Archive for July, 2009

8-Bit Bins

In its continuing efforts to improve on its already superhuman diversion rate, the city of San Francisco has launched recyclingmoments.org, a Web site designed to clarify what items go in each of the city’s three curbside bins.


But to really drive the message home, mayor Gavin Newsom also unveiled “Recycle Slam!,” a retro arcade game in which players must maneuver green (food waste), black (trash) and blue (recyclables) bins into position to snag items tossed by a delinquent raccoon (one suspects the Texas version of this game would simply involve shooting the raccoon).


Give it a try, but be warned: In my experience, just catching the items is a bigger challenge than figuring out what goes where.


Outside the Box

Image via Creative ReviewThis collection from the blog Environmental Graffiti is the coolest assemblage of recycled cardboard art (and architecture) I have ever seen, but I am open to the possibility that there is cooler stuff out there … and will gladly sing your praises if you offer up something better. Ball’s in your court!

E-Waste Wish List

im-just-a-bill.jpgEarlier this week, U.S. Senators Amy Klobuchar, D-Minn., and Kirsten Gillibrand, D-N.Y., introduced legislation to increase the recycling of electronics and to reduce the use of hazardous materials in the products. The Electronic Device Recycling Research and Development Act comes at a time when electronics manufacturers, state and local governments, waste handlers, environmentalists, and consumers are all crying out for consistency in the handling of e-waste. Trying to juggle 50 different sets of regulations for e-waste only ends up hurting everyone and makes compliance costly and difficult. It also prevents the establishment of large-scale domestic markets to process and use this material.


What components should be included in this legislation for it to be successful and what will help it meet the needs of the waste and recycling industry?

Missed Connection?

This observation from New York Times technology columnist David Pogue came across my Twitter feed today.



Good question.

Vote Your Conscience

green-effect.jpgThere are five days left to help decide which of ten innovative green ideas should receive $20,000 in funding. The Green Effect contest, sponsored by National Geographic and SunChips, will award $20,000 each to five deserving projects. One of the projects will be selected through online voting, while a panel of judges will choose the remaining four.


Several of the proposed projects are near and dear to the hearts of waste industry professionals. One would establish recycling collection for multifamily homes in the San Rafael, Calif. community of Canal using a fleet of large tricycles. Another seeks to eliminate waste by replacing all of the disposable cups, plates, and utensils used during class celebrations at an elementary school in Julian, Calif. with a “Green Classroom Party Kit,” washable white plates, clear cups, and silverware in a rolling storage container that can be deployed all over the school.


All of the finalist proposals seem worthy. Stop in and register your vote before it’s too late!

Molto Grazie, Mr. Roboto

dustbot_massa-23.jpgUsually when garbage in Italy makes the news, it’s because it’s piling up in the streets. But now Italians can be proud, as researchers working in the Tuscan town of Peccioli have developed a cutting-edge (and adorable) robot named DustCart that has the potential to replace truck-based garbage collection in the tiny, truck-unfriendly avenues that crisscross most small European towns.


In tests, residents summon DustCart simply by calling to it. It quickly rolls over and asks for a customer ID number and details on the type of trash being disposed (organic, recyclable or waste) before opening a compartment in its belly to accept it. From there it would likely take the waste to a centralized collection point.


According to the GlobalPost (click through for a great set of photos of the robot in action), DustCart is part of a $3.9 million research program called DustBot, launched in 2006 to “implement robotics in society in useful ways.” In addition to collecting garbage, DustCart is equipped with special sensors that monitor air pollutants, such as nitrogen oxides, sulfur oxides, ozone, benzene, CO, CO2 and air temperature, making it a rolling air-quality barometer.

Signed, Sealed, Discarded

envelope.JPGIf writing this column has taught me anything, it’s to ALWAYS check inside envelopes (and occasionally mattresses) before tossing them out. Because you never know when they might contain someone’s life savings, the only existing copy of a will, an unpublished Shakespeare play or nude photos of a celebrity.


The latest schlub to learn this lesson the hard way is Achim Gerber, a music professor at Bob Jones University in Greenville, S.C. Gerber, preparing for an upcoming trip to his homeland in Germany, had obtained 3,500 euros — more than $5,000 U.S. dollars — and stashed it in a white, legal-sized envelope. As so often happens, that envelope ended up in the recycling bin and, subsequently, a Greater Greenville Sanitation Commission collection center. Though it took a month of searching through 20 tons of packed paper, Gerber, with help from Greenville sanitation employees, found the envelope. He reportedly emitted a “bloodcurdling scream” of joy and hugged all assembled, who were amazed by his luck.


So I ask you: Envelopes — harmless stationery or GATEWAYS TO HELL?


Source: GreenvilleOnline.com

Take Me Home, Garbage Road

road-name-ecbevan-rp-350.jpgIn the pantheon of unfortunate street names (Butt Hole Road, near South Yorkshire, England; Farfrompoopen Road in Story, Ark.; and the all-too-familiar intersection of Lonesome and Hardup in Albany, Ga., to name but a few), you could certainly do worse than Florence Garbage Road in Florence, Ore. Though it clearly lacks in aesthetics, the name is functional, as the road services the Lane County Transfer Station and the neighboring Florence Area Humane Society. That said, including the word “garbage” in local place names doesn’t exactly scream “civic pride,” so it’s no surprise that residents lobbied hard to have the name changed to something a little more becoming.


Bending to political pressure, the city council recently agreed to rename the thoroughfare New Hope Lane. Whether the new name reflects genuine optimism on the council’s part or their devotion to Star Wars was not disclosed.


Source: The Siuslaw News

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The Heap is a blog featuring waste industry news and analysis written by the staff of Waste Age magazine and guest commentators.

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