Archive for the ‘Trash Politics’ Category

Hedgehog Wars

Thursday, September 14, 2006

hedgehog.jpg  I just read on the Grist List (yet another kick-ass sidebar link) that McDonald’s has changed the packaging it uses for McFlurry ice cream to something more “hedgehog friendly”. Clicking through to the article, I learned that hedgehogs were squeezing into the containers and getting stuck inside.

It seems there is an entire organization in the UK dedicated to saving hedgehogs from just this sort of garbage-related peril and what’s more, they have a rival group out to kill the little guys.

Just goes to show you, under every trash lid is an entire world of quirks, nuance and issues. How does “Hedgehog Wars” sound as a working title for the first everyday trash documentary production?

the wee hours and teamstergate

Thursday, September 14, 2006

morales.jpg  After seeing yesterday that Waste Management and the Teamsters were joining forces, I noticed the following headline on Solid Waste.com (one of many excellent sources of information and amusement linked from the side bar):

“Teamsters Appoint Morales Director of Solid Waste, Recycling”

You see, in my sleepiness, I misread Morales as morals, so you can imagine my surprise when I clicked through to discover that Morales is a person and not a sense of right or wrong.

I was also surprised to see that Jimmy Hoffa’s son is president of the Teamsters (yeah, I know, where have I been) and that he rose to power after a scandal called Teamstergate knocked out the competition.  I think I vaguely remember this ‘gate, but man do I need a Labor 101 course or to spend some quality time on wikipedia, the poor woman’s grad school. 

Weekly Compactor

Wednesday, September 13, 2006

sofia.jpg In trash news this week:

  • A Native American chief in rural Utah is angry that nuclear waste WON’T be stored on his tribe’s land. Clearly he hasn’t been reading everyday trash;
  • Some asshole in Delaware throws away a dog, while Tampa finds its third dead baby of the year in a trash can at a Target;
  • Waste Management signs a deal with the Teamsters (not sure who the underdog is in this partnership);
  • Bulgarians unintentionally build a wall of trash (pictured above);
  • Israeli gas stations to get recycling bins (no promise on gas, though).
  • And, not to be outdone, Qatar installs a hazerdous waste treatment plant and sets environmental regulations to keep Gulf air clean. Or at least as clean as it is now.

tax breaks for good recyclers

Tuesday, September 12, 2006

recyclebin.jpg The U.S. Senate Finance committee is currently considering the Recycling Investment Saves Energy (RISE) Act, a tax bill introduced by Senator Jeffords of Vermont in July. Jeffords proposes we offer companies tax incentives to recycle and reuse materials and that we make buying recycling equipment tax free. The bill has a long way to go before it’s even considered by the full Congress and may go through many changes from the Senate Finance Committee or even get tossed out. Meanwhile, the solid waste industry supports the plan and has sent Jeffords a letter to make sure he tucks in juicey perks.

death by trash

Tuesday, September 12, 2006

trashdeath.jpg  Last week, my friend Kimberly suggested I add a category to everyday trash that would cover those killed by trash or in trash related incidents.  My hesitation isn’t that I think the material is lacking, on the contrary it’s everywhere, but rather a fear of trivializing the seriousness of death by trash.  As Kimberly pointed out to me today, it’s no picnic to live in the away to which other people throw their unwanted things.   

Garbage Land

Friday, September 8, 2006

trailoftrash.jpgFrom the promotional website of the very next book I plan to read:

In Garbage Land, acclaimed science writer Elizabeth Royte leads us on the wild adventure that begins once our trash hits the bottom of the can. Along the way, we meet an odor chemist who explains why trash smells so bad; garbage fairies and recycling gurus; neighbors of massive waste dumps; CEOs making fortunes by encouraging waste or encouraging recycling–often both at the same time; scientists trying to revive our most polluted places; fertilizer fanatics and adventurers who kayak among sewage; paper people, steel people, aluminum people, plastic people, and even a guy who swears by recycling human waste. With a wink and a nod and a tightly clasped nose, Royte takes us on a bizarre cultural tour through slime, stench, and heat-in other words, through the back end of our ever-more supersized lifestyles.”

The State of Garbage in America, 2006

Friday, September 8, 2006

sog.gifThe good people of BioCycle magazine and the Earth Engineering Center of Columbia University have been tracking the ebb and flow of America’s municipal solid waste—as in all private and commercial trash that isn’t construction debris—since 1989.  Their recently released 2006 report (affectionately known as the SOG), reveals that overall Americans recycle about one-third of our waste and send nearly two-thirds to landfills.  Only seven percent is burned and less than one percent is burned for energy.

New York dropped from first to third on the list of states that export the most trash, following Jersey at number two and the surprising front-runner of Maryland.  Who knew?  Changes in the way in which exported trash was counted this time around contributed to some of this drop, the authors explain, as a couple million tons of construction debris was knocked off the Empire State’s tally.  Even so, as of 2004, New York remained the third most squeamish state when it comes to dealing with our own garbage.  Interestingly, our recycling rate is above the national average, though with states like Alabama sending nearly 90% of their trash to landfills, the bar wasn’t set all that high.

This concludes the dry numerical portion of the blog.  At least for the moment.

Weekly Compactor

Wednesday, September 6, 2006

In trash news this week:

garbology

Tuesday, September 5, 2006

diary.jpg I threw away my journals last year. All of them. From the little girl diaries with locks and keys to the ferociously-filled marble notebooks of my college years. Mine was a many-volumed collection of angst and, in a moment of psychological cleansing and studio space-making, I decided I had been hauling around the emotional and physical baggage of those books for too long.

I nearly lost my resolve the next day when I came home to find the steps in front of my building littered with ripped out pages from the cloth-covered journals I favored in high school, the ones I filled all the way through on thick one-sided pages then flipped over and filled one-sided the other way. My stomach churned.

I’d like to think it was a bum who opened the trash can and, angry that my adolescence could not be redeemed for nickels, tore the pages from the journals and threw them on the ground before stomping away. I’d also like to think he or she did all of this without pausing to make out words from the scribbling and that none of my creepy neighbors had the foresight to pick up the pieces and invade my fifteen-year-old self by skimming a few lines.

It’s a romantic concept, garbology, to examine a culture by looking at what it throws away. Someone reading closely that night on West 104th Street would have learned an enormous amount about the relationship, over time, between a young woman and her cloth-covered books.

40 oz wishes and aerosol dreams

Friday, September 1, 2006

graffiti.jpg  In addition to their lucrative rat-out-a-mobster cash incentive plan, the Department of Sanitation will now pay you to stalk graffiti artists.

Because when you think about it, Hawaii is just a big fleet of cruise ships…

Thursday, August 31, 2006

boat.jpg  City officials in Honolulu are exchanging tips with European cruise ships on how to dump sewage without contaminating the beautiful waters of Hawaii.  Apparently islands and luxery liners have many of the same questions when it comes to trash. 

Katrina

Tuesday, August 29, 2006

katrina.jpg  One year later, much of New Orleans resembles a rubbish heap.

WM

Monday, August 28, 2006

wm_header_logo.gifrunway.jpg  Waste Management is EVERYWHERE. I just got back from a trip to Canada and what do I see plastered all over every dumpster I pass? That big green and yellow W and M. It’s scary. And then the other night I was catching up on my Project Runway and where do the designers go? To a Waste Management recycling facility to scavange for materials for a retrofit challenge.  Jeffrey’s newsprint-treated piece totally should have won, even if he is a dick. 

“Toxic Tansport”

Sunday, August 27, 2006

toxic-transport.jpg  This story from the PBS show NOW takes a look at the moving target of toxic waste and the links between trash, politics and terror.

Beads

Sunday, August 27, 2006

threestrand.jpgbeaders.gifbandbrace.jpg I have discovered what I believe to be the most politically correct items on the face of the Earth: jewelry from the Bead for Life project. Bead for Life is a community development program that allows women from Northern Uganda to earn a living for themselves by making beads out of old magazines and stringing those beads into shiny strands to be sold to yuppie Westerners. Nothern Uganda, in case you haven’t heard, has been plagued by civil unrest for years now. Also, the HIV rate is very high, in no small part because of the violence and instability, including rape, domestic abuse and all the other side effects of war. So, this little project of recycling old paper into profit benefits women who are either refugees, living with HIV or raising AIDS orphans or some combination of the three. You, too can feel good about yourself by buying beads.