbecue Bash contest gave entrants a chance to win by recycling the most used cheese wrappers June 1-July 31. - See more at: http://www.christianchronicle.org/article/say-cheese-north-carolina-congregation-wins-national-recycling-contest#sthash.rSMWk18N.0IwcfBEu.dpuf
Action News Reports on a Girl Scout troop doing their part recycling Kraft Cheese packaging while raising money for their school or charity (Link Below).
TerraCycle on WPVI-PHI (ABC)
The girl scout troop collects Kraft cheese packaging at local eateries to raise funds for their school or charity. TerraCycle, an upcycling and recycling company located in Trenton, New Jersey, is working with the girl scout troop by collecting and reusing Kraft cheese packaging. They convert the plastic into reusable items. This reduces waste while paving a way to help others with donations for education or charity.
LOWELL -- The YWCA Green Team started without a name. As a small group of committed youth and staff volunteers, they piloted recycling efforts at the 2000 Lowell Folk Festival. Today, 12 years later, the group is about to surmount the half-million mark in recycled beverage containers -- plastic soda, water, sports drink and juice bottles, as well as metal soda cans and plastic No. 6 PS drinking cups.
Working closely with Lowell's Solid Waste and Recycling Office, the Green Team formalized its name in 2008. Now, in addition to the Lowell Folk Festival, the Green Team assists with recycling at a variety of events, including the Textile River Regatta, National Night Out and the Bay State Marathon.
The Green Team has also forged relationships with approximately 20 local nonprofit, municipal and private organizations. The partnerships establish recycling drop-off stations and provides on-call pick up of their recyclables -- like toner cartridges, cellphones, button-cell batteries and bottles and cans.
Some of the valuable partners include Merrimack River Valley House, the American Textile History Museum, Community Team Work Inc., various Lowell municipal offices, The Boys and Girls Club, Miracle Ear and the Lowell Teen Coalition.
Most recently, the Green Team has started collecting and recycling yogurt/dairy tubs.
One of the most prized partnerships has been forged with Coca-Cola of New England in Lowell. The local Coke facility has generously accepted all collected noncarbonated No. 1 PET plastic (nonnickel) bottles -- including those of a competitor bottling company -- that the Green Team has collected at the Lowell Spinners baseball home games, nearly 10,000 bottles and cans from this season alone.
Balfour Beauty believes sustainability is a collective responsibility. As a group we want to work together with our customers, suppliers and residents to ensure sustainability is embedded in our daily lives. We are launching to TerraCycle program at Whiteman Air Force Base on Monday, July 23, 2012!
TerraCycle offers support for stores that sign up for snack bag, candy wrapper recycling.
CSP Daily News | March 22, 2012
TRENTON, N.J. -- In an effort to divert more waste from landfills and help businesses engage in their local community, TerraCycle Inc., the leading upcycler and recycler of difficult-to-recycle waste, is encouraging supermarkets and convenience stores to sign up to recycle empty chip bags, candy wrappers and other packaging that accumulates on a daily basis. Each year, millions of these wrappers and bags are needlessly discarded and end up in landfills. The stores can join several programs to collect previously nonrecyclable items and give their customers a way to recycle and earn extra funding for a local charity.
TerraCycle collects more than 40 kinds of products and packaging.
Ninety-seven percent of participants of the Green Your Home Challenge said it increased their knowledge of how to help the environment.
The tale of one online game serves as a powerful example of how approaching old problems in new ways can bring about significant changes – in a relatively short space of time. The Green Your Home Challenge, a month-long game run by Recyclebank <
http://www.recyclebank.com/> in April last year, was highly successful in getting people to adopt more eco-friendly habits, simply by framing their actions in a gaming environment.
So far we have collected 63 units and earned 326 points! With just our points from December we have earned enough to plant three trees, provide a goose to three families or we are half way to protecting an acre of land sponsored by the National Wildlife Organization.
Love it or loathe it, Valentine’s Day is quickly approaching. Some are planning romantic dates with their longtime sweetheart. Some are planning to finally ask out their crush at recess. Regardless of your plans this Valentine’s Day, TerraCycle has sweet ways to celebrate that are good for the planet, good for the wallet and good for you.