Save the Planet: Recycle

When you open the lid of your 85-gallon trash can and plop the over-stuffed plastic bag on top of other similarly stuffed bags, jam down the lid and haul it to the street on garbage pickup day, do you ever wonder what happens to it?

Where are we going to put all this trash?

Do you ever wonder where that trash goes after the truck and the sanitation workers pick it up?

I do, and it concerns me.

I think parks and rec professionals can do something to help.

The average person produces about 4.5 pounds of trash per day, according to national statistics.

In a city of 37,000, that comes to about 167,000 pounds of waste, each and every day. In a week, that rate mushrooms to more than 1 million pounds.

The math beyond that is simply staggering.

The waste comes in many forms: plastic food containers and wrapping, Styrofoam, food, plastic, glass, aluminum, steel, tin, paper. Of these items, a significant percentage is recyclable.

In the stuffed plastic bag in the curbside trash can, these items are worthless and possibly harmful, destined for a landfill near you or someone else.

Some of the aforementioned items are the “acceptable” materials for landfills. Also in many of those bags are unacceptable items: paints, TVs, lightbulbs, motor oil, batteries, electronics, medicines and medical supplies.

These are the items that should not be in a landfill, and many are not even recyclable. Some, like motor oil, fluorescent bulbs, medicines and paints, must be singled out for special disposal.

But even if items are “acceptable” for landfills, how many landfills can the earth accommodate? It seems to me there will come a time when this excessive trash production will catch up to us.

Then what will we do?

Right now, some larger metropolitan areas have to truck or barge their trash to distant landfills or incinerators. Burning trash brings its own set of issues, like where are all the burned toxins floating to?

But that doesn’t really solve the excessive garbage problem; it just ships it to someone else’s back yard. And once those sources are filled, then where?

The ocean? That’s already filling up.

A 2008 article in Discover magazine gives details about the “Great Pacific Garbage Patch,” a current-driven, swirling mass of garbage estimated to be one and one-half times the size of the U.S. and 100 feet deep.

How about outer space? Lots of room there, right?

Well, consider that the few satellites we put up there occasionally fall to earth when their orbits decay.

Can you imagine floating tons of trash of all descriptions in space? Eventually, the Weather Channel could be predicting trash storms as well as the weather.

Again, it seems like a Band-Aid fix to a gaping chest wound.

It seems to me that taking care of the excessive trash issue is like shedding body weight. In most cases, it’s a matter of either reducing the intake or increasing the output. Either don’t eat as much junk, or work out more, or both.

Reducing the trash going into the equation seems like the best way of controlling how much trash is going downstream.

That’s an easy thing to say, but way harder to actually accomplish.

As humans go about their busy daily lives, saving the planet ends up far at the bottom of their priority “to do” list.

As individuals, we can recycle things like cardboard, glass, plastic, paper or tin. It is amazing how much that reduces what goes into the kitchen trash can.

But I wonder how much substantive impact that really has on a problem of this magnitude.

It comes down to economics. If there isn’t some financial benefit for someone to go into the business of recycling things, it won’t happen.

And in the meantime, the trash heap continues to grow, and become more toxic.

I guess as we move into our Friday, February 10th, 2012, we should look at the bright side. There are more people recycling; there are more people out there looking for ways to derive a living from recycling discarded items; more people are aware of the issue.

So, as parks and rec professionals dedicated to making the world a better place, what can you do?

I can suggest a couple things, but I’ll bet there are a lot smarter people reading this who have more experience than I do. Got any ideas? Sharing them here might motivate someone else to give it a try.

Here’s one to kick-start the discussion:

Do you have recycling receptacles for plastic and aluminum cans at all your sports facilities?

Do you have them out when you have big practice days or tournaments?

Can you get someone to help monitor and encourage people to use them?

It will amaze you to see the volume of bottles and cans you isolate for recycling after one of these events.

Or start in your own office. Put out containers for aluminum cans and plastic to get people into the habit.

OK, your turn … ideas anyone?

Randy Gaddo, a retired Marine, who also served until recently in municipal parks and recreation, lives in Peachtree City, Ga., and can be reached at (678) 350-8642 or email cwo4usmc@comcast.net.

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2 comments on “Save the Planet: Recycle

  1. Randy, the timing of this article is astounding. In my freebie weekly paper, a local church is hosting a Sierra Club documentary about plastic abuse. The film “Bag It” will show between 100 to 150 billion plastic bags in 2010 floating in the Ballona Creek in southwestern Los Angeles. I thought the picture was beachfront before I read the article and realized it was all plastic.

    I personally take a very active role in buying products that I can recycle. My community recycling center does a great job of offering containers for plastics, paper, metal, appliances, tires, etc. I burn what I can in the fireplace and compost in my backyard. I am not responsible for a park per se, but I do take pride in taking action to pick up when I’m walking in my neighborhood, on a trail and even in a parking lot. And you’re right — once we fill up these spaces….what do we do? Unfortunately, we are a throw-away society and until our backs are to the walls…it’s all gonna come down to money.

    While visiting my dad in MA, he would pay a quarter to rent a carriage, if he returned it he would get the quarter back. If he didn’t bring bags for his groceries he had to buy them at the register. In addition, he had to bag them himself at another counter. Why? The store kept it’s overhead down and products were inexpensive. In a park situation it’s the same: Take responsibility and have the containers available, or incentives to bring it out.

    In Disney World Florida, children and adults kept feeding this wandering trash container to get it to talk, burp and thank them for feeding them. In some schools, children are taking repsonsibility for keeping their schools clean, recycling and gardening. The answer is to start this thought process early. If we continue as we are, we’re leaving one heck of a mess to our children.

  2. Great input Nancy, thanks for replying. I really like the idea of the wandering trash can! And I agree, conditioning the kids as early as possible is probably the one key item, and it should start at home, then be reinforced in schools and elsewhere. I also like the idea of buying the plastic bags at the grocery – that would get people thinking. At one grocery chain here in Georgia they have a plastic bag re-use program where you can bring your plastic bags back and they re-use them over and over again. There’s a ton of ideas out there but people have to first be motivated to do something. I hope we can start turning our “throw-away” mind set around, soon.

    To be honest, I was a little disappointed in the responses…or rather lack of them, to this Weekender. I thought there were lots of P&R pros out there who were recycle-savvy and willing to share ideas. I hope people were just distracted and will see this now and fire off some ideas….but thanks for yours Nancy, they were excellent! Oh, and your comments here are eco-friendly, digital medium, no paper, no plastic.:-)

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