good recycling info
Jun. 23rd, 2006 06:43 pmHow to Recycle Practically Anything: Old Myths are Shattering and New Options Come Online
The info about recycling styrofoam peanuts, in particular, was new to me (and very useful -- I hate throwing those things away).
The info about recycling styrofoam peanuts, in particular, was new to me (and very useful -- I hate throwing those things away).
no subject
Date: 2006-06-24 08:04 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-06-25 08:37 pm (UTC)Here in my town, most folks recycle, both because it's the old New England ethic to never waste anything if possible (put another way, folks is cheap ;>), and because almost all taxation here is local (property-tax-based), since we have no state sales tax or state income tax. The property tax is based on a strictly-balanced budget, and a big part of that is trash disposal costs. The fee for that is a total of the cost of hauling away solid waste, minus the income from recycling, so if you don't recycle, you cost yourself, and the rest of the town, twice -- less income, and more costs. Your neighbors give you a very hairy eyeball if you pull into the transfer station with no recycleables and a bunch of bags of trash. That's another aspect of it -- there's no public trash pickup (some folks provide that service on a private basis, tho'), so dropping your trash off at the transfer station becomes a social event -- you see your neighbors, and you know whether they're recycling, too ;>
Direct and immediate feedback works, I've noted. In our society we're kept, in general, way too distant from the actual results of our actions. We don't have to see many of the negative results of our consumer choices, on the environment, on workers, on the economy, etc. If it weren't so, I think we'd probably live far differently.
no subject
Date: 2006-06-25 10:59 pm (UTC)