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ELIMINATING THE IDEA OF WASTE®

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Walmart's Car Seat Recycling Program Means Savings for Parents — Here's How to Get Some Money Back

  • Walmart is hosting its first-ever car seat recycling program from September 16–30, 2019.
  • Parents who drop off a car seat will receive a $30 gift card
  • The program is done in partnership with TerraCycle, a company that works with typically hard-to-recycle items.

  The annoying thing about babies is that they just keep growing, which means that all of that gear you've bought for them eventually becomes unusable. This is especially true of car seats, which are hard to pass on to other families, since they fall under the category of baby gear that safety-minded organizations like the American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) recommend getting new instead of used. (You never know if a used car seat is damaged or recalled, the AAP warns.) But a car seat is no good to anybody sitting in a garage — or a landfill.   Thankfully, Walmart is stepping in with its first-ever car seat recycling programThe event is taking place at 4,000 participating Walmart stores from September 16–30.Parents who drop off a car seat at the service desk during that time can feel good knowing that it'll be taken apart, and each little bit of it will be diverted from landfills. But even better news: Parents who drop off a car seat will receive a $30 gift card, which can be used either in-store or online for more baby items. (Perhaps a bigger car seat?) The caveats: They're not taking booster seats, and there's a limit of two gift cards per household. It's also worth checking to make sure your local Walmart is one of the participating stores before you go.   For this event, Walmart is teaming up with TerraCyle, a company that specializes in working with materials that are typically hard to recycle. “Through the Walmart Car Seat Recycling Program, traditionally non-recyclable car seats are now nationally recyclable,” Tom Szaky, TerraCycle's founder CEO, said in a statement. “Through this event, we expect to divert the plastic equivalent of approximately 35 million water bottles from landfills.”   If TerraCycle sounds vaguely familiar, it's because the company has been popping up all over the place in partnerships like these, from working with Hasbro on recycling toys to helping L.O.L. fans keep all its packaging out of landfills. Keep up the good, green work, TerraCycle!    

What parents need to know about Walmart's car seat trade-in event

Has your toddler outgrown their current car seat? Is the seat you're currently using covered in juice stains and cracker crumbs? Are you finished using car seats with your kids and looking to purchase something else they need?   Walmart is gearing up to help with their car seat trade-in event, running from September 16 through 30 at more than 4,000 participating Walmart stores.   Parents who trade in a used car seat at their local Walmart will receive a $30 Walmart gift card to use on the purchase of a new car seat or other baby items. The traded seats will be recycled by TerraCycle, a waste management company that works with major retailers to find ways to recycle items that are challenging to dispose of and may otherwise be thrown into landfills.   This is the first car seat trade-in event held by Walmart, and is scheduled in conjunction with National Baby Safety Month.   "Safety — especially car seat safety — is a top priority for Walmart's baby department, so we wanted to use our size and scale to create an event that offered unprecedented access to trade in an outgrown car seat for a gift card — perfect for using on your baby’s next car seat," said Melody Richards, vice president of Walmart Baby. "Sustainability is of equal importance to Walmart, so we're happy to work with TerraCycle who will recycle every component of the car seats."   To take advantage of the deal, Walmart customers can bring their old car seats to the customer service desk of any participating Walmart and receive their gift card. Booster seats are not eligible for the trade-in, and there is a limit of two gift cards per household.

No ifs, ands or butts about it - Ypsilanti wants you to recycle your cigarette filters

(FOX 2) - When a staff member approached Christopher Jacobs about recycling cigarette butts, he thought it was a dig at him. After all, the executive director of Ypsilanti’s Downtown Development Authority counts himself among the few that still partake.   Instead, the supposed tongue-in-cheek comment was actually a recommendation that Jacobs thought fit the city’s progressive culture rather well.   “We brought it before the board in August, reached out to businesses - almost all of the bars and restaurants said they struggle with cleaning up butts in front of their stores,” Jacobs said. “People seemed to be excited, so we said ‘let’s pilot the program’.”   That program involves placing 12 recycling containers intended for cigarette butts at highly trafficked areas around the city. The simple gesture is good optics for the city, but it also represents a burgeoning trend among cities to engage best practices for business and environment.   “I think we may be one of the first communities,” he said. “I don’t see it in many of the other communities. To divert that material from landfills and to produce something good from a bad habit - we really didn’t need to talk about it much (at city council). Everyone said ‘wow, that’s a great idea. It’s really cheap. It’s low-hanging fruit’.”   As governments enact more restrictions on single-use plastics, environmentalists have turned their heads toward cigarette butts. The orange piece of paper and plastic might be minuscule, but the numbers behind them certainly aren’t.   The Cigarette Butt Pollution Project reports that every year, 376 billion cigarettes are consumed in the U.S. alone. Worldwide, that number climbs into the trillions. Now imagine 65 percent of those cigarette butts getting tossed on streets, in rivers and every other crack of pavement they it can fit in.   More than just an eyesore, those butts don’t biodegrade. They’re made of a polymer. As the waste has spread, the cigarette butt has been dubbed the “The most littered item in the world.” And with that acknowledgement comes a surging campaign to recycle the waste.   “I love our mission, it’s the whole mission-driven eliminate-the-idea-of-waste goal,” said Lisa Pellegrino, the strategic partnerships manager and consumer engagement with TerraCycle. “It’s an anti-littering message that focuses on the toxic nature of waste.”   TerraCyle isn't one of the new kids on the recycling block - but it's message of eliminating “the idea of waste,” rather than just the waste itself may be. The symbolic charge they hope generates material progress comes through in their cigarette butt campaign.   They are focusing on the positive reinforcement of recycling cigarette butts, rather than using negative messages meant to shame smokers who discard their waste.   Pellegrino said they have seen a reduction of nine to 12 percent of litter in the vicinity of their recycling containers. From there, the butts are processed or ‘pelletized’ and refit for other plastic products like ashtrays and shipping pallets. For Detroit and Grand Rapids, two Michigan cities that have used TerraCycle’s services, they have collected 60,750 and 1,219,728 butts respectively.   But, officials remain skeptical to their effectiveness.   “It all depends on whether people use them,” Jacobs said. “With conventional cigarette butt disposals, not everyone snuffs out their butts and puts them in there. Some communities might be skeptical. But with stories like these, TerraCycle might bring on a few more communities.”  

Farmers market celebrates 50th anniversary of Woodstock

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Creative vintage clothing, jewelry and headbands popped up around the market with lots of smiles and poses for the camera. Farmers Market volunteers made quite the fashion statement in popular blue green tie-dye T-shirts. The children joined the festivities by creating “flower power” masks and butterflies. The Alice B. Toklas Brownie Fest drew a crowd, with everyone wanting to taste the Woodstock brownies.
The judges had some difficult decisions to make. Dave Roantree, Matt Lieberman and Chris Howe (Real Brigantine) must have had a ton of energy after eating all of that chocolate. The winners were Meghan Martin in first place, Anne Barretta in second place and Chrissy Lauletta and third place. The Fun Wave Band set the tone with songs by Santana, Jimmy Hendrix and other Woodstock singers. Beads were de rigueur and scintillating in the sun at Art in the Park with Bob Petrillo’s Bead Art. There were 71 entries in the Trivia Contest. Wes Winkler won the $25 TD gift card. Can you answer this Woodstock question? What was the band Fish noted for at Woodstock? Answer: Fish Cheer. Owner Trudy Clark, of Makers Workshop, fit right in selling her Boho Bags. She will be back again this Saturday, Aug. 24. The Brigantine Cultural Arts Commission displayed much historical information and many photos from the past. The commission will host the fourth annual Scarecrow Exhibition on Oct. 1-31. Contact Johanne Milnes at milnes20@gmail.com for information. Last week was the last Green Team Health and Wellness Forum of the summer. Dr. Megan Danaher, PT, DPT, from Brigantine Physical Therapy and Fitness, explained that the goal of the Rehab, Performance and Wellness Center was to provide superior rehab and fitness offerings with a personal touch. Her husband, Paul Donaher, runs the Fitness and Personal Training side of the center. This delightful young couple is working wonders in our community. Deedi Mora, licensed nationally certified massage therapist was providing 10-minute professional soothing chair massages that surpassed expectations! John Addrizzo shared tips for healthy eating and for prepping and making healthy smoothies. George Loza was at the Chamber tent. He is an architect who designs homes, does renovations, works with flood issues and will also work to update older homes. Also at the Chamber, Ada Krebs, of Berkshire Hathaway Home Services, provided information on the housing market and houses for sale. Many thanks to our community members who brought school supplies to be donated to Hands Up Brigantine for needy local children. Get ready for Green Fest on Saturday, Aug. 24. In support of the Brigantine Green Team's mission to reduce and reuse, the team will give away reusable silicone straws in their own carrying cases, making them a truly portable option. The straws were a HUGE hit at National Night Out.
You will want to spend some extra time at Green Fest. In addition to the weekly vendors, there will be at least 10 additional companies and organizations. Their representatives will provide information about sustainable living. Look forward to seeing the ACUA, NEXTEK, Marine Mammal Stranding Center, U.S. Coast Guard, Atlantic City Electric, South Jersey Gas, Clean Communities, Surfrider and Brigantine Garden Club. Tomorrow is the day to bring the rinsed red Solo cups to the Green Team tent. They will be boxed and sent to Terra Cycle to be recycled. Denise Hakanson will be at the Demo Tent tomorrow making fried tomatoes. She includes sustainablilty tips in all that she does. Of course she will buy her tomatoes and other recipe ingredients at the market. Following her cooking demo there will be a watermelon eating contest for adults and children. Don the Medicine Man will be back by popular demand singing his original songs, blues and pop. The Spotlight on Community will be the Sons of Italy and Clean Communities. Leah and Island Items will be at the Spotlight on Business tent. We hope to see you at the Farmers Market 8 to noon Saturday, Aug. 24. At Green Fest you will be educated and inspired to increase your conservation and recycling efforts as well as work on health and wellness.

Walmart & TerraCycle Host Car Seat Recycling Event

Walmart and TerraCycle are joining forces to launch the nation’s largest car seat recycling event in nearly 4,000 Walmart stores across the country.   The first-ever Walmart Car Seat Recycling Event will take place Sept. 16-30, in celebration of National Baby Safety Month. Customers can trade in used car seats at the Service desk in any participating Walmart store and receive a $30 Walmart gift card* that can be used in store or online to buy items for their baby. All car seats collected in this program will be recycled through TerraCycle, and each component will be diverted from the landfill.   “Safety – especially car seat safety – is a top priority for Walmart’s Baby department, so we wanted to use our size and scale to create an event that offered unprecedented access to trade in an outgrown car seat for a gift card – perfect for using on your baby’s next car seat,” said Melody Richards, vice president, Walmart Baby. “Sustainability is of equal importance to Walmart, so we’re happy to work with TerraCycle who will recycle every component of the car seats.”   “Through the Walmart Car Seat Recycling Program, traditionally non-recyclable car seats are now nationally recyclable,” said Tom Szaky, CEO and founder, TerraCycle. “We are proud to work with this forward-thinking company to offer families from coast-to-coast a way to give their car seat, the item that has kept their little ones safe, a second-life. Through this event, we expect to divert the plastic equivalent of approximately 35 million water bottles from landfills.”   To learn more about this event and others happening in Walmart’s Baby department throughout September, please visit www.walmart.com/AboutBestOfBabyMonth.   *Walmart $30 gift card offer with car seat trade in valid September 16, 2019 through September 30, 2019 at participating Walmart retail store locations. Not available at all Walmart Neighborhood Market locations. Limit of 2 gift cards per household. Booster seats not eligible for trade-in. Please see Customer Service desk for assistance with all car seat trade-ins. Gift cards subject to terms and conditions found at: https://help.walmart.com/app/answers/detail/a_id/57/~/gift-card-terms-and-conditions.

EGEB: OECD reaches green energy production milestone, 10 ways to go Zero Waste, more

In today’s Electrek Green Energy Brief (EGEB):  
  • Clean electricity has exceeded coal in OECD countries.
  • What’s wishcycling? It’s a bad habit we all have.
  • UK’s chief environment scientist: Everyone needs to make big changes to cut harmful emissions.
  • 10 ways to achieve Zero Waste.
  EGEB: A daily technical, financial, and political review/analysis of important green energy news.   Some good news to start your weekend: The International Energy Agency (IEA) says that “clean electricity has exceeded the amount produced by coal across the countries belonging to the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD),” according to Country Life.   The OECD is a 36-country intergovernmental economic organization founded to stimulate trade and economic advancement. So who’s the green energy leader?   The greenest country in the OECD … is Iceland (pictured above), where virtually all electricity came from renewable sources — primarily hydro power and geothermal — both in 2018 and in the first five months of 2019.   The World Economic Forum calls the IEA’s news a green energy production milestone. The WEF sums up the current situation nicely:   Coal is in rapid decline across the OECD, while renewable sources of energy are surging. Gas is now the most common source of fuel for energy production across the OECD. It’s cleaner than coal but still a fossil fuel that contributes to global warming.   But there’s still plenty of room for improvement: Coal increased by 3% in 2018, mainly in China and India. “Coal is still the largest fuel source for generating electricity, accounting for 38% of total global production,” says the WEF. But India and China are canceling and delaying plans for new coal facilities. And “investment in coal-fired power plants declined by nearly 3%, however, to the lowest level since 2004.”  

Our terrible recycling habit

  The perpetual waste question: Is this or is this not recyclable? You look at the guide sticker on your recycling bin, and the thing you’re holding isn’t on the list. So you take your chances and put it in the recycling bin anyway.   As Mother Jones explains, the waste management industry calls this wishcycling.   According to Marian Chertow, director of the Solid Waste Policy program at Yale University, ‘a wishcycler wants to do the right thing and feels that the more that he or she can recycle, the better.’   Currently, 25% of the items Americans put into their recycling bins aren’t supposed to be in there, like dirty items or things that just can’t be recycled. The result of this is rising costs and reduced productivity at recycling facilities.   So what to do? Mother Jones suggests we reduce and reuse, in addition to recycling. And here’s their guide (maybe copy and paste it somewhere that’s easily accessible) to what can and cannot be recycled:   When you do recycle, you should know what belongs in the bin: Rinsed plastic containers and glass bottles, cardboard, and beverage and food cans are almost always acceptable. Plastic bags, electronics, and paper covered with food generally are not. Neither are insulated coffee cups and toothpaste tubes, in most cases. And if you’ve checked your local guidelines to see if an item is recyclable and you still aren’t sure, it’s best to ignore your wishful instincts and throw it in the trash.   (I didn’t know about toothpaste tubes not being able to go in the recycling bin. Huh. We learn something new every day.)  

It’s everyone’s responsibility to cut emissions

  The UK’s chief environment scientist, Professor Sir Ian Boyd, told the BBC in an interview that in order to halt greenhouse gas emissions, everyone is going to have to do their part. He also said that strong political leadership is needed to get the message through to the general public.   Boyd says we all have to do these three things: use less transportation, eat less red meat, and buy fewer clothes.   In other words, walk or bike more (or take public transport, buy an electric vehicle, or carpool), go vegetarian, and keep wearing your 10-year-old favorite sweater  — or hit the thrift stores if you really need to replace a clothing item.  

10 ways to go Zero Waste

  Waste is a big problem in the US. We sent 137.7 million tons of it to landfill in 2015, according to the EPA. It needs to be dealt with effectively, alongside implementing green energy, so we don’t end up looking like the Earth in WALL-E.   We need to keep the momentum going on big action on a global level, but just as importantly, it starts with every single one of us. If we all change our habits, we’ll make a difference.   Real Simple spoke to experts and compiled a list of 10 ways to achieve Zero Waste. Their list is below, and check out their article for further details.  
  1. Use what you already have: If you’ve got a plastic item that works, don’t replace it with something more eco-friendly. Because then you have two of the same thing.
  2. Refuse first: Don’t take samples and flyers.
  3. Rearrange the trash: Make it harder to automatically throw things away. It forces you to think.
  4. Pack reusable necessities: You know — coffee cups, straws. Keep them in your car.
  5. Borrow before buying: Share things with your neighbors. It keeps down on all the consumption of stuff.
  6. Do a trash audit: Check to see what you throw away the most, and make a change to reduce that waste.
  7. Don’t feel like you have to make everything yourself: Only make it yourself if you enjoy it. You don’t have to be Martha Stewart.
  8. Green your period: Reusable menstrual cups not only save money, they cut down on some serious waste.
  9. Raise tiny tree huggers: Teach your kids about green energy and how to take care of the planet. Help them set good habits early. Then they’ll nag you. In a good way.
  10. Invest in a TerraCycle bin: “The company TerraCycle accepts many items that can’t always be recycled locally, like coffee capsules, toothpaste tubes, and potato chip bags. It partners with brands … to offer free recycling of their products. Or you can buy a bin or pouch for a specific need.” (Oh, so that’s what I do with my toothpaste tube!)

   

Looking back to the future of packaging

Despite being a certified millennial, I am late to the bandwagon on many trends — listening to podcasts being one of them. Though I have dipped a toe into the vast sea of podcast programming this year, I spend a lot of my “listening hours” on the podcasts of yesteryear — vintage radio programming. These shows are fun to listen to not only for the classic comedy routines or noir-style whodunnits, but also because of the commercials. You can learn a lot from advertising. Case in point: I recently binge-listened to several seasons of “Casey, Crime Photographer,” sponsored by the Anchor Hocking Glass Co. — “the most famous name in glass.” Of all Anchor Hocking’s advertised products, what I found most interesting were spots promoting glass jars for baby food or fruits and vegetables, and others introducing the “revolutionary new one-way no-deposit bottle” — not because I’m fascinated by glass, but because of the insight they give on packaging trends throughout the decades. Glass was promoted as a clean, safe, convenient vehicle for baby food that allowed concerned mothers to examine the quality of the product within as well as easily store any leftovers for baby’s next meal. Glass, according to Anchor Hocking, enabled America’s food producers to preserve summer’s bounty of fruits and vegetables at “the peak of freshness” for consumption in the winter months, especially during a world food shortage. And the one-way no-deposit bottle meant you didn’t have to haul all your empty beer bottles back to the store — you could simply toss them into the garbage pail with everything else. In the post-WWII era when rationing and materials conservation were no longer necessities, throwing a single-use glass container away probably felt like a small luxury. Today, however, we’re on the other end of throw-away culture, and the global conversation on packaging has shifted back to reuse as sustainability becomes more important. Kroger, for example, is piloting products in reuseable glass or metal containers through a partnership with Loop and TerraCycle. Since glass isn’t really practical where fresh is concerned, produce companies are seeking to reduce the amount of plastic in packaging or make it easier for consumers to recycle paper and plastic packaging elements. At the same time, a recent study shows 72% of consumers either don’t mind buying produce in plastic or prefer to do so, compared with 17% who say they try to avoid it as much as possible. Since consumers today — just like those of the 1940s — put a high value on convenience, my guess is plastic packaging isn’t going to go away anytime soon. However, if both e-commerce and sustainability efforts continue to reshape how people buy things and how companies do business, I wouldn’t be surprised if, in the future, we hear advertisements on podcasts for the revolutionary new returnable, reuseable, refillable strawberry clamshell or pear pouch bag — “simply consume the fruit, send the packaging back to the shipper, and receive a refilled container, all with the click of a button.”  

Walmart and Target hosting car seat recycling events in September. What you need to know.

Target and Walmart are offering dueling incentives to keep car seats out of landfills. In September, which is National Baby Safety Month, the two retailers are holding in-store trade-in events to recycle the old car seats. Target’s trade-in event returns Sept. 3 and through Sept. 13. Get a 20% coupon on select baby gear in exchange for an old car seat. On Sept. 16, Walmart kicks off its first car seat recycling event at nearly 4,000 stores. For the two-week period through Sept. 30, for trading in a used car seat, get a $30 gift card that "can be used on any item in stores or on Walmart.com," the company told USA TODAY in a statement.
 
Melody Richards, Walmart Baby vice president, said in a statement, that safety is a top priority for the retailer’s baby department. “We wanted to use our size and scale to create an event that offered unprecedented access to trade in an outgrown car seat for a gift card – perfect for using on your baby’s next car seat,” Richards said. Tom Szaky, CEO and founder of TerraCycle, the company that will be recycling car seats collected at Walmart, said that through the event they “expect to divert the plastic equivalent of approximately 35 million water bottles from landfills.” Since Target introduced its first car seat trade-in program in April 2016, half a million car seats and more than 11.9 million pounds of materials have been recycled.
 

Target's trade-in event

  • Take your old car seat to Target's Guest Services and place it in the drop-off box from Sept. 3 to 13.
  • Target stores will accept and recycle all infant car seats, including infant seats, convertible seats, car seat bases, harness or booster car seats. The materials will be recycled by Waste Management.
  • In exchange, Target will give a 20% off coupon to use in-store and online through Sept. 14.
  • The coupon can be used on baby gear, including a new car seat, car seat base, travel system, stroller or select baby home gear, such as playards, high chairs, swings, rockers and bouncers.
  • Learn more at Target's corporate website.
 

Walmart car seat recycling event

  • Walmart’s event is from Sept. 16-30 and all car seat brands will be accepted. All car seats collected will be recycled through TerraCycle.
  • Bring your car seat to the Customer Service counter during the recycling events at participating Walmart stores, which can be found on the store's website.
  • In exchange, get a $30 Walmart gift card to use in-store or online. The card is subject to Walmart gift card's terms and conditions.
  • There’s a limit of two trade-ins per household and booster seats are not eligible for trade in.
  • Learn more and find locations at www.walmart.com/AboutBestOfBabyMonth.