My Recycling

My Recycling
This crate is filled once a week and taken to the big blue bin for Saturday recycling

Sunday, September 23, 2007

Waste Recycling

Waste Recycling

Good evening readers. Another busy week down but another awaits. Hope everyone had a relaxing weekend.

Last Monday I visited Richard “Rocky” Brittain in his office to interview him for a story I was doing on graywater. After our conversation, I shifted to the subject of recycling. He told me he separates and recycles his glass and paper. Then he brought up batteries and oil. I went brain dead because I had recycled my car batteries before but it completely slipped my mind. I couldn’t recall how oil was recycled.

“A lot of people don’t think about recycling their oil,” Brittain said. “All you have to do is drain the oil out of your car, take it to Checker Auto Parts and dump it into their barrels and it gets recycled.”

I learned something new that day.

Car batteries aren’t the only kind that can be recycled but also rechargeable batteries. Brittain mentioned power tool and little flashlight batteries could be taken to Home Depot.

This website on battery recycling is broken up into three categories: businesses, government/municipalities and household. I found these tips under the household section because it brought up some good points. People might think twice before throwing a battery away. The website is:

http://www.batteryrecycling.com/household.html

Benefits of a Battery Recycling Program:
· Keeps all the hazardous metals in one place
· The metals reclaimed are reused and put back into the manufacturing process to build more batteries
· The plastic is recycled to be used again
· The cost of landfilling the batteries is saved
· Establishes good environmental policy
· Saves natural resources
· Protects the future
· Conserves for future generations
· Countries have gone environmentally bankrupt by not managing their waste products. Recycling helps prevent this from ever happening!

The main website is:
http://www.batteryrecycling.com/?src=google

This last website I liked because it lists the locations in Tucson where people can take their batteries and oil for recycling. AutoZone and Checker aren’t the only ones listed. It showed locations for other types of recycling like aluminum and appliances. Scroll down and you'll find a lot.

http://www.cityoftucson.org/tcb/rd/rmbsr.htm

Enjoy folks and talk to you next week.

Sunday, September 16, 2007

Buy It Recycled

Hello readers,

Another day in paradise. Hope everyone had a good weekend. For this week’s post I wanted to write about products I didn’t know could be recycled. I hit the jackpot because I found a website that displays various products and people can buy them. Now I could be a little out of date here, because before creating this blog the only things I knew that were recyclable were cans, bottles, and pizza boxes.

The overall site is:

http://www.ecomall.com/biz/recycle1.htm

I searched through it and the list of recyclable materials people can buy, to say the least, surprised me. I hope I’m not going to be one of those people who promote these products just so people would buy them, but I do want to reveal the ones that shocked me most to the point where I said, “Those things are actually recyclable?”

The only time I’ve “recycled” a bag of any kind is reusing a Ziploc bag for traveling. I put my toothbrush, toothpaste and deodorant in it and after I’d return from a trip, I would keep it around to use for the next vacation. On this website there’s a product called Bag-E-Wash (http://www.bag-e-wash.com/). It is a little appliance someone can put in the dishwasher to clean plastic bags and reuse them. I know people who use Ziploc bags to put a sandwich in and afterwards, reuse it for storing fruit. I can understand rinsing it out, but I’ve never heard of cleaning a bag in a dishwasher in order for it to be reusable. I thought that was an interesting tool.

Another site I found interesting had products from shoes to mattresses. This was the ultimate site for me in discovering what recyclable and earth friendly materials can be. The site is:

http://www.earthfriendlygoods.com/

I browsed through clothing, furniture, and accessories and there was a lot more. I was amazed how much was presented. It was one big department store online. The site also presented shoes and pet accessories like leashes and toys. I thought that was funny. The site explained a bit about the online store and how it grew just from people spreading the word.

This last site is:

http://www.chopstickart.com/information.php?info_id=2

I wanted to mention this site because the products here came from recycled chopsticks. The highlighted materials were necklaces, baskets and lamps. I’ve seen little ornaments made out of chopsticks at the Fourth Avenue Street Fair and a few times at The Tanque Verde Swap Meet but I never thought of them being made from recyclable ones. On the mission statement or “About Us” section, the idea is plain and simple that chopsticks people used in restaurants were thoroughly cleaned, sanitized and finally used for different creations. It is called Kwytza Kraft.

Hope you enjoy checking out the overall site. There is so much more. I’ll never look at recycling the same again after seeing all the ideas out there. Talk to you all next week.

Monday, September 10, 2007

UofA Recycling Part II

Greetings. Hope everyone had a good weekend. This week I had the pleasure of conducting interviews for a story I wrote in class on the new Architecture building at the UofA and how important green living is to the department. I spoke with Charles Albanese, the Dean of Architecture and Landscape Architecture, Ron Stoltz, the Director of Landscape Architecture and a professor in the department and Jackie Moxley from the Water Resource Research Center.

My interviews were very productive and a lot of recycling was incorporated with the whole construction process. During my interview with Albanese, he told me that the brick and concrete from the old building were detached, smashed and broken up. The pieces were then used to cover the ground. I thought that was a good idea because it keeps a part of the old building alive and fits it in with the new look. It would have been a waste of time and money if it all had been taken to the dump and disposed of.

During my interview with Moxley, who helped design a website that raises awareness of sustainability on campus (http://www.sustainability.arizona.edu/), she told me the issue has been raised of putting more recycle bins on campus.

“There have been lots of complaints among students, staff and faculty that there could be a lot more depositing recyclables. You just see a lot of bottles and cans in the garbage. That’s really frustrating. It should be really easy that you don’t have to go searching for bins to put it in or at least think about where you’re putting it and not dump it in the trash.”

It is a good idea to raise more awareness about recycling but regardless, there will always be people who don’t care. I think if more bins are placed on campus, there will be an increase in recycling.

Another campus organization Moxley mentioned was the Arizona Student Recycling Association (http://clubs.asua.arizona.edu/~asra/index.htm). The website has some photos from 2001 on America Recycles Day and a short mission statement along with contact information.

I also tried downloading this YouTube video but it wouldn’t let me play it on my blog. It was promoting Recycle Mania and posted last January by EcoCoordinator. Here’s the URL:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1UWZVSJ5xV0

Enjoy folks and talk to you next week.

Monday, September 3, 2007

Recycle Blog (Part I)

Greetings. Since this is my first real recycling blog post, I thought I'd start with my own thoughts on the topic. Recycling has been a habit ever since I was in high school and the product that is the most recycled in my house today, is plastic bottles. My roommates and I go through countless water and green tea bottles. We just bought more at Costco yesterday and I noticed how much we recycle just from the packages the bottles come in. We filled up our recycle bin half way just from the cardboard boxes. On the back of those boxes it said, "Recycle Please."

Now that I've given a little incite into what my exciting week in recycling was I want to discuss a little bit about what I found out about recycling on the UofA campus. I'm sure a lot of us have seen the big bins in the Student Union that are separated by garbage and recycling. That has seemed to be a good idea because I see a lot of people separating trash from recyclable materials and I'm sure they're not even noticing.

The UofA has dedicated a website to recycling paper. This site gives the do's and do not's of what kind of paper to recycle. One part of the site that through me off was in the non-recyclable category. I've always been taught to recycle any cardboard material, phonebook and newspaper but on the site those are listed in the don't recycle category. Then a little further down, it said to recycle newspapers and magazines. I might be missing something but at the same time all I could think of was, "make up your mind." The site is: http://www.fm.arizona.edu/recycle/Paper%20Guide.pdf

In January, the UofA took part in a ten week competitive activity called Recycle Mania. The site is: http://www.life.arizona.edu/recycling/recycle_mania.asp. The competition was also between different halls and apartment complexes. The school that won got a trophy and was recognized by various medias. Check out the Power Point presentation they had, it was interesting. I didn't see an advertisement forthe next competition but I'll keep an eye out for it.

Check out http://www.life.arizona.edu/recycling/opening.asp. This site is dedicated to Residence Life and recycling. The highlight of the website is presented below with statistical information on students moving into the Residence Halls and La Aldea Graduate Housing.

2004 - Total Collected: 17 tons of cardboard
The recycling we did at hall opening saved:
289 trees
118,201 gallons of water
7,871 gallons of oil
9,979 pounds of air pollution
52.02 cubic yards of landfill space
69,309 kilowatt hours of energy

2006 - Total Collected: 25.2 tons of cardboard and 1.3 tons of polystyrene
The recycling we did at hall opening saved:
433 trees
177,301 gallons of water
11,806 gallons of oil
14,968 pounds of air pollution
78.03 cubic yards of landfill space
103,963 kilowatt hours of energy

Have a good week folks and talk to you next week.