Archive for the 'Recycling' Category

Elizabeth

Bike Month Starts May 1

I pledge to reduce my greenhouse gas emissions by 450 pounds during May, which many U.S. cities, including Salt Lake City, recognize as Bike Month.

I have the farthest commute of all the SOAR team members (about 30 miles), so I’m not going to attempt to commute the entire way by bike. But I will take the bus two to three times per week, and stop asking my husband to drop me off and pick me up from my home bus stop (I learned at the Bicycle Leadership Conference that 40 percent of trips in the U.S. are just two miles and are the most polluting). If I do this during the month of May, UtahCommuter.com tells me that I can reduce my vehicle trips by 450 to 680 miles and my greenhouse gas emission by 380 to 575 pounds.

Me prepping for the Momentum bike fashion show at Interbike

Me prepping for the Momentum bike fashion show at Interbike

I first started using mass transit because it was cheaper than buying snow tires for my 1988 California-raised Volvo. Even though the threat of snow is gone (let’s hope), I still try to commute by bus twice a week. The entire commute from point to point takes about 30-40 minutes longer than it would if I drove by myself, but I think it is worth the extra time spent. One-way bus fare cheaper than a gallon of gas and the time I have on the bus to read Newsweek and study Portuguese is priceless. Plus, I get home to my husband in a much better mood not having fought traffic for 45 minutes.

I’ll also reduce my green house gas emissions by biking around town more. I’ve been assessing every road I drive on for its bikeability and often think, “I could totally bike this. Why am I even driving a car?” I see bike trips to the gelaterie are in my not-so distant future.

You can learn how many pounds of carbon emissions your commute reduces by registering at UtahCommuter. com (hint: if you only commute by a car alone, your commute reduces NONE! Think about it.)

Poppa P

Protecting the Earth, Step by Step

Garbage day is Monday at the Politis household, which means that every Sunday night before retiring for the evening, Poppa P gets to take the trash cans out to the curb.

And for 10 years, that has also meant taking the green recycling can out to the curb as well, filled (as often as not) with newspapers, cardboard and other paper products, as well as with empty soda bottles and aluminum cans too.

In spite of the fact that I assiduously collected newspapers, aluminum cans and glass of all types and colors as a 13-year-old to help pay for a month-long summer trip to visit cousins in Ogden, Utah, the truth is that for most of my life I’ve been a reluctant recycler. But not anymore.

Intellectually, I realize that throughout modern history unscrupulous profiteers have illegally dumped toxic liquids, chemicals and materials into our water, air and land, and wantonly harvested plants, animals and compounds from the earth with little thought about long-term consequences and/or sustainability. In this regard, I am glad that there are now tougher laws in place to halt, minimize and prevent such actions in the future and to seriously penalize those who thwart such regulations.

That said, I have often felt overwhelmed at the enormity of the task, particularly as one individual out of a worldwide population of more than 6 billion.

“What can I do?” I have wondered when contemplating the environment. “And will my solitary actions make any difference?”

Today being Earth Day 2008, I realize that I do not have such questions any more.

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