A Cleaner, Greener, More Beautiful BLOG Postings for April 2005

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A blog is a web log.  For KKB it is a diary of the activity of our organization.

Saturday, April 30, 2005

More than 220 cleanup volunteers and KKB supporters attended the 2005 Great American Cleanup™ Trash Bash presented by Calhoun's on-the-River.  We had a great lunch, gave out lots of certificates and other prizes and everyone got a t-shirt.  Here are some pictures from the event:

















As of today, 54 groups have reported picking up more than 55,000 pounds of litter during March and April.  KKB expects additional reports from its volunteers and this does not include numbers from the Ijams Nature Center River Rescue, CAC AmeriCorps, Knox County Adopt-A-Road Groups (except for those groups that registered for the Great American Cleanup™) and the Izaak Walton League.  These super groups picked up tens of thousands of pounds of trash during March and April.  We will post all their numbers later.  The poster contest had 143 students participating.  Top performing groups during the 2005 Great American Cleanup™ include: Lambda Chi Alpha Fraternity (Greek Challenge), Old Sevier Community Group and Western Heights Residents (tied for Neighborhood Group), Nature's Way Montessori (Youth Group), North Knox Rotary Club (Civic Club), Military Entrance Processing Station (Government), Halls Crossroads Women's League (New Group) and the Hardin Valley Neighbors (Knox County Adopt-A-Road Group).

Here are the pictures of the poster contest winners and their families.  Thanks to volunteer Michael Castle for the photos.







- posted by KKB staff at 2:30 PM  


Sunday, April 24, 2005

There's got to be a morning after.  It is always dismaying how much trash is created at a big public event.  Even though we had 36 recycle bins spread out over 6 locations, event-goers still generated a substantial amount of trash.  Here is what we picked up the morning after Earthfest.  Do you think it is a little odd that people who go to Earthfest have trouble figuring out how to recycle?  Maybe we'll do better next year!  Who knows, for several thousand people drinking beer and eating maybe this isn't so bad.

- posted by KKB staff at 11:15 AM  


Saturday, April 23, 2005

It was a very busy day for Keep Knoxville Beautiful.  At 9:00 a.m. KKB staff and volunteers were setting up our tent and 6 recycling centers at Earthfest at World's Fair Park and Tom Salter was moderating a session at the 2nd Annual City and County Neighborhood Conference.  Board member Tim Wheeler staffed our information table at the Neighborhood Conference.  About 20 people attended the session where Dr. Paul Kelley, Scott Frith, Terry Faulkner and Bob Santore shared their experiences leading beautification efforts in their neighborhoods.  It was a great session - you should have been there.

All the rest of the day we were down at World's Fair Park celebrating Earthfest.  Helping out most of the day were KKB staffers Emily Ditty and Seed Lynn and volunteers Mike Castle, Joyce Hausman, Larissa Jurand-Salter and Ryan Justice.  KKB board members Phyllis Fansler, Cassandra McGee and Susan Long and her daughter worked most of the day also.  We especially want to thank members of the West Knoxville Optimist Club and Beta Alpha Psi and UTK business fraternity for staffing two of our recycling and waste disposal centers all day.  The KKB booth was busy all day.  We sold Don't Throw Down on K-TOWN shirts and stickers.  More than 150 people voted for their favorite Don't Thrown Down on K-TOWN posters in our big poster contest.  We apologize to any poster contest students or family members who came to see the show after 3:30.  At that time a big gust of wind broke some wires in our booth and the whole poster hanging system collapsed.  Here are some pictures of our booth and volunteers:







We are pleased to announce the following winners of the 2005 Great American Cleanup™ poster contest.  The students, their parents and their teacher are invited to the Great American Cleanup™ Trash Bash presented by Calhoun's on-the-River next Saturday, April 30th to be honored for their efforts.  The walking Sunsphere is my personal favorite.  Here are the winning posters:

(below l-r) Tied for 3rd Place in Elementary Division, McKenzie Schleicher and Emma Mathes, both of Nature's Way Montessori School.


(below l-r) 2nd Place Elementary Division, Nathan Wright, Sequoyah Elementary School; 1st Place Elementary Division, Kitti Kertesz, Pond Gap Elementary School.


(below l-r) Middle School Division, 3rd Place Winner Caleb Pleasant, 2nd Place Winner Jazmond Wright and 1st Place Winner Justin Wright, all of Vine Middle Magnet School.


(below l-r) High School Winners are 3rd Place Anastasia Barnes, 2nd Place Dina Siedschlag and 1st Place Bailey Priest all of Bearden High School.


After the awards luncheon next week, the posters will on display at The Emporium at 100 S. Gay Street for several weeks.

Here are a couple of other post-event pics.  John Evans, Rodney Rockett and Sara Hart (all of the Knox County Solid Waste Department) disassemble one of the information booths and Joyce Hausman (a top volunteer of KKB) is taking a well-deserved rest on the tailgate of her truck.

- posted by KKB staff at 11:05 PM  


Friday, April 22, 2005

Happy Earthday 2005 to everyone.  Here is a neat graphic we ran for Earthday last year.  I like it so I'm running it again:



Make sure you attend Earthfest tomorrow at World's Fair Park.  It will be a lot of fun.  It is free and open from 10:00 am to 10:00 pm.  There will be information booths, food and entertainment.  KKB will have Don't Thrown Down t-shirts and stickers for sale at our booth.  

Here is a follow up to yesterday's litter cartoon:

- posted by KKB staff at 8:43 AM  


Thursday, April 21, 2005

It's just like peeing in a pool.  Check out this cool litter pickup cartoon that ran in the News Sentinel on Earthday Eve.  It nails the problem of littering.  Thanks to Hector Cantu and Carlos Castellanos for addressing this problem in a very straightforward way:

- posted by KKB staff at 8:30 AM  


Sunday, April 17, 2005

It sure feels like spring!!!  I like dogwoods, but I love azaleas.  This is one of my favorite spots to hang out on spring afternoons.

- posted by KKB staff at 2:15 PM  


Friday, April 15, 2005

It's Tax Day.  That has nothing to do with our stake out this morning in the North Hills area.  Tom and Seed spent an hour looking for those little garbage trucks that go from house to house and haul loads of trash to a compactor truck.  According to City ordinance and waste hauling company policy, those trucks are supposed to run with covers over their beds.  In reality, they often run uncovered and litter falls or blows from these trucks just like privately owned trucks.  Tom Salter, KKB's executive director, is authorized by the County Solid Waste Department to issue litter citations (and warning tickets).  We did not find any garbage trucks and had to return to the office for other work.

- posted by KKB staff at 8:15 PM  


Wednesday, April 13, 2005

The staff at Marble Springs, otherwise known as The John Sevier Home on John Sevier Highway did a cleanup on John Sevier Highway near the historic site.  The bags of trash and loose material collected have been taken to the UTK campus to be included in our ongoing litter analysis.

- posted by KKB staff at 4:45 PM  


Tuesday, April 12, 2005

Today there was a pretty long article in the News Sentinel about pending container deposit legislation in Nashville.  KKB had a quote about the impact of the bill on our operations.  If passed the legislation would eliminate a current statewide program that grants funds to counties and several nonprofits to carry out litter prevention education and cleanup programs.  Readers of this blog may wonder why organizations that focus on litter aren't leading the charge in favor of the "bottle bill".  Here are just some of the reasons:

1) Keep Knoxville Beautiful is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization and is required to limit its lobbying (support of specific legislation or candidates).  We can certainly provide facts about our operations and our issues, but we aren't going to support or oppose specific bills or candidates.  For the record Keep Knoxville Beautiful and as far as we know, all Keep America Beautiful affiliates, promote litter prevention (with an emphasis on proper disposal), waste reduction (including the three "R's") and community beautification.  We also tend to look at litter as a human behavior problem related to all types of material littered.  We tend not to focus on one category of material - like bottles or cans.

2) Contrary to what the supporters of the "bottle bill" say, the bill would NOT solve the litter problem in Tennessee.  When KKB has done individual item analyses of actual litter from actual cleanups by volunteers we find that "bottle bill" containers make up from 14% to 34% of the material found.  This data is supported in other studies.  It is our opinion, based on hard data, that the bill would have a minimal impact on litter and we believe the litter problem would look pretty much the same as it does now. (See #3 below).  When you approach the litter problem emotionally the bottle bill looks great.  When you look at the facts it doesn't fix litter.  This may come as a shock to some bill supporters, but other states that have bottle bills still have litter.  Their litter typically contains fewer bottles and cans, but there is still plenty of other trash to warrant anti-littering awareness campaigns, municipal (taxpayer) cleanup, volunteer cleanup, enforcement efforts and litter despair.

3) "Bottle bills" are recycling programs that cause, as a side effect, some reduction in the amount of drink containers in the litter stream.  The container legislation up for consideration in Nashville is a recycling bill.  Most of the bottles and cans "recovered" by container deposit laws are already in the waste stream, but they are headed to landfills.  Instead of getting buried, they get recycled.  Diverting cans and bottles from landfills is the greatest impact of container legislation.  The deposit/refund system captures some of the littered containers, but not all.  Have you heard any stories in the news lately about the recycling crisis or how low rates of recycling are leading to lower property values and how a failure to recycle creates a bad first impression of our community to visitors and new business prospects?  Of course not.  Recycling becomes a crisis when landfill costs are very high - which they aren't here.  Recycling also becomes a crisis if there is unmet demand for plastic, glass and aluminum - with corresponding high prices paid for the recycled material.  (If my recycling buddies want to take me to the woodshed on this fine, I'll take my beating).  So why not promote the bottle bill as a recycling bill?  Are you kidding?  Litter is the emotional issue you can rally around.  If you promote the container legislation as a recycling program will it make a sound?

4) All this is really about money, something that you can get very emotional about.  The promoters of the bill make an important assumption about redemption rates.  They believe 30% of the containers will never get returned.  Some will be damaged, some lost, some littered.  Most of the "lost" bottles will just get thrown away in landfills.  The deposits left over from unredeemed bottles will pay for the program.  I believe they are underestimating redemption rates.  I believe that market forces will result in much higher redemption rates leaving little behind to pay for administrative and other costs.  If they have to have 70% to make the program work, what happens if redemption rates hit 80%?  I didn't see anything in the legislation that addresses this issue.  This is a huge gamble on the part of an already financially strapped state.  I suppose the industry can control printing labels and restrict container labels with TN on then to only be sold in Tennessee, but I can't help remembering when Kramer borrowed Newman's mail truck to haul bottles from New York City to Michigan to get 10˘ instead of 5˘?  

5) Where is the support from the business community?  What you don't hear about is that the wholesale distributors of these containers must pay either 1˘ or 1.5˘ (depending on sales volume) on every container into the administrative system to run the program.  This is in addition to the 5˘ to be collected from consumers.  In reality the drinks will cost 6˘ or 6.5˘ more but the deposit and return will be 5˘.  

6) A representative of a nonprofit organization pushing the current "bottle bill" called me to assure me that organizations like KKB would receive more grant money than they already get to work on the litter problem after the bottle bill passes (and I thought all this time the bottle bill is going to eliminate litter).  After reading the legislation I have no idea what he is talking about.  There is absolutely nothing in the bill to fund litter prevention education and cleanup and I am skeptical the bill can pay for its own administration.  

The bottom line is this.  Don't sell it to me as a litter bill.  Don't tell me the deposits paid by the consumer pay all the costs of the program.  Don't tell me there will be plenty of money laying around to fund the anti-litter programs that will still be needed.  Just pitch it for what it is - a recycling program that passes along some costs to the companies that sell the bottles and cans and relies on an unknown rate of redemption for other income.  Pass or fail, the initiative will be judged for what it is, not what the supporters think will sell the best with legislators, their constituents and the media.   

Below: A graph of the results of four separate litter cleanups categorized by typical "bottle bill" items.  Contact the KKB office for detailed information about the study.



- posted by KKB staff at 10:00 AM  


Monday, April 11, 2005

We had another meeting today of the Neighborhood Conference Beautification Panel members.  Whitney Stanley led the meeting with Tom Salter, Bob Santore of South Knox Beautification and Terry Faulkner of Bearden Beautification Committee met and went over their presentations for the conference session set for 9:00 a.m., Saturday, April 23rd at the new Convention Center.

- posted by KKB staff at 1:45 PM  

Tom gave a speech to the West Knox Civitan Club at the Shoney's on Kingston Pike at Walker Springs Road.  It was a good crowd of about 20 people with lots of good questions.  My host was Bob ScanlonGreg Walters, a KKB volunteer is also a member of this club but could not attend the meeting.  Greg arranged the speech.  We may get a few volunteers from the group.

- posted by KKB staff at 8:15 PM  


Sunday, April 10, 2005

Don't Throw Down on K-TOWN
(stickers) made an appearance at the wildly popular Rossini Festival on Gay Street.  We also took the time to look at everything in the current exhibit at The Emporium (which has been right outside my office for two weeks and I've only glanced at a few items).  Go see it!

- posted by KKB staff at 3:30 PM  


Friday, April 8, 2005

Today there was a really important meeting.  Neal Denton, Stephen Garton, David Vandergriff, John Evans and Tom Salter met at Barley's for lunch and had calzones, tea and coffee and discussed topics including editorial cartoons, billboards, low-quality trees, daffodils and more.  It was a lot of fun and we plan to do this again soon.  Sorry, no pictures - it is pretty dark at Barley's.

- posted by KKB staff at 1:45 PM  


Monday, April 4, 2005

Today and tomorrow Tom and several others from Knoxville are attending a conference in Nashville sponsored by the UT Center for Industrial Services called Changing Behavior When There is No Crisis: The Daily Challenge Facing Environmental Professionals.  Below is John Homa, Sarah Surak, Tom Leonard (from Sevierville) and 4 ducks outside the Mexican restaurant where we had dinner.  We did not have duck.  I think we tried the spinach enchilada and the bean burrito.  The ducks were in no danger from our group.



- posted by KKB staff at 10:30 PM