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Allen Field was the brainchild and force behind the challenge. He called me up a few months ago. I haven't done much volunteering since my Peace Corps days, and I'm a sucker for anything involving community and garbage, so I signed up to help get the situation sorted.
First, we met and brainstormed the ways to set the families up for success. We figured they needed a few angles of attack to whittle their garbage ration down from once a week to once a month. First, they needed to do curbside recycling (here in Portland OR that includes paper, metal and plastic bottles with glass on the side). Second, they needed to go "beyond curbside" which meant bringing rigid plastics, film plastics, and miscellaneous materials to Far West Fibres. Third, they had to do backyard composting, or vermicomposting. Fourth, they needed to address diapers and pet waste (here's one dog waste solution). Finally, they would (ideally) start to wrap their head around "precycling," or buying things with less waste in the first place.
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It always amazes me how much you learn about a household through its garbage -- the hundreds of bits of scrap paper at one house told the story a recent school craft project.
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I was really impressed with the delivery of this vision and project. Allen set up a blog on the Richmond neighborhood website. He got grants from local business and government agencies to help supply worm bins and other waste reduction supplies. He included a "pay-it-forward" element to the challenge to enable/coerce participants to extend their experience to their community. He pointed folks towards useful resources such as the EnviroMom website and a participant's blog. The project has already gotten great press.
The idea is already spreading -- I just called up my garbage hauler and switched from a weekly 20-gallon can to a 35-gallon roll cart. I'll save about $5 per month. More importantly, it feels good to take on the challenge. If families with kids and pets can do it, I can-a-month, too.
4 comments:
Great thing you did, I want to do something like this. I wonder if they have something like this in the Seattle area.
*****5 Stars for your Recycling Efforts. In our household when I started recycling we cut the trips to the dumpster down to 1 per week. As summer approaches I'll be building a compost bin to hopefully cut the trip to the dumpster 1 every 2-3 weeks. Luckily the city, St Louis, MO, has provided recycling dumpsters in the alleys that accepts everything no need to sort. In other words they are attempting to make recycling so easy that everyone will do their part.
***** 5 Stars for your Blog.
nice blog!
continue your good job..
By Deepankar
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Good job, I am trying to do so. It's easier to for doing so.
Rubbish Removal
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