Thursday, February 28, 2008

Apple recycles iPods and cell phones



Apple is making it easy - as easy as one, two, three, in fact - to recycle your used iPods and cellphones.

All it takes is a quick form to fill out, print the free mailing label, and cart it to your neighborhood post office. Simple, eh?

Says Apple:
Apple’s commitment to responsible environmental citizenship includes ensuring that an iPod is properly disposed of at the end of its useful life. The recycling program covers your iPod or any cell phone — regardless of the manufacturer or model. Apple’s recycling program makes it easy for you to help protect the environment.

This after much ballyhoo about Greenpeace's attacks on Apple's lack of green initiative. Take that, Greenpeace!

Thursday, February 21, 2008

We're looking for a few good board members.

Recycling Jackson is looking for a few good men and women.

In fact, it seems like we're always searching for board members. New ones come and go, term limits boot others out - it's the usual story with a small non-profit organization.

Now we need at least two board members to help out our green cause. If you've always wanted to help make an environmental impact in Jackson, this is your chance.

Our board meets once a month, usually on the third Monday at 5:30. We have several committees, including site operations (for our Brown St. drop-off location), education and outreach (to get our word out in the schools and community), marketing (stuff like this blog, our quarterly newsletter, ads, and press releases), membership, and e-waste.

We're a working board, which means we do a lot of the heavy lifting for Recycling Jackson ourselves. For instance - as the marketing chair, I design the newsletter, update the web site, and send our press releases when we have something to say. We don't pay anyone to do that work for us - we do it all ourselves.

And hey, if you like getting your hands dirty, there's plenty to be done.

Our board is the perfect spot for environmentalists, home recyclers, waste management wonks, or anyone who gives a darn about the world and our place in it.

You can develop skills like community relations, networking, city and county political negotiations, and knowing the difference between cardboard and paperboard. Cool, huh?

For more information, or to ask us any questions, drop us an e-mail (recyclingjackson [at] yahoo [dot] com). There's no tests or quizes or gauntlet to run through. We just need passionate people who care about recycling.

Hope to hear from you.

- by Dave Lawrence, RJ VP

Monday, February 18, 2008

What a good neighbor

"About four years ago Mitzi Cranmore decided to start recycling to make her household green.

'After finding out how easy it was, I realized that one house does not make a difference,' Cranmore said.

She realized she could further the cause by educating students about recycling."

One of our very passionate helpers was in the paper - check out Mitzi's profile at the CitPat!

Wednesday, February 13, 2008

Aquafina is tap water, and therefore is nothing special.

That's what the Simple Dollar author says in a great rant on the evils of plastic-bottled water. The author says to think about the cost, the environmental impact, and the fact that it is plain ol' tap water.

Preach on!

Tuesday, February 12, 2008

How to: recycle glass




Recycling Jackson accepts glass bottles, as do most of the in-town drop-off sites.

Here are some guidelines, thanks to Better Homes and Gardens, and what to do and not do with your glass.

Do recycle

unbroken food and beverage containers, such as applesauce jars, ketchup bottles, wine and beer bottles.

Don't recycle

baking dishes, ceramics, windows, mirrors, and vases. They're made differently than containers and can contaminate. Donate household goods (like the baking dishes and vases).

Eventually, your recycled glass becomes food containers, tiles, landscaping and fish bowl pebbles, and road surfacing (kind of weird to think about, isn't it?).

Really, we just like the cool shattering sound when you toss a glass bottle in with the rest.

Sunday, February 10, 2008

Whole Foods says 'BYOB'



Whole Foods won't say paper or plastic - they'll say bring your own.

That's thanks to their new "Bring your own bag" (or BYOB) program, outlined on their site here.

When you bring your own bag to any Whole Foods shopping location, they will give you a refund of 5 cents per bag. They also have their own canvass bags, as we've lauded before, available for the usual 99 cents.

But what about paper? Says Whole Foods:
We aren’t trying to settle the "paper vs. plastic" debate. We say "reuse!" instead. But when you don't reuse, we provide 100% recycled (and recyclable) paper bags.