Re: greenyes-d Digest V99 #380

BRING Recycling (bring@efn.org)
Mon, 20 Dec 1999 09:29:42 -0800


Reply to Jodi Dong of Lantzville, B.C.
The City of San Jose, CA conducted an "Economic Study for a Construction and
Demolition Debris Deposit Program." They might have information that is
helpful to you. Contact Stephen Bantillo, Environmental Services department,
Integrated Waste Management Division, 777 North First Street, Suite 300, San
Jose, CA, USA, 95112-6340.
David Wollner
BRING Recycling
----- Original Message -----
From: <greenyes-d-request@earthsystems.org>
To: <greenyes-d@earthsystems.org>
Sent: Friday, December 17, 1999 3:00 AM
Subject: greenyes-d Digest V99 #380

> --------------------------------------------------------------------------
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> greenyes-d Digest Volume 99 : Issue 380
>
> Today's Topics:
> [GRRN] Fw: Zero Waste New Zealand Update
"Bill Sheehan" <bill_sheehan@mindspring.com> ]
> [GRRN] Construction/Demolition Waste Management
"Dong, Jodi" <JDong@rdn.bc.ca> ]
> [GRRN] Recycling Neon Papers
"Bill Sheehan" <bill_sheehan@mindspring.com> ]
>
> Administrivia:
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>
> Date: Thu, 16 Dec 1999 19:00:40 -0500
> From: "Bill Sheehan" <bill_sheehan@mindspring.com>
> To: "GreenYesL" <greenyes@earthsystems.org>
> Subject: [GRRN] Fw: Zero Waste New Zealand Update
> Message-ID: <007701bf4821$de381040$843cfea9@billsdell>
> Content-Type: text/plain;
> charset="iso-8859-1"
> Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit
>
> I just returned from a week in New Zealand where
> I was the guest of the Zero Waste New Zealand Trust
> (ZWNZT), a non-profit entity whose purpose is to
> make NZ the first zero waste nation. They have a
> strong emphasis on community economic development
> and turning 'junk into jobs." The Trust is a project of a
> foundation set up by a highly successful retailer, and
> the director of both the foundation and the Trust,
> Warren Snow, was a community-based recycler before
> starting the Trust in 1997.
>
> ZWNZT has a bottom-up strategy for getting to zero
> waste, focusing on council (= local) government
> officials and recycling practitioners (for-profit and non-
> profit community groups). One of the keys to
> ZWNZT's success is that they give small grants to both
> council governments and recyclers who are committed
> to zero waste from landfill. They give US$12,500
> grants to councils that resolve to work "towards the
> elimination of landfill as a disposal method and the re-
> use of all materials in an environmentally sustainable
> manner" [Incineration is not supported either, and there
> are none in NZ.] The money is not a lot, but since
> discretionary funds are scarce in local waste
> management budgets it seems to be effective in
> initiating change and in leveraging other funds.
>
> I was invited to address the National Zero Waste Pilot
> Project Conference, attended by representatives from
> 20 of New Zealand's 74 council governments. In the
> past six months, fourteen councils (representing 15%
> of the country's population) have already committed to
> "zero waste from landfill" - most by 2015 -- and more
> are keen on following suit. The councils that have
> signed on represent a cross section from small, rural to
> fairly large, and the 14 represent about 15% of the
> country's population.
>
> Conference participants were keenly interested in our
> (GRRN's) work on promoting extended producer
> responsibility and changing policies that encourage
> wasting. Most seemed to recognize that there are limits
> to what can be achieved "at the end of the pipe."
>
> Several circumstances account for the momentum of
> the New Zealand zero waste movement. First, New
> Zealand (pop. 3.8 million) has a can-do ethos. They
> were the first nation to give women the vote, and the
> first to ban nuclear weapons. Second, NZ is
> increasingly dependent on tourism and maintaining a
> 'clean-green' image and they recognize the threat that
> landfills and incinerators pose. Third, NZ is
> undergoing a major political shift - from a decade-plus
> of experimentation with privatizing and free market
> policies to the election several weeks ago of a center-
> left government in which the Green Party holds a
> pivotal role. The parliamentary Commissioner for the
> Environment addressed our conference and is
> recommending that the new government work with
> ZWNZT and the councils committed to zero waste.
>
> New Zealand has less recycling infrastructure than the
> U.S. in many respects. New Zealand seems to have the
> potential to challenge the waste management
> establishment and leapfrog ahead of us. At minimum,
> they have hit on a potent grassroots strategy for
> challenging the waste management status quo. They
> are doing it in a non-dogmatic way that is empowering
> and unleashing creativity. Overall, it is encouraging.
> Stay tunded .....
>
>
> ************************
> Bill Sheehan
> Network Coordinator
> GrassRoots Recycling Network
> P.O. Box 49283
> Athens GA 30604-9283
> Tel: 706-613-7121
> Fax: 706-613-7123
> zerowaste@grrn.org
> http://www.grrn.org
> ************************
>
> --------------------------------------------------------------------------
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>
> Date: Thu, 16 Dec 1999 16:20:48 -0800
> From: "Dong, Jodi" <JDong@rdn.bc.ca>
> To: "'greenyes@earthsystems.org>'" <greenyes@earthsystems.org>
> Subject: [GRRN] Construction/Demolition Waste Management
> Message-ID: <347DF8A9B0CBD211B70D00104B344C4E155354@RDN3>
> Content-Type: text/plain
>
> Does anybody have any information on the health and environmental impacts
of
> burning and/or landfilling C/D waste? We are in the early stages of
> compiling information to develop policy on this issue. Any suggestions or
> information is appreciated!
>
>
> Jodi Dong
> Environmental Services
> Regional District of Nanaimo
> 6300 Hammond Bay Rd.
> Lantzville, B.C. V0R 2H0
> (250) 390-6514
>
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>
> Date: Fri, 17 Dec 1999 03:40:29 -0500
> From: "Bill Sheehan" <bill_sheehan@mindspring.com>
> To: "GreenYesL" <greenyes@earthsystems.org>
> Subject: [GRRN] Recycling Neon Papers
> Message-ID: <01a701bf486f$65c14d40$843cfea9@billsdell>
> Content-Type: text/plain;
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>
> Many students have asked us about the environmental effects of
> neon paper posters. This week, Dana Kelly from the University of
> Colorado Environmental Center answers your questions.
>
> Although bright and neon papers are eye-catching, these papers
> are no longer accepted for recycling by most paper mills. The dyes
> in bright papers are made with toxic heavy metals (cadmium,
> arsenic, and others), making these papers much more resource
> intensive and costly to recycle. In addition, since bright papers
> can't be recycled, they end up in landfills, where their toxic dyes
> may one day contaminate water and soil.
>
> At the University of Colorado, offices and departments have taken
> steps to reduce bright paper usage on the Boulder campus. The CU
> Bookstore, Printing and Copy Services, and CU's Distribution
> Center have discontinued stocking astrobright and neon colors. The
> University of Colorado Student Union requires groups using student
> fee money to use only recyclable paper (no brights), and the
> University Memorial Center does not allow posting of materials on
> bright or neon colors. In a University memo in February 1998, the
> Vice Chancellor for Administration's office strongly encouraged
> campus offices to discontinue use of brights papers and use pastels
> instead whenever non-white paper is needed.
>
> Questions? Contact the CU Recycling staff
> mailto:cure@stripe.colorado.edu.
>
> [From EarthNet News, December 9, 1999
> ...a project of the Center for Environmental Citizenship]
>
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> End of greenyes-d Digest V99 Issue #380
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