| Ed Hurley Memorial
Paper Recycling Award Winner |
Jack Horner, Knoxville, Tennessee |
| Business Leadership Recycling Award Winner |
HP, Palo Alto, California |
| Community Recycling
Award Winners |
City
of Rock Hill, South Carolina | City
of Perrysburg, Ohio Dorchester County, South Carolina |
| School Recycling Award Winners |
Harvard
University | Potter Street Elementary Barbara Bush Elementary |
| 2007 Recycling Awards Video | View Video! |
Jack Horner, VP Sales and Recycling,
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Learn more about Ed Hurley's positive impact on paper recycling, by watching this short video.
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City of Rock Hill, South CarolinaSmall Community To encourage increased recycling, the city conducts several fun and innovative programs. They distribute recycling bins at all city-sponsored events and capture recoverable materials from block parties, church picnics, and school events. The city also held a Rock Hill Recycling Challenge - a contest among neighborhoods to increase the amount of recyclables in curbside bins in a six-week period. The winning neighborhood received a free block party with food and entertainment. In addition, an ongoing mystery recycler program selects random homes each month to see if recycling bins are at the curb. Winners receive $50 and are featured in a local commercial. To encourage recycling through student outreach, the City of Rock Hill, York County and the Museum of York County worked together to give approximately 115 classroom presentations for 6,778 students. 800 fifth grade students were reached during an America Recycles Day event, 3,030 sixth grade students attended singer Jack Golden's performances of "A Little Bit Goes A Long Way," and 1,300 first grade students learned about recycling from the "Clean and Green Clowns." Trash clean up has also been turned into a recycling opportunity. The Rock Hill Clean and Green Board, a Keep America Beautiful affiliate, helped participate in and promote the Great American Cleanup event in 2006. The city coordinated 250 volunteers for this Cleanup, collecting 264 bags of trash - much of which was paper that was later recycled. AF&PA is proud to recognize the City of Rock Hill,
South Carolina with the 2007 AF&PA Community Recycling
Award in the small community category. For more information
on Rock Hill's program, please visit:
City of Perrysburg, OhioSmall Community
The City of Perrysburg was able to increase curbside recycling through a variety of measures. Curbside recycling is heavily promoted to all current and new residents through a 19-page recycling and refuse brochure describing the program and how to participate. Recycling information is also pushed through the city's Web site and through two of the area's newspaper's - the Perrysburg Messenger Journal/Advisor and the Sentinel Tribune. Public service announcements (PSAs) are used extensively to keep residents up-to-date on curbside recycling and other city events. The City of Perrysburg also hosts many special recycling programs such as the twice-yearly Recycling Roundup Day and a drop off cardboard recycling effort that has grown to collect over 12 cubic yards of cardboard per week. On November 15th, America Recycles Day, visitors to the Way Public Library were greeted by Keep Perrysburg Beautiful staff and volunteers and asked to sign a form saying that they recycle and greeted with a "mood" pencil to show they were "In the mood to recycle." AF&PA is proud to recognize the City of Perrysburg, Ohio with the 2007 AF&PA Community Recycling Award in the small community category. |
City of Dorchester County, South CarolinaLarge Community Recycling Troopers are students in county schools that encourage classroom recycling by issuing tickets or gold stars, setting up bins, distributing recycling information, and making sure recovered paper remains uncontaminated. They wear badges and not only collect bins, but also check for contamination by non-recyclables. If a classroom continues to fail inspection, a few students and a parent volunteer give a 10-minute recycling overview. One prime example is the program at Spann Elementary School. At the beginning of the year, the first grade class made signs for each recycling bin at school with artwork and slogans to encourage recycling. Every week, a lead teacher selects five students in his or her classroom to be the "troopers," with a parent volunteer assisting the program. The trooper responsibility then rotates throughout the school - each week a different grade, classroom or special area (library, principal's office, etc.). In 2006, the Dorchester County Recycling Trooper programs had 120 student participants in 11 schools with 85 percent participation in paper recycling. This increased focus on school paper recycling netted 397 tons of paper in 2006, saved the Dorchester County Schools system more than $4,000 in waste disposal costs, and extended the life of county landfills. The Recycling Trooper program is now a multi-year participation program for Kindergarten through sixth grade students, helping achieve continuity and maximum success in the Dorchester county recycling program. AF&PA is proud to recognize Dorchester County, South Carolina with the 2007 AF&PA Community Recycling Award in the large community category. To learn more about Dorchester County's recycling program, please visit http://www.dorchestercounty.net.
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Harvard University
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Podcast Interview with Rob Gogan
Rashida Holmes of the American Forest & Paper
Association talks with Rob Gogan of Havard University
about the university's recycling program. |
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Click on the play button (right) to listen to the podcast. |
Potter Street Elementary
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