Thursday, November 15, 2007

If we had 3 wishes...(day's end at the landfill)

Thanks to all those who visited us at the Waste Management Landfill today, including their management and several of our staff.  We've had a busy day chatting by phone, email, blog, text and video phone with people all over America, and even Canada. We've shared our concerns about recycling with CBS National News Radio, Texas State Radio News, NBC, ABC and CBS affiliates in Austin and the Austin American Statesman.

Our hard core team of staff (Kevin, Valerie, Millie, Kelli and Justin) have all been up since 4 a.m. and we're now delirious. We are playing Scattergories under our tent.  (Val won).

We played this game: answer this question: "After being in a landfill for 12 hours, what three things would you want delivered here to you:

Kelli:
bottle of wine
TV
cheese

Justin:
a football
Bed
Beer

Millie:
Olives
Wine
TV

Kevin
Pillow
Facial wipes
White Wine

Valerie
Cheese
Red Wine
Ottoman

Don't worry. We'd pack it all out with us on the way out.
Remember: Recycling in America: We can do better!

Special thanks to Steve Jacobs, Bubba Smith, Denise Fraser, Lynda Rife with Waste Management for all their help today.
Peace out.
Posted by EnviroMedia at 16:48:30 | Permanent Link | Comments (0) |

Val in the Pit

See Valerie Davis videos from the pit
new national research on recycling attitudes

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I_1DZetjUQY

and on electronics waste
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LLW-6esHGC0
Posted by EnviroMedia at 16:13:33 | Permanent Link | Comments (0) |

Trash and trucks

More 18-wheelers with cardboard, brush and other recycleables. Plastic grocery bags are truly a problem with the wind. 
Check out some videos from today:


Posted by EnviroMedia at 14:38:32 | Permanent Link | Comments (0) |

Filling up every minute...

It's 10:30 a.m. and the size of the landfill has grown rapidly. More than 100 garbage trucks. Tell us why you won't recycle or your ideas to make recycling mandatory.
Posted by EnviroMedia at 10:33:35 | Permanent Link | Comments (6) |

Wednesday, November 14, 2007

America Recycles Day is Today (Nov. 15); The Trashy Blog

More than Half of Americans Support
Mandatory Recycling to Help Reduce Global Warming

New national poll shows positive public response, but recycling numbers still gloomy

(AUSTIN, Texas) — On today’s 10th anniversary of America Recycles Day (Nov. 15), new research commissioned by its founders shows more than half of Americans support mandatory recycling as a strategy to help reduce global warming.

Yet founders Kevin Tuerff and Valerie Davis are commemorating the initiative’s anniversary today by camping out in a landfill to express their dismay at the country’s lack of recycling progress.

“A surprising 76 percent of Americans believe recycling at home can reduce their contribution to global warming,” said Kevin Tuerff, president and principal of EnviroMedia Social Marketing. “We are enthused by the response but aren’t sure Americans really understand the connection and how it helps.”

Recycling now crawls forward at an alarmingly slow pace. The nation’s overall recycling rate skyrocketed 80 percent in the 1990s according to Environmental Protection Agency figures. Since 2000, the rate has climbed a mere 12 percent.

“Back when we started America Recycles Day in 1997, leaders projected half of all waste would be recycled by now. We’re at 32 percent, and that’s a huge disappointment for conservation,” said Tuerff.

Of those Americans who believe recycling at home can reduce global warming, 80 percent would support mandatory recycling.

“Younger people are more likely than other age groups to support mandatory recycling and believe recycling at home can help reduce global warming,” said Davis, EnviroMedia principal and CEO.

Of people ages 18 to 34, 84 percent believed recycling at home could help, compared with 61 percent of people ages 65 and over. Of U.S. regions, people in the northeast (91 percent) are most likely to support mandatory recycling as a strategy to reduce global warming.

The research, conducted by International Communications Research among 1,348 adults, represents a cross section of the U.S.

Live from the Landfill
While at the landfill today, Tuerff and Davis are encouraging Americans to engage in a conversation about recycling and how it can help curb the advancement of global warming. They will blog continuously at http://livefromthelandfill.blog.com/ and invite questions about recycling at 512-773-7452 (direct line for media only).

“Recycling can help reduce greenhouse gas emissions that lead to global climate change,” said Davis. “We need to demand more recycling programs for homes and businesses and break away from the toss-away mentality that has proliferated in America in the last several decades.”

Dismal Progress
Tuerff and Davis blame the lack of progress on four things: more than 150 fewer curbside recycling programs exist in the U.S. since 1996; manufacturers’ disinterest in using recycled materials; diminishing community programs and education budgets to remind people to recycle; and the proliferation of plastic water bottles.

Those plastic bottles present the saddest story today in America’s recycling efforts. The Container Recycling Institute reports just 14 percent of plastic water bottles are being recycled. Meanwhile, per capita consumption of bottled water has more than doubled in the U.S. since the first America Recycles Day.

Getting It All Started
In 1997, Kevin Tuerff and Valerie Davis pulled together private companies, environmental groups and government agencies to create the first America Recycles Day, which was chaired by then Vice President Al Gore. It was an unprecedented effort to present a united message to the public about the importance of recycling and buying recycled products.

That effort gave birth to EnviroMedia Social Marketing. When the company opened its doors in 1997, it was the first full-service advertising and PR firm in the nation dedicated solely to improving the environment and public health. Tuerff and Davis are the principals of the agency and still passionate about recycling but deeply disappointed at its slow progress.

"Waste Management supports environmental initiatives that reduce the amount of waste that ends up in our landfills," says Steve Jacobs, Central Texas Landfill Manager. "America Recycles Day is a great opportunity to remind consumers and businesses to recycle and reuse.”

What You (and all of us) Can Do
As Tuerff and Davis spend the 10th annual America Recycles Day in a rapidly filling landfill, they call on everyone to reinvigorate their recycling efforts. But they also believe voluntary recycling programs can’t do it all, so governments must provide encouragement, whether it is financial incentives or mandated recycling.

“It’s been 10 years since we started America Recycles Day, and we must start re-educating people today,” said Tuerff. “To slow climate change, one of the easiest solutions in the toolbox is recycling.”

EnviroMedia Social Marketing is an agency working to affect positive behavioral and social change for environmental and public health issues. Agency employees will celebrate America Recycles Day during their annual office cleanup, where functional and usable office items are “recycled” through a donation to Goodwill.

America Recycles Day (Nov. 15), led by the nonprofit National Recycling Coalition, asks Americans to pledge to recycle more at home and to buy products made with recycled materials. www.americarecyclesday.org. It was established in 1997 and is based on the Texas Recycles Day program founded by the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality in 1994.

Waste Management’s Austin Community Landfill offers free electronics recycling with Goodwill Industries, as well as free Christmas tree recycling. Waste Management donates the mulch to Austin Habitat for Humanity for landscaping and uses it for erosion control at the landfill and at its new Wildlife Habitat Park on Springdale Road. Waste Management re-uses materials such as tires and crushed concrete in its landfill operations. Waste Management, combined with its wholly owned subsidiary Recycle America, is North America’s largest recycler.

Posted by EnviroMedia at 19:42:10 | Permanent Link | Comments (2) |

Recycling in America 2007

Fact Sheet
Recycling in America
November 15, 2007

• Recycling Spikes in the '90s: The national recycling rate for
Municipal Solid Waste (MSW) grew from 16.2 percent in 1990 to
29.1 percent in 2000 – an 80 percent increase. (U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency)
• Recycling Has Flattened since 2000: Recycling rates for MSW
increased by just three percentage points between 2000 and
2006. The latest recycling rate available from EPA was measured
at 32.5 percent.
• Curbside Recycling Down: The number of curbside recycling
programs in the U.S. has dropped by 157 since America Recycles
Day was started in 1997. In 2006, there were 8,660 curbside
recycling programs in the U.S. (EPA)
• Recycling Curbs Global Warming: Americans can avoid 2,400
pounds of carbon dioxide emissions per year by recycling just
half of their household waste. (An Inconvenient Truth)
• Waste Disposal Flattens After Recycling Takes Off: Per
capita waste generation grew from just 2.7 pounds of trash in
1960 to 4.5 pounds in 1990. As recycling spiked in the '90s, per
capital waste disposal leveled off. In fact, per capita waste
disposal remained at 4.5 pounds from 1990 to 2003, and when
last measured stood at 4.6 pounds per person in 2006. (EPA)
• Plastic Waste Up: Plastics make up 12 percent of our waste
stream – coming in only behind paper, yard trimmings and food
scraps as the greatest source of MSW. When America Recycles
Day was started in 1997, plastics made up 9 percent of our
waste stream. Plastic containers come in only behind glass as
the least recycled waste product. (EPA)
• Bottled Water Consumption Up: Per capita consumption of
bottled water has more than doubled in the U.S. since America
Recycles Day was started. In 2004, we consumed nearly 25
gallons of bottled water per person per year, totaling a collective
7 billion gallons of bottled water consumed annually in the U.S.
Converted to the 16-ounce bottles we drink, that's the
equivalent of 200 bottles of water consumed per person per
year, or a collective 56 billion bottles consumed annually in the
U.S. (Beverage Marketing Corporation)
• Only About One in 10 Water Bottles Recycled: Just 14
percent of plastic water bottles are being recycled. That means
we're sending nearly 50 billion water bottles (16-ounce) to the
landfill every year. (Container Recycling Institute)
• Plastics Are A Big Water Pollution Problem: Nearly 90
percent of floating marine debris is plastic. (United Nations
Environmental Programme)
• Plastic Stuck in Huge Swath of Pacific Ocean: The same
year America Recycles Day was founded, a patch of floating
plastic debris twice the size of Texas was discovered in the
Pacific Ocean. Called the "Eastern Garbage Patch," it is
composed of 1 million pieces of plastic per square mile. Plastic
pellets used to manufacture plastic products like CD cases are
mistaken for fish eggs and eaten by marine life. More than 100
billion pounds of these pellets, also known as "nurdles," are
produced every year. (U.S. News and World Report)
• Composting Growing: The number of community composting
programs in America has increased by 210 over the past 10
years. In 2006, there were 3,470 community composting
programs in the U.S. (EPA)
• Electronics Recycling Needs Help: The EPA estimates that
only 345,000 to 379,000 tons of some 1.9 to 2.2 million tons of
used or unwanted electronics were recycled in 2005. About 1.5
to 1.9 million tons were primarily discarded in landfills.
Computer monitors and older TV picture tubes contain an
average of 4 pounds of lead.
Posted by EnviroMedia at 18:55:11 | Permanent Link | Comments (0) |

America Recycles Day Founders Down in the Dump

America Recycles Day Founders Down in the Dump
Originators Decry Dismal Progress on 10th Anniversary of Recycling Campaign
Q&A Thurs. LIVE from Austin, Texas landfill!

(AUSTIN, Texas) — The founders of America Recycles Day will commemorate the initiative’s 10th anniversary by camping out in a landfill to express their dismay at the country’s lack of recycling progress.

On Thursday, Nov. 15, Kevin Tuerff and Valerie Davis will spend all day at the Waste Management landfill in Austin to make a point — America is way behind on recycling, and global warming is one more reason we should do more.

Recycling now crawls forward at an alarmingly slow pace. The nation’s overall recycling rate skyrocketed 80 percent in the 1990s according to Environmental Protection Agency figures. Since 2000, the rate has climbed a mere 10 percent.

“Back when we started America Recycles Day in 1997, leaders projected half of all waste would be recycled by now. We’re at 32 percent, and that’s a huge disappointment for conservation,” said Tuerff, president and principal of EnviroMedia Social Marketing.

Live from the Landfill
While at the landfill, Tuerff and Davis will encourage Americans to engage in a conversation about recycling and how it can help curb the advancement of global warming. With help from satellite wireless internet and a laptop, they will blog continuously at this site and invite questions about recycling through instant messaging. (see AIM post for address)

“Recycling can help reduce greenhouse gas emissions that lead to global climate change,” said Davis, EnviroMedia principal and CEO. “We need to demand more recycling programs for homes and businesses and break away from the toss-away mentality that has proliferated in America in the last several decades.”

Posted by EnviroMedia at 08:25:28 | Permanent Link | Comments (1) |