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<!--Generated by Squarespace Site Server v5.8.0 (http://www.squarespace.com/) on Sat, 07 Nov 2009 13:33:00 GMT--><rss xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/" xmlns:wfw="http://wellformedweb.org/CommentAPI/" xmlns:itunes="http://www.itunes.com/dtds/podcast-1.0.dtd" xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/" version="2.0"><channel><title>Blog</title><link>http://goodgreengraces.squarespace.com/blog/</link><description></description><lastBuildDate>Tue, 11 Aug 2009 03:05:53 +0000</lastBuildDate><copyright></copyright><language>en-US</language><generator>Squarespace Site Server v5.8.0 (http://www.squarespace.com/)</generator><item><title>The World Without Us</title><category>Book Review</category><dc:creator>Janice Sitton</dc:creator><pubDate>Tue, 11 Aug 2009 03:01:32 +0000</pubDate><link>http://goodgreengraces.squarespace.com/blog/2009/8/10/the-world-without-us.html</link><guid isPermaLink="false">177238:1694944:4869285</guid><description><![CDATA[<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>A friend of mine gave me a great book for my birthday. It was <em>The World Without Us</em> by Alan Weisman. It looks at specific location on our planet, and what will happen when we, as a species, are gone. It was very interesting and enlightening.</p>
<p>For example, I didn't know that Manhattan Island, New York City, originally had 40 or more brooks and streams that crossed the island. You don't see these today, because they were buried to make the City what it is today. It takes a huge system of pumps to manage storm water runoff through the various underground manmade streams, and the pumps require constant maintenance to prevent flooding. During heavy rains, the subway tunnels fill with water anyway. Without people to mind the pumps, water would reclaim the City in short order. Bridges, without care, would weaken from freeze and thaw cycles and the elements too. In other climates, nature is already taking down abandoned buildings and towns, sometimes creating, ironically, safe migration zones for animals.</p>
<p>The book examines various aspects of what will happen, without humans, over the next several hundred, thousand and millions of years. It also looks at what our species has already done in relation to nature.</p>
<p>Although I consider myself pretty knowledgeable regarding materials, the chapter on plastics provided clarity and information I had not encountered before. It not only covered plastics in the environment, but also the general chemical make-up of plastics, and the corresponding difficulties of recycling plastics, in terms that were quite understandable. I found the quotes below especially poignant.</p>
<p>"'Except for a small amount that's been incinerated...," every bit of plastic manufactured in the world for the last 50 years or so still remains. It's somewhere in the environment.'"</p>
<p>'"...Today's amount of plastic will take hundreds of thousands of years (for nature) to consume, but, eventually, it will all biodegrade. Lignin is far more complex, and it biodegrades. It&rsquo;s just a matter of waiting for evolution to catch up with the materials we are making.'"</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>]]></description><wfw:commentRss>http://goodgreengraces.squarespace.com/blog/rss-comments-entry-4869285.xml</wfw:commentRss></item><item><title>The Model is Broken</title><dc:creator>Janice Sitton</dc:creator><pubDate>Tue, 03 Mar 2009 05:53:42 +0000</pubDate><link>http://goodgreengraces.squarespace.com/blog/2009/3/3/the-model-is-broken.html</link><guid isPermaLink="false">177238:1694944:3170909</guid><description><![CDATA[<p>The bad news first: The model is broken, and it will likely take at least a year or more to become stable, but far from fixed. The model is based on consumerism, the American Way, which is supposed to bring us the American Dream. People work themselves into the ground to shop at Wal-Mart and buy products produced by someone else, somewhere else. The prices we demand do not support the wages we need to have everything we need and want. So we turn to credit. Over the past 40 years, we, as a nation, have become entrenched in debt. Credit has been handled irresponsibly on either sides, and now we, as a nation, are feeling the effects firsthand.</p>
<p>Because we exported the majority of our industry and manufacturing to support the low prices we demanded, and to cut costs and increase profits for corporations, we are now seeing increased unemployment. Our demand on natural resources and products is so great, as soon as our own demand decreases, we affect the ability for millions to work. Our model is broken.</p>
<p>People turn to government for support. Millions of people can&rsquo;t afford health care, housing or food, the basic necessities for life and happiness, without government assistance. Somehow, the government must fund our increased need for services, while tax revenues from sales, permits and personal and business income are decreased due to the same situation.</p>
<p>In the meantime, we have a material management, otherwise known as a waste management, issue. Even in this recession, we are still consuming 25% of the world&rsquo;s resources. The U.S. population accounts for roughly 5% of the world&rsquo;s total population. We consume products and their corresponding resources at an alarming rate, and within a matter of months, days, minutes, sometimes even seconds, we discard what we have consumed. And we start the process all over again.</p>
<p>The majority of our discards are put into landfills, where they do not breakdown but stay in a static form for hundreds of years. In an EPA drill at a landfill 60 years deep, they discovered carrot tops that looked as though they had just been cut. A newspaper handled as though it had just come off the rack. Why? A landfill is designed to lock out oxygen and water, the two basic ingredients needed for materials to decompose. If things do breakdown anaerobically (without oxygen), it releases methane into the atmosphere, trapping heat and contributing to global warming.</p>
<p>These examples are rather benign additions to our landfill. Others, like batteries, electronics, chemicals and petroleum products, may form corrosive liquids that eat through the protective liners and contaminate our ground water and streams, our insects and fish. This is already happening in some places, whether from landfills or production lands. This contamination eventually works its way up the food chain and is ingested, by us.</p>
<p>Insects are important to the survival of humans. Bees pollinate a large majority of the food we grow and eat in the U.S., and they are dying off at alarming rates the world over. No one is quite sure why. We will ultimately suffer their loss. Most people do not even realize this is happening.</p>
<p>The solution: I believe one of our greatest resources as a nation right now is what we discard. We could provide for the entire nation, possibly even the world&rsquo;s needs, just in what we don&rsquo;t want anymore. Rather than burying it in the ground, where it is wasted and can lead to ill effects in the future, why can we not employee people collecting, repurposing and selling our used goods to others in need. Scrapping and reusing parts from our electronic devices that we often use for a year, or less, before replacing with updated versions. If this toxic exposure is too high for our own citizens to handle, why do we allow these products to be sold in the first place? Let&rsquo;s take responsibility for our consumerism, let&rsquo;s ask the companies that produce products to take responsibility, and find a way to benefit from it, as a nation.</p>
<p>I do not propose that this system would pay for itself. However, if the government is going to fund a bailout, it would be nice to see it address multiple issues at one time, the entire life cycle of issues. The need for resources on all levels is a growing concern for our country, our world. Let&rsquo;s use our resources wisely, over and over again, rather than extracting raw materials at escalating economic and environmental costs while depriving ourselves of basic needs.</p>
<p>The old model is broken. The American Dream of retirement will not exist for my generation. I am 37. We will be dealing with food, water and climate related issues in the very near future. Things won&rsquo;t get better if we are truly past the tipping point as scientists indicate. Our only hope is to tear down the old model that is consuming our resources and us along with it, and to build a new, sustainable model, starting today.</p>
<p>Stop consuming, start reusing. Live wisely with the world in mind.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>]]></description><wfw:commentRss>http://goodgreengraces.squarespace.com/blog/rss-comments-entry-3170909.xml</wfw:commentRss></item><item><title>Bedbugs - A Nightmare for Halloween</title><category>General</category><dc:creator>Janice Sitton</dc:creator><pubDate>Wed, 29 Oct 2008 03:50:53 +0000</pubDate><link>http://goodgreengraces.squarespace.com/blog/2008/10/29/bedbugs-a-nightmare-for-halloween.html</link><guid isPermaLink="false">177238:1694944:2480860</guid><description><![CDATA[<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>It all started when I saw a couple of oval shaped, brown bugs walking through my kitchen. I typically don't kill bugs, so I let these go too, figuring they came in with the produce or something and wouldn't pose any harm if left free. That was my first and only mistake. Unfortunately, that one mistake was enough to change my life.</p>
<p>I started experiencing a weird rash, with red, itchy bumps that would appear throughout the day on an ongoing basis. The bumps were extremely itchy and each one would last a week or more. I would often have twenty or more bumps at a time, and the itching was maddening at best. The rash would appear randomly throughout the day on my back, face, neck, feet and hands. Nothing would sooth the itching.</p>
<p>I thought I had been exposed to a toxin or something and that the rash or hives were coming from within. I hoped that over time, the rash would go away on its own or that I would discover the source that was causing me to break out. I tried changing my eating habits, had acupuncture treatments, changed laundry detergents, but the rash kept coming. I lived with anxiety each day as I dealt with this unknown and itchy plague.</p>
<p>That was, until I went to NC for three weeks in August. During that time, the existing bumps disappeared and no new bumps appeared. I thought I had successfully removed the toxins I had been exposed to, and was free of the unknown rash. I was thrilled and hoped I had seen the last of the weird itchy rash forever.</p>
<p>The day after I returned to SF from NC, though, I was covered in bumps again. Within a day, I had over 50 angry red bumps on my back. I knew that whatever was causing it was in my apartment in SF but I still didn't have a clue as to what the source might be. I was freaked out to say the least. I didn't know what to do! I had just started a new job and did not want to go into the office covered in red bumps every day!</p>
<p>The next night, I found a note from another tenant to the landlord noting the discovery of bedbugs in her apartment. She was two doors down the hall from me, so I immediately went online to find out more about bedbugs. I found the bite symptoms matched mine exactly, and upon inspection of my bed linens, found a dead adult bedbug confirming the true source of my mystery rash. I had bedbugs too.</p>
<p>I alerted my landlord of my discovery, and we began discussing possible treatments. In general, I am not in favor of using pesticides. I asked him to give me time to inspect my apartment, and to see if I could find any non-toxic remedies for the situation. The information I found through my research did not look promising. I found that bedbugs, once present, are extremely difficult to get rid of, and the only highly successful remedy used in getting rid of them was DDT or high heat. Bedbugs are not a bug to be taken lightly. I didn't want to be exposed to a modern day DDT equivalent or any toxins, but I could not imagine living in a constant state of itching. Now that I knew the source of my "rash," I wasn't sleeping well at all either.</p>
<p>First, I needed to learn about the enemy. Adult bedbugs are small, oval shaped brown bugs that look similar to a tick. They come from the same family as ticks, and are blood suckers. They also inject their saliva into their bite victims, which cause red, extremely itchy bumps. They cannot fly, so must travel by land and direct contact. According to some sources, they cannot climb glass and don't favor metals. They can live up to a year or more (depending on the information source) without feeding. It only takes one female to reproduce and carry an infestation between two separate locations. The only thing that is known to successfully kill them is high heat.</p>
<p>Baby bedbugs go through five stages of development, which may last between four weeks and four months. They must eat at each stage in order to progress to the next stage of development. They are visible to the naked eye at each stage, although they are very small in the initial stages. At one point in their development, they "hatch" out of castings, which look like a short (1 cm) pine needle.</p>
<p>At the smallest stage, I found they were easier to spot based on movement than by size. As they progress in development, they look more and more like the adult bedbugs, except they are smaller and translucent, with a brown dot in their centers (likely their last blood meal). They move really fast. I saw one crawling across my kitchen wall at a very surprising speed. I killed it right away.</p>
<p>As soon as my new job and work schedule allowed, I started a thorough inspection of my apartment. Although I didn't find any signs of bedbugs on the mattress itself, I found several adults and babies tucked into the seams and corners of the box springs. I also found them in my kitchen in the most bizarre places: under the tray of silverware in the drawer of my wooden kitchen island; wedged between the paper and the plastic of a CD case tucked into a cabinet; in the drawer of another kitchen cabinet under some paper; a swarm of new babies under a woven basket on the floor; another swarm of babies under a woven box on a table; an adult in the seam of a bag against the floor. I killed every one I found by hand or threw away the swarm sources, but quickly realized that the bedbugs could be anywhere and were likely everywhere; especially where one would least suspect them. To be safe and find them all, I would have to inspect everything I owned in minute and methodical detail in an extremely systematic manner.</p>
<p>At this point, I was extremely freaked out. I felt surrounded, outnumbered and overwhelmed. I felt I was fighting a hidden and unstoppable enemy. I was afraid to sit down anywhere in my apartment. I was afraid to sleep. I was jumpy and anxious all the time. I called my landlord and told him that I wanted to have my apartment sprayed along with anyone else that was having a spraying. One of the tenants had already tried to bomb them, only to find that the bedbugs just left and came right back. That is probably how they found their way to my apartment in the first place. I figured if my neighbors got sprayed and I didn't, I would end up with them all. I could not live with that thought, so I would gladly take the toxic spraying instead.</p>
<p>I thought a toxic pesticide would take care of the bedbugs, and given their ability to be everywhere, spraying was likely the only way to get rid of them. I didn't have time to inspect every item I owned in minute detail. I had a brand new job and a four hour round trip commute each day. I justified the toxic spraying for the sake of my sanity.</p>
<p>My landlord found an exterminator who provided a detailed protocol each tenant would need to follow before our apartments were sprayed. According to the instructions, spraying would not be enough. Inspecting, cleaning, washing, sunning everything we owned both before and after the spraying would be critical in eradicating the bugs. Even if we followed the protocol AND had the recommended schedule of three sprayings each 10 days apart, the bedbugs might still be present and additional sprayings might be necessary. The exterminator company let us know this in advance. Unwillingly, I began living in a constant state of anxiety that I would never be rid of these bugs.</p>
<p>To prepare for the sprayings and to sleep without obtaining new bites, I sealed my mattress and box springs in large, plastic bags purchased at a U-Haul supply store. The bags had numerous air holes in them, but I used duck tape to make sure all the holes were sealed. I also wrapped the legs of the bed frame in double sided tape, hoping any bedbugs traveling from other places would get stuck to the tape and not be able to pass. I was able to sleep successfully on the plastic covered bed without obtaining any additional bites, but the thought of bedbugs continued to plague me. I had a safe haven in my apartment, but could not place anything on it, including myself, unless I was sure it was "clean" of bedbugs. I would only sit or sleep on the bed after a shower. The worst part was that I could see the baby bedbugs moving inside the plastic bag on the box spring. Even though I had killed, by hand, each one I found during my inspection, there were still numerous bedbugs located there. They were probably new babies. It was terrible sleeping in my bed. I prayed my duck tape would hold.</p>
<p>The next step required washing all my clothing and linens in hot water, drying on high heat, and placing the items in sealed bags so they would be protected from the bedbugs. Approximately 15 hours at the laundry mat and $60 later, I had approximately 15, 30 gallon, sealed black plastic bags stored in the basement of my apartment building. I was too scared to bring the clothes back into my apartment. I normally abhor plastic bags, but I was grateful for them now. It was extremely hard to dress for a professional job day after day out of black plastic bags, but the alternative was unthinkable. I would be living out of these bags for at least a month...the recommended time for the scheduled spraying.</p>
<p>I then started the systematic inspection and cleaning of all my things. I realized this would take not only hours, but days, to properly inspect everything for bedbugs. This task was daunting at best. I had no time for it, and to miss one female adult could mean continued trauma in my life.</p>
<p>I also realized that success in eradicating the bedbugs did not depend on my actions alone, but on the actions of my neighbors as well. Even if I was able to locate and kill all the bedbugs in my apartment, if my neighbors were not as thorough in their pre-spraying protocols, the bedbugs would come right back. Knowing some of my neighbors, I literally feared for my life. Although I liked my neighbors, I knew one was a pack-rat and was not likely to clean to the level needed to be rid of the bedbugs. Although I didn't like sleeping on plastic, to purchase a new bed was unthinkable. It was likely to be infected right away anyway.</p>
<p>The level of anxiety I was living in started to affect my personal and business relationships. I hadn't had a moment to myself for some time, had recently experienced a family emergency, had just started a new job, and with the added anxiety of bedbugs, I started to crack. The unbearable notion of living with the bugs for an unknown amount of time into the future pushed me over the edge. I decided I would have to get out.</p>
<p>I immediately started looking and within a week found a new apartment in San Jose. I knew I would have to be extremely careful so I would not bring them with me and infect my new apartment and neighbors. I could not bring them with me. I spent an additional two days hauling and washing my clothes and linens a second time in hot water and drying on high heat before moving these items into my new apartment. I did not reuse the black plastic bags. I used new bags for the newly washed clothes and threw away the old bags...in fear of bedbugs. My suitcases were off limits, left for spraying in SF. I purchased a new bed and couch, as I was too afraid to purchase these items used as I normally would. I even left the new bed in its plastic wrapping for two weeks to make sure I hadn't somehow brought the buggers with me despite all my efforts. When I had slept successfully without new bites for two weeks, I knew that phase one of the move out had been successful and I removed the plastic from the new bed.</p>
<p>Phase two would be a little more difficult. I had to purchase new furnishings for my new SJ apartment, as all of my non-clothing related items were still in my SF apartment. I didn't want to move my table, chairs, books, paperwork, art, personal items, bookcases, suitcases, storage drawers, shoes, etc., until they had been sprayed all three times. The series of spraying would take 30 days, and I had to survive until then.</p>
<p>After the last spraying, I thought I would be safe, but wanted to see what, if any, additional precautions I should take in relation to my potted plants and general belongings. I called the exterminator company, and spoke with one of their bedbug experts, John. The information I got from him didn't calm my fears, but raised them several degrees. Even though I wasn't being bitten any more, the mind game and fear factor was even worse.</p>
<p>Because bedbugs are known to survive even multiple spraying treatments, John felt I should take extra measures with all of my belongings before moving anything into my new apartment. He recommended steam cleaning and vacuuming any furniture I wanted to bring with me. The steam would kill them, vacuuming would remove them. He also recommended sealing all of my books, electronics, paperwork, and pretty much everything else I owned, in large, black plastic bags, placing the bags in direct sunlight for a minimum of two to three days. Living in SF, the only place that was secure to place numerous black, plastic bags in the sun was on the roof of my apartment building. He wasn't sure what to do with the plants, but noted that bedbugs don't care for moisture, and would likely only set up camp in the soil if it was dry.</p>
<p>I spent 12 to 15 hours a day over a three day weekend inspecting every inch of every item I owned, placing everything in black bags, carrying the bags up a flight of stairs to the roof, and leaving them in the sun for two days, carrying them back down, inspecting and cleaning them again, and packing them in clean bags for removal to my new apartment. Any items that could be washed, like plastic storage units, metal step ladders, wooden shoe racks, I soaked underwater in the bathtub for a minimum of 30 minutes. I found a few dead bedbugs floating in the water during this process, and one dead bug in the living room on a table, but I didn't find any live ones.</p>
<p>I completely soaked my potted plants in water, and then left then in standing water overnight in an effort to drown any bedbugs that might have taken up residence in the soil or at least to flush them out for removal. I had to move as quickly as possible so I could vacate my apartment by the end of the day Monday, while inspecting and cleaning every last inch of everything to ensure I left all bedbugs behind.</p>
<p>Because it was so windy on the roof, I didn't feel like the items had been heated sufficiently, especially since some of the items were only exposed to the sun's heat for a day and a half. Plus, when I felt the side of the bags that faced away from the sun, they felt cool to the touch. So, in addition to sunning the items on the roof in black bags, I steamed all my suitcases and other like items. I washed with hot soapy water and then steamed all my wooden furniture and lamps that I wanted to bring with me. This didn't help the finishing on the furniture, but it did ease my mind somewhat. I inspected every single book (and I own a lot of books) in minute detail since I couldn't steam them. I loaded the car in stages, so that only "cleaned" items would be transported together.</p>
<p>Even after all this effort, I was still nervous. The cost of a mistake, of one live adult female, was too great. So, I left things in black bags in the sun outside my new apartment in San Jose for another day or two. I was so late getting the last load out Monday night that I had to extend my car rental an extra day. I took advantage of this, and left the packed car parked in direct sunlight in an effort to kill any bugs that might still remain on my things. I think this heating treatment via car might be more effective that placing things in black bags in the sun. The items in the car were all thoroughly heated over the course of a day in the sun.</p>
<p>I threw away several articles of bedding and clothing that either could not be washed or I was too afraid of even washing and reusing. I did not want to take any chances. If I didn't have time to thoroughly inspect or clean something, or if it was visibly contaminated, it hit the trash. No questions. No regrets. I probably threw out a total of 10 or more 30 gallon bags of belongings. Most of these items had been purchased used or I had had for over 10 years, so the waste generated from this clean up could have been much worse. My infected neighbors were doing the same, and in no time at all, the trash storage area for our apartment building was overflowing with bags. My bed (labeled as containing bedbugs), the couch, a suitcase, and several furniture pieces were left for a scheduled, bulky item pick up, but I found people took most of these things when left at the curb the night before the scheduled pick up. I hoped and prayed that they were clean and that the infection would not spread to others.</p>
<p>After weeks of trauma, I am glad to say that I was able to leave the bedbugs behind. I have not suffered any bites in my new apartment, after two weeks of having everything moved in. After days and days of effort, my thorough and systematic cleaning worked. I am thankful to be past this now, and hope I never encounter bedbugs again. My SF neighbors are going into their fourth and fifth spraying now, still suffering bites.</p>
<p>If I were to wish anything on my worst enemy, it would be bedbugs. Not only are they a pest in the traditional sense, they also wreck havoc on a person's psyche and state of being for long periods of time. I am still recovering from the trauma, and will likely be haunted by bedbugs for many months to come.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>]]></description><wfw:commentRss>http://goodgreengraces.squarespace.com/blog/rss-comments-entry-2480860.xml</wfw:commentRss></item><item><title>Why Glass Recycling Saves Energy</title><category>Glass</category><dc:creator>Janice Sitton</dc:creator><pubDate>Fri, 01 Aug 2008 04:06:37 +0000</pubDate><link>http://goodgreengraces.squarespace.com/blog/2008/8/1/why-glass-recycling-saves-energy.html</link><guid isPermaLink="false">177238:1694944:2047154</guid><description><![CDATA[<P> A recycling colleague contacted me recently to get statistics on how much energy is saved by recycling glass. I only had one or two statistics available, so I went for a little hunt on the net. Here is what I found. The information is truly amazing. </P> <P> The energy savings from recycling translate back to consumers whether we realize it or not. Unfortunately, we are still wasting more than we are recycling. Approximately 10 million tons of glass were thrown away in 2006. Based on the stat below, if we had recycled 75% of this glass, approximately 67,500,000 gallons of fuel could have been used for something else. I could have driven my old Honda Accord, which got roughly 30 miles to the gallon, for 2,250,000 miles. Or more realistically, 150 Accords could have driven 15,000 miles. That was just for one year. We have been wasting this much fuel (glass), or more, since the 1970s. It is no wonder the price of fuel is what it is today. </P> <P> Source: <A href="http://www.grrecycledglass.com/id13.html">http://www.grrecycledglass.com/id13.html</A> </P> <P> · Based on statistics from the U.S. Geological Survey in 2002: Sixty billion, one hundred eighty six million pounds of silica sand was strip mined for use in US water filtration in that year alone. </P> <P> · The Great Lakes Region is the third largest supplier of silica sand. </P> <P> · According to EPA statistics – the U.S. produced 12,470 tons of glass in 2003 with a recovery rate of 19% </P> <P> · Recycling one glass bottle saves enough energy to light a 100 watt light bulb for 4 hours or operate a television for 3 hours. </P> <P> · Producing glass from virgin materials requires 30% more energy than producing it from crushed used glass. Producing glass from virgin materials requires 30% more energy than producing it from crushed used glass. </P> <P> · It takes approximately 1 million years for a glass bottle to break down in a land fill. </P> <P> · In the U.S. today, only 34% of all glass containers are recycled. </P> <P> · Glass never wears out-it can be recycled forever. </P> <P> · Glass containers save 9 gallons of fuel (oil) for every ton of glass recycled. </P> <P> Additional information about glass disposal, and energy savings available through recycling glass is available at <A href="http://www.solidwastedistrict.com/stats/glass.html">http://www.solidwastedistrict.com/stats/glass.html</A>. </P> <P> Here is another link with Q&amp;A’s regarding glass production and the use of recycled cullet in the production process. <A href="http://www.gpi.org/recycling/faq/#faq2">http://www.gpi.org/recycling/faq/#faq2</A> </P> <br/>]]></description><wfw:commentRss>http://goodgreengraces.squarespace.com/blog/rss-comments-entry-2047154.xml</wfw:commentRss></item><item><title>A moment of fame</title><category>Online Videos</category><dc:creator>Janice Sitton</dc:creator><pubDate>Sun, 06 Jul 2008 05:26:00 +0000</pubDate><link>http://goodgreengraces.squarespace.com/blog/2008/7/6/a-moment-of-fame.html</link><guid isPermaLink="false">177238:1694944:1969131</guid><description><![CDATA[<p>For the past week, I have been working onsite at the Marin County Fair to capture both pre-consumer (before food is served) and post-consumer (after food is served) materials for composting. My work with the Fair actually started in May, with hours of telephone calls&nbsp;with the food vendors, to&nbsp;help them understand and locate food ware products that could be composted onsite. </p><p>On the 4th of July, I was interviewed by the local ABC channel and&nbsp;got to share some information about the composting program at this year's event. Out of all the footage they filmed that day, I was fortunate to make a two second&nbsp;appearance on the evening news (don't blink or you might miss it!). Check out the link below to see my moment of fame. They got my last name wrong by one letter, but I won't sweat the details on this one!</p><p><a href="http://abclocal.go.com/kgo/media?id=6246448">http://abclocal.go.com/kgo/media?id=6246448</a></p><p>I find that paper products are the hardest things for people to understand as far as where they go&nbsp;(recycling or composting) when they have finished their food. We&nbsp;have been trained for years to think paper equals recycling, so shifting&nbsp;gears seems to be a slow process for most. However, with station monitors to help Fair visitors get their materials in the right place (recycling, compost or waste bins),&nbsp;hopefully, this message will translate into greater awareness of items suitable for composting.</p><p>Although it&nbsp;has been a learning process all the way,&nbsp;the majority of food vendors at the Fair&nbsp;have gone above and beyond to help ensure their materials are composted and recycled at this year's event. Instead of one can for everything (i.e. a trash or garbage can),&nbsp;almost all the vendors have kept their food scraps and recycling separate. Some&nbsp;have even kept up to four streams of material clean (separate and uncontaminated)&nbsp;for composting&nbsp;and recycling, including food scraps (pre-consumer),&nbsp;special and post-consumer compostable items (the&nbsp;pre- and post-consumer compostable materials are being processed differently and therefore had to be kept separate), plastic film (this has to be kept separate and clean in order to recycle it),&nbsp;and bottles and cans.&nbsp;Sound confusing? Well, it certainly isn't easy at first, but with a little practice, it becomes second nature.</p><p>Thanks to the&nbsp;food vendors, the Fair's composting program has been successful this year. Change started with the Fair office, but could not have happened without the food vendors.&nbsp;Most were not only open to it, but went above and beyond to make it happen. Thank you, guys! You all ROCK, and I will cherish the memory of working with you for a very long time. Especially my Gold Star vendors. There are many, so I will not list them here, but you know who you are. : )</p><p>Special thanks to the Marin Conservation Corps, who provided all the staff to man the stations and collect the recycling and post-consumer compostables on site. Their team was wonderful to work with, and made a world of difference through the education they provided to the public.</p><p>For further information about the Marin County Fair, please visit their website at: <a href="http://www.marinfair.org/">http://www.marinfair.org/</a></p>]]></description><wfw:commentRss>http://goodgreengraces.squarespace.com/blog/rss-comments-entry-1969131.xml</wfw:commentRss></item><item><title>Updated Links &amp; Resources Page</title><category>Website Information</category><dc:creator>Janice Sitton</dc:creator><pubDate>Mon, 02 Jun 2008 23:18:44 +0000</pubDate><link>http://goodgreengraces.squarespace.com/blog/2008/6/2/updated-links-resources-page.html</link><guid isPermaLink="false">177238:1694944:1880201</guid><description><![CDATA[<p>I have added a new section to the <a href="http://goodgreengraces.squarespace.com/links-resources/">Links &amp; Resources</a> page called &quot;New Links,&quot; and have posted&nbsp;a large selection of new resources and articles to this section today. The next time I update the links page, I will file these links under the appropriate categories, but in the meantime, I thought it might be easier to find the new links if they were separate from the existing ones. Enjoy! </p>]]></description><wfw:commentRss>http://goodgreengraces.squarespace.com/blog/rss-comments-entry-1880201.xml</wfw:commentRss></item><item><title>Compostables or Plastics?</title><category>Products</category><dc:creator>Janice Sitton</dc:creator><pubDate>Thu, 29 May 2008 16:24:20 +0000</pubDate><link>http://goodgreengraces.squarespace.com/blog/2008/5/29/compostables-or-plastics.html</link><guid isPermaLink="false">177238:1694944:1871293</guid><description><![CDATA[<p>I get this question a lot, so I thought it might be helpful to post my thoughts here for future reference. This isn&rsquo;t so much an answer to the question, but rather additional information so that each event planner can find the answer they feel most comfortable with.</p><p>The question is: If an event or venue does not have a composting program (the infrastructure to process the compostables after the event), is it better to use compostable or plastic utensils and cups?</p><p>There are several things to consider in answering this question. </p><p>1) Most people think that if a utensil or other food ware product is compostable, it will break down even if it goes to the landfill. This is not true. It will remain in tack for decades or longer, just like everything else in the landfill. If it does start to break down at some point, it will likely do so without oxygen, forming methane, a greenhouse gas 23 times as potent as CO2 in the atmosphere.</p><p>2) A compostable utensil or cup made with poly lactic acid (PLA) uses an agricultural base for the polymer instead of a petroleum base (plastics are made from petroleum). In many cases, corn is used as the base. These products are still fairly new to the market and are more expensive that typical plastic utensils and cups. </p><p>3) Just because a cup has a #1 symbol on it, does not mean that it can be recycled. Most recycling programs in the U.S. do not accept anything but #1 or #2 plastic bottles and/or narrow neck containers. Utensils are very rarely, if ever, recycled. The number and symbol on plastic products relates to the resin used to make the product, and does not mean it can be recycled. Recyclability is determined by the markets and infrastructure, i.e., whether anyone is willing to buy the collected plastics and can reprocess&nbsp;them without losing money. </p><p>Based on this information, my opinion is that if you can&rsquo;t compost the compostable products, it is better to waste the plastic than the compostable products. To me, there is extra waste associated with wasting (versus composting) compostable products: the extra resources used to purchase them (money) and the corn or agricultural base which could have been used for food instead of a single use product that is discarded instead of used to generate compost. </p><p>Of course, there is the need to drive the market for compostable products, so the compostable product prices eventually decrease. Corn and agricultural products are also renewable, whereas petroleum is not. Some vendors and venues chose to purchase compostable products for these reasons even though they get thrown away. I just have a hard time justifying the extra resources needed to waste them for the sake of building demand. Plus, the infrastructure to process the compostable food ware products needs to be developed along with&nbsp;the compostable products, and the extra money going into the products is not going into local infrastructure to process it. At least not yet. The infrastructure piece is often forgotten.</p><p>By far, the best answer to this question is to use neither compostable ware nor plastic ware, and to use reusable products instead. I.e., dishes and utensils that can be washed and used again. Of course, there is an extra cost in water and energy resources to haul and wash these dishes, but at least they eliminate the need for single-use, disposable products.</p><p>As with most questions of what is more sustainable, there is no easy answer. There are many factors to consider, several of which are determined by the local infrastructure in which an event is held. Save resources, drive markets, build infrastructure. They really all go hand in hand. </p>]]></description><wfw:commentRss>http://goodgreengraces.squarespace.com/blog/rss-comments-entry-1871293.xml</wfw:commentRss></item><item><title>Recycling in my Home Town</title><category>General</category><dc:creator>Janice Sitton</dc:creator><pubDate>Thu, 22 May 2008 17:16:59 +0000</pubDate><link>http://goodgreengraces.squarespace.com/blog/2008/5/22/recycling-in-my-home-town.html</link><guid isPermaLink="false">177238:1694944:1856613</guid><description><![CDATA[<p>I recently made a trip home to NC for a visit with family and friends. Hence, some of the radio silence lately. Once I settled in there, it felt as though I had stepped back in time, into the dark ages (or at least several decades). Internet access was not available at one of the two places I stayed, people spoke and acted slloooowwwly, Styrofoam cups were everywhere and recycling was extremely hard to come by. Food scrap composting wasn&rsquo;t an option at all. In Henderson County, where I grew up and visited, there was no curbside pick-up for the county and only one option for drop off&hellip;the county dump. Curbside pick-up was offered to the city of Hendersonville, roughly equivalent in size to two San Francisco city blocks. However, for most of the county, recycling was out of reach.</p><p>My family, still well within the county line, lives about 15 miles from the dump. So, a round trip would take a minimum of an hour including time for driving, unloading and sorting. Most folks don&rsquo;t have or make the time and space to keep their recyclables separate and haul them to the dump. This is especially true with gas prices what they are now. It is not just a matter of time and space, but money.</p><p>Even at the home of my most conscientious friends in Henderson Co., glass bottles, aluminum cans and paper were still going in the trash. This was very painful to me. I was tempted to dig through their trash, pull out all the recyclables, and haul them back to Asheville to one of the drop-off recycling centers. This wasn&rsquo;t a very rational thought. It would only work on the days I was there, and then everything would go right back in the dump again once I left. This pained me even more. I thought, &ldquo;Am I a radical for wanting to dig these precious materials out of their trash? Why is this a radical thought?&rdquo;</p><p>Food scraps were even harder for me to throw away. I ate every last bite of every meal served to me in restaurants. Fortunately, I ate at some really good restaurants, so this was not difficult. When I ate at my family&rsquo;s house, I threw any remaining food scraps out in the back yard for the animals to enjoy. I figured this would be better than sending the scraps to the landfill where they would eventually create methane. </p><p>I was often seen standing over the waste bin with something in my hand that I just could not throw away, but which everyone else expected me to. They didn&rsquo;t understand my hesitation. Or, I would separate plastics from paper in preparation of recycling and composting, only to find only one option for disposal...waste. This was the weirdest situation. To have knowledge that these materials could save tons of green house gases if recycled and reused, but no means or infrastructure to exert the knowledge. Understanding the consequences of throwing the materials away and having to accept this reality was a struggle for me. </p><p>Don&rsquo;t fear. All materials were not lost. I was able to save a car load worth of materials from the landfill while I was there. My Grandma Lucy was able to hide newspapers and aluminum cans in the basement (so they didn&rsquo;t get thrown out with the garbage) since my last visit, and I took those to a drop-off center in Asheville along with five, large, heavy bags of mixed paper. I was also able to take a bag of my old stuffed animals and clothes to GoodWill for reuse. </p><p>The most interesting thing I learned while in NC was that the Henderson County landfill was capped late last year, and all the garbage from the county now has to be hauled to a landfill in South Carolina. The SC landfill is almost full, though, so it is likely that the Henderson Co. waste will need to be hauled to Georgia by the end of this year. The county is ripe for recycling, which would save not only the materials for reuse, but also the cost of hauling materials that aren&rsquo;t really waste across two state lines to waste them. </p><p>Why has wasting become so common place in America? Even when faced with disposal costs that may double, why isn&rsquo;t this county laying the foundation and infrastructure for recycling? Why wasn&rsquo;t recycling put in place years and years ago? How have we come so far with technology, but we can&rsquo;t recapture resources more effectively in our homes and communities? </p><p>I am continually amazed and disturbed at our lack of progress in material management in the U.S. I fear by the time we learn the valuable lesson of saving materials for recycling, or avoiding single-use materials all together, and build the infrastructure necessary to collect, process and reuse materials throughout the U.S., it may be too late to do much good. We are doing an overwhelming amount of damage in the interim. </p>]]></description><wfw:commentRss>http://goodgreengraces.squarespace.com/blog/rss-comments-entry-1856613.xml</wfw:commentRss></item><item><title>Waste Wise Launch at the SF Ferry Plaza Farmers Market</title><dc:creator>Janice Sitton</dc:creator><pubDate>Fri, 25 Apr 2008 04:42:56 +0000</pubDate><link>http://goodgreengraces.squarespace.com/blog/2008/4/25/waste-wise-launch-at-the-sf-ferry-plaza-farmers-market.html</link><guid isPermaLink="false">177238:1694944:1786911</guid><description><![CDATA[<p>Please join me in celebrating the new Waste Wise Launch at the SF Ferry Plaza Farmers Market this Saturday, April 26. </p><p>I have worked with CUESA (the Center for Urban Education about Sustainable Agriculture), the nonprofit that operates the market, for the last four months in developing their new waste wise initiative, which was unveiled on Earth Day this week. The celebrations will continue&nbsp;this Saturday and include a reusable bag give away, a reusable bag parade, a screening of <em>The Story of Stuff</em> and a slide show of recycled art produced by the Norcal Artist in Residence program, a great educational display describing what happens when food scraps get composted versus landfilled along with great tips for shoppers to reduce waste both at the market and at home.</p><p>The best part, though, are the new Waste Wise Stations, which include a three bin system to collect composting and recycling at the market, with clear signage to indicate what materials go where. Up until Tuesday, all the materials discarded at the market went straight to the landfill. With the ability to collect compost and recycling instead, the market will be able to divert approximately 78 tons from the landfill per year, over 90% of what gets discarded at the market. </p><p>During the initial launch on Earth Day, I felt as though I was in heaven. My day started with the training of the Waste Wise volunteers, which is one of my favorite things to do, and continued with questions and answers about recycling and composting throughout the day. It&nbsp;is incredibly&nbsp;fulfilling to share my passion for recycling and composting with others. Plus, I got to dress up in a boa made from reclaimed plastic bags, and parade through the market singing Happy Earth Day (like happy birthday day)! I even got my picture in the SF Examiner, along with Jessica McCracken from the Trash Mash-Up group, who supplied the plastic boas for the parade participants. Thanks, Jessie!</p><p>It has been a true pleasure working with the CUESA team in developing the educational materials, signage and the elements for the launch. They were the first client I have worked with that was not only interested in marketing themselves as green, but were truly interested <em>and</em> willing to walk the talk too, going well above and beyond to do so. Their focus on the educational component of the waste wise initiative makes all the difference. Thank you, CUESA, for being a shining star and example of what one, dedicated organization can do in the area of waste prevention and reduction. </p><p>Although my work with them is almost done, I will forever be a frequent shopper at theirs and other local farmers&rsquo; markets. My last task will be to compile the steps that were taken on the path to becoming a waste wise farmers&rsquo; market, so they can share their experiences, the challenges and the successes, so that other farmers&rsquo; markets can follow in their steps. For more information, please visit the CUESA Waste Wise website at <a href="http://www.cuesa.org/events/waste_wise/index.php">http://www.cuesa.org/events/waste_wise/index.php</a>.</p>]]></description><wfw:commentRss>http://goodgreengraces.squarespace.com/blog/rss-comments-entry-1786911.xml</wfw:commentRss></item><item><title>Busy, busy</title><dc:creator>Janice Sitton</dc:creator><pubDate>Fri, 25 Apr 2008 04:36:14 +0000</pubDate><link>http://goodgreengraces.squarespace.com/blog/2008/4/25/busy-busy.html</link><guid isPermaLink="false">177238:1694944:1786878</guid><description><![CDATA[<p>Although I have not posted a blog in a long time, I have still been busy gathering useful information and articles, and finally had a moment to add these to the website. Please check&nbsp;the <a href="http://goodgreengraces.squarespace.com/links-resources/">Links and Resources</a> page for almost 20 new links to articles ranging from chocolate biofuels and&nbsp;low toxin&nbsp;sex toys to&nbsp;the state of the recycling industry and how our changing environment&nbsp;is taking its toll&nbsp;on those who pay attention. &nbsp;Enjoy!</p>]]></description><wfw:commentRss>http://goodgreengraces.squarespace.com/blog/rss-comments-entry-1786878.xml</wfw:commentRss></item></channel></rss>