TERRACYCLE NEWS

ELIMINATING THE IDEA OF WASTE®

Posts with term TerraCycle X

BRIGADA DE RECICLAJE DE INSTRUMENTOS DE ESCRITURA

Estimadas familias: Les informamos que nos hemos sumado a una iniciativa de recogida de instrumentos de escritura, productos cotidianos que usamos a diario en el centro, las casas y lugares de trabajo. De este modo cualquier boligrafo, pluma, rotulador, corrector, marcador fluorescente, etc, (sin importar la marca del fabricante o el material del que estén hechos con excepción de la madera) puede ser reciclado. Pondremos en las aulas y hall del colegio donde se podrán depositar en lugar de la papelera habitual.

Willingboro retiree honored for recycling efforts

Would you believe discarded Ziploc bags and juice pouches could be worth more than $3,000? Students at a Burlington County elementary school believe it now, thanks to one woman's extraordinary recycling efforts and generosity. On Thursday night, the Burlington County Education Association and New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection honored retiree LuAnn Doyle for her contribution to both the school and the environment. From Feb. 2011 until late May of this year, Doyle collected waste from school meals during lunch hours at Hawthorne Park Elementary School in Willingboro, N.J. She recycled the items and gave the money made from it back to the school. All told, she saved more than 160,000 items from the landfill and raised $3,274.15. Here's the breakdown of what she collected: 29,145 juice pouches

Kimberly-Clark uses packaging to reduce product waste

Kimberly-Clark is known for popular consumer brands such as Kleenex, Scott, Huggies, Pull-Ups, Kotex, and Depend. Yet through its four business segments, the company also makes products for industrial and medical-related segments. In all, Kimberly-Clark markets its brands in more than 175 countries. This summer, Kimberly-Clark Health Care and Kimberly-Clark Professional, two of those four segments, are launching “SmartPULL*” packaging technology for its STERLING* and LAVENDER* Medical Exam gloves that greatly reduce glove waste from previous packaging and fit into the company’s wide-ranging sustainability efforts. Developed internally, SmartPULL packaging technology incorporates a dual glove opening tab for paperboard cartons used in medical, dental, laboratory, and university research environments.

Garnier’s Greener Tour

The Garnier Greener Tour, in partnership with TerraCycle, is making stops all over the country to raise awareness about the recyclability of cosmetic packaging, encourage people to think differently about waste, and teach simple ways to have a positive impact on the environment. And yes, it’s actually coming to Corpus Christi. We shall pause for a moment of silence in honor of the sheer awesomeness of this fact. pause On Sunday, June 10th from 2pm to 4 pm – the Garnier Get Greener Tour Bus is going to be at the Calallen Walmart at 3829 US Highway 77. There will be a couple of stylists to do hair, Terracycle bins for recycling used cosmetics containers, refreshments, even games and activities, and for those lucky ones who RSVP’d to the local evite FB blast — special Garnier Goody Bags!

Middle schoolers lead recycling effort

A recycling revolution is going on through the halls of North Andover Middle School. Students, teachers and other staffers have cut the volume of trash from the cafeteria by more than half, according to Craig Richard, one of the teachers who helped get the program going. The three lunch periods at the school used to produce around 30 bags of trash per day, Richard said. "Now it's around a dozen," he said. Tod Workman, school custodian, pointing to a cart that was about half full of trash bags, said it used to overflow with refuse from the cafeteria. The recycling renaissance was spearheaded not by adults, but by two eighth-graders, Douglas Starrett and Harry Ustik, who wrote a letter to the school's online newspaper NAMS Knightly News, in which they took the school to task for throwing away too much trash.

Can Spirituality and Big Business Tango?

Tom Szaky, Chief Executive Officer, TerraCycle, Inc. Does spirituality play a role in how you run your company? This is a hard question to answer, as my personal spirituality is what guides my daily decisions -- both consciously and subconsciously. However, if looking for a yes/no I would go with "no" as we try to run an agnostic organization so that all spiritual beliefs can co-exist. If not, can you share your thinking about omitting spirituality? Since spirituality is personal and especially because it can create controversy (when two different spiritual perspectives collide) I don't think there is a place for it in the workplace (TerraCycle). To us it is equally inappropriate as people wearing T-shirts with political slogans on them (e.g. "pro-choice").

Goodebox Delivers Eco-Friendly Beauty Samples to Your Door Every Month

Sometimes it’s hard to see the green through the greenwash. Goodebox cuts through the claptrap with a monthly service that delivers boxes of pre-screened beauty and personal-care samples to your doorstep. The burgeoning company not only vets each trial-sized product for sustainability, efficacy, and ethics, but it also tailors your selection to fit your age, skin profile, and personality. Past boxes, curated by green gurus like Renée Loux and Jess Blades, have included some of our favorite brands, including Dr. Hauschka, Tatcha, Josie Maran Cosmetics, and Kahina Giving Beauty. Plus, every dispatch is chockablock with exclusive discounts and special offers, as well as opportunities to win full-size products.

Packaging collected for recycling

Beauty brand Garnier kicked off its summer Garnier Greener Tour in partnership with green company TerraCycle on Wednesday at the Walmart parking lot on Boca Chica. A stated goal of the tour is to gather packaging from cosmetics and from hair- and skin-care products — packaging that would otherwise end up occupying space in a landfill. The TerraCycle website says that beauty and personal-care products account for about one-third of landfill waste because they are usually not accepted as recyclable material because of their composition.