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11 Aug 10 Hesperia Environmental Awareness Calendar

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I-15 south from Hesperia The annual City of Environmental is now accepting entries and we want your most depicting ways to protect, preserve, and promote the environment in the areas of littering, , , and illegal dumping.

Check out the City of Hesperia Web Site to find out more


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02 Feb 08 Recycle

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RecycleThe Irish have embraced the use of cloth bags to carry their groceries, encouraged by a 33-cent tax on each plastic bag grabbed at the register, I read this in this morning’s .

What I find almost amusing, if it wasn’t a serious issue, is this whole concept of .

When I was a kid, my mother would sent me to the to buy groceries. I always took a large cloth shopping bag. She kept one in a closet in the kitchen solely to keep vegetables in.

I would go to the greengrocer, and get the potatoes first. They went into the bottom. Not wrapped up, you understand, just loose potatoes from the greengrocers scale pan. Then the other vegetables went on top.

After that I would go next door to the bakers and get the bread. Fresh baked earlier that morning, unsliced. It would be put in a brown paper bag. My mother used those paper bags, along with some , to wrap my fathers sandwiches for work.

I’d perhaps have to go to the grocers to get some ham and cheese, again it was wrapped in paper. The same at the . No plastic wrap in sight.

Milk was delivered to the door step each day in glass bottles, that we put outside when empty which the took away again to re-used, sterilized, and re-filled with more . If we bought soda, it was in a glass bottle, on which we paid a few pennies deposit, and got back when we took the bottles back.

If my father went to the hardware store for four screws, he got just that. Four screws. We also had a local tailor and shoe-mender. New got put into pants, and soles on shoes, socks got darned. Oh, and if the TV or radio developed a fault, there was a in another store that would usually be able to fix it for us.

Now, fast forward 40 years.

We go to the supermarket across town, using gas to get there. The potatoes are in a plastic bag, as are all the other vegetables, and the bread. The ham, cheese, and meat, and in sealed containers now. The milk is in a large . Soda is in cans, and PET bottles.

Those hardware items like screws now usually come in a plastic container of 48 screws, that practically takes wire cutters to open, or cut fingers if trying to do it by hand.

Tailor? Get a zip sewn in? Heck, no, throw the pants away, and get a new pair! Same with the TV. It’s lasted 3-4 years, it’s time for a newer, bigger, higher definition one anyway. That one can go to the dump.

Now, there’s all this clamor for recycling projects and plans. It’s good. Sure. But, what about cutting back on some of that plastic? Do we need to have so much packaging? What about using glass again, and re-using the bottles?

Surely if we were to re-adopt some of those ideas from 40 years ago, we’d have a lot less going in the landfill to start with? That’s before we start spending more money on any other municipal recycling schemes.


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10 Dec 07 Waste Paper

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undertaken on just three of the Underground’s twelve lines reveal that passengers leave 9.5 tons of on the each day. The amount has risen hugely since a free daily commenced between the major newspaper companies.

How many wasted is that? How much pollution in making all those papers? Where’s Al Gore? Send him to London!

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