Thursday, June 12, 2014

Americans think they are recycling correctly but are they really?

Recycling provides many opportunities along with many challenges. I have an optimistic view that most people make a genuine effort to recycle. Surprisingly, one of the biggest challenges in the recycling industry isn't the effort of the people,  it's overenthusiastic attempts to actually recycle the un-recyclable. There are a lot of old rules, mix messages and misinformed recycling messages out there. Waste Management even stated that they lost 1 billion dollars in revenue is because they have not educated their customer properly. We agree! We are looking to improve and we want to open up this post as a forum to have you ask us your questions!

Sample questions:

1. Is item X recyclable?
2. What happens to our recycling?
3. How can I help in my community/ office to recycle better?

Let us know your thoughts! 



Thursday, May 1, 2014

Weekly Highlights



Last Week at Action/ IWS


We hope you are enjoying the much anticipated warm weather like we are. In light of spring and showing gratitude we wanted to let you know what we are doing as a company this week and invite you to do the same. Our corporate culture always incorporates participation whether it be our participation in the community or internally within our own offices. 

Bring Your Child to Work Day



This year we are celebrating our first bring your child to work day in our new offices in Teaneck. We have an overwhelming number of participants this year and can not be more excited! We have activities and seminars planned for the kids and hope they walk away learning something new. Maybe even gain a little more appreciation for what Mom and Dad do everyday. 


Earth Day 2014 Highlights

We celebrated Earth Day by visiting schools, business and in our community. One event in particular we want to highlight is our visit to the Just Home Healthcare Services in Fair Lawn, NJ. A representative of Action came to Just Home and gave a presentation on recycling and brought a garbage truck to show off too!

Just Home Healthcare Services is a cooperative of for and non-profit agencies focused on providing long term care in New Jersey. Individualized support is tailored to meet the needs of the geriatric community, adults with developmental disabilities; their families and loved ones. Services include adult medical daycare, independent living training, homecare, habitation, respite care, and so much more.  


Monday, January 27, 2014

Superbowl Street Closures

Super Bowl Boulevard

Super Bowl Boulevard

Wednesday, January 29 to Saturday, February 1, 2014
Broadway from 34th Street to 47th Street


On February 2, 2014, MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford, New Jersey, will host Super Bowl XLVIII. To celebrate, New York City, the Super Bowl Host Committee and GMC have dreamed up "Super Bowl Boulevard," a series of football-themed experiences that will take over Times Square the week before the big game. Stop by a live concert, snap a photo with the Vince Lombardi Trophy or race down a specially made toboggan. Admission is FREE and open to the public. FOX, NFL Network, CBS, CNN and ESPN will broadcast the festivities live.
SuperBowlBlvd
Activities Happening in Times Square
super11n-4-web
  • Vince Lombardi Trophy: While the AFC and NFC champions will have to battle it out to earn the NFL's most coveted prize, you can take a photo with it just by showing up.
  • Super Bowl XLVIII Roman Numerals: Pose in front of the oversize numerals commemorating this year's game and don't be afraid to get snap happy. (Broadway between 42nd and 43rd Streets).
  • Toboggan Run: In celebration of the first open-air cold-weather Super Bowl, enjoy a wintry ride—this seven story slide is painted to look like the real, snowy, deal. Tickets can be purchased on site. (Broadway between 40th and 41st Streets).
Other Activities
  • Autograph and Concert Stage: Stop by for free autograph sessions with current and former NFL players (daily, noon–6pm), as well as concerts (daily, 8–10pm). (Broadway between 39th and 40th Streets).
If you are traveling in or around Times Square, please note the following street closures:
  • Broadway between 35th and 42nd Streets will be closed to vehicular traffic at 6pm on Saturday, January 25th. This is necessary to facilitate snow clean-up/removal and the removal of any other items along the event footprint prior to the scheduled load-in. The load-in of elements on Broadway will commence as planned at 12:01am on Sunday, January 26th.
  • Broadway will be closed from 34th Street to 47th Street for the event from January 26th to February 2nd 2014.
  • All cross streets are expected to remain open with the exception of 41st Street.
  • 41st Street from 6th to 7th Avenue will be closed from 9:00 a.m. until midnight. All other times it will be local traffic only.
For more information about the Super Bowl Boulevard and the Super Bowl, visit the official Super Bowl XLVIII website.
While you are in Times Square, be sure to check out our HotelDiningShoppingEntertainment & Attractions, andBroadway guides and listings. You’ll also find other events and special Super Bowl deals in the neighborhood. Sign up for the Official Times Square E-Newsletter to get the latest updates or follow us on Facebook and Twitter.

For Times Square Businesses
  • For questions regarding street closures and other neighborhood impacts, email THarris@TimesSquareNYC.org.
  • Add Super Bowl Deals and Events at your establishment through the Tourism Manager. For more information about the Tourism Manager, contact rfojas@timessquarenyc.org.
  • There will be truck and delivery restrictions along Broadway and adjacent side streets. Additional information will be disseminated once the plan is finalized.
Times Square Businesses who have questions relating to NFL Super Bowl Boulevard can also contact the Alliance at 212.768.1560. Follow @TSqNews for updates.

Monday, January 20, 2014

WM CEO: Didn't educate customers on recycling

Recycling, is it different everywhere? Or are there basic guidelines that we can all follow? What happens to my recyclables after they are collected?

These are questions we all have! At the Action Environmental Group we are facing the same problems as Waste Management in customer education. We realize that customer education is KEY into making recycling successful and Waste Management's CEO explains why



Tuesday, December 31, 2013

NYC NYE Street Closures


On behalf of The Action Environmental Group we want to wish you a happy and healthy New Year! 


We wanted to take this time to not only thank you for being a customer, partner or just a blog reader but also inform you of the street closures tonight in Manhattan due to the NYE celebrations.



Celebrate Safely. Happy New Year! 



For our New Year's Resolution, we are going to try to go a little greener. How about you?
 


Monday, December 16, 2013

Changes in China's recycling could cost N.J. towns cash

Changes in China's recycling could cost N.J. towns cash

SUNDAY, DECEMBER 15, 2013    LAST UPDATED: MONDAY DECEMBER 16, 2013, 7:47 AM
THE RECORD
A crackdown on trash halfway around the world has disrupted the U.S. recycling industry and could cost North Jersey municipalities some of the coveted revenue they earn from selling the paper, plastic and aluminum cans that residents put out at the curb.
Alfred DuBois, center, Clifton’s recycling coordinator, pulling out contaminants from a delivery with Steven Rodriguez, left, and Andrew Soboto at the city’s recycling center.
STEVE HOCKSTEIN/SPECIAL TO THE RECORD
Alfred DuBois, center, Clifton’s recycling coordinator, pulling out contaminants from a delivery with Steven Rodriguez, left, and Andrew Soboto at the city’s recycling center.
For much of this year, China has rejected bales of recyclables shipped from the United States that are too contaminated by regular trash. China’s effort to erect what’s become known as a “green fence” against contaminated recyclables has prompted recycling companies here to start charging financial penalties to the towns and corporate clients whose recyclables are tainted with too much regular garbage.
“Make no mistake: This is a serious situation that can have major repercussions for the future of the recycling industry in the U.S.,” Chris Riviello, managing partner of Atlantic Coast Fibers, a Passaic-based recycling company, told the municipalities it serves in a recent letter.
It’s not clear how much North Jersey towns stand to lose, but some municipalities make between $300,000 and $500,000 on recycling.
And towns in Bergen County could be especially vulnerable because they use a system in which  their recycling hauls are more likely than those in Passaic County to include regular trash.
Given the region’s proximity to the Port of Newark, much of the recyclables collected in North Jersey, particularly paper, gets sent abroad, where mills turn it into new products. Much of it is sold to China, which bought $11.3 billion in scrap metal, plastic and paper from the U.S. in 2011.
China’s action — and the response by recyclers — has come at a time when towns, especially those in Bergen County, have been trying to entice more residents to recycle by embracing simpler single-stream recycling programs. Residents can combine paper, cardboard, glass, aluminum and plastic in one container rather than separating them.
Some experts say single-stream recycling increases the amount of material collected by up to 30 percent and provides more revenue to the towns that sell their recyclables. But given China’s crackdown, some in the industry question the wisdom of having moved to a single-stream system. They say that so much garbage gets mixed in with the recyclables that it significantly reduces its value.
“It’s easier to recycle when you have single-stream. But it’s also easier for residents to throw non-recyclables into the mix,” said Jerry Lobosco, senior vice president with Green Sky Industries, a Clifton-based recycling company with many municipal clients in the region.
Lobosco said his company sends about 95 percent of its paper and cardboard to Asia — principally China, but also to South Korea, Taiwan, Indonesia and India.
Nationally, the typical single-stream load of recyclables contains 20 percent non-recyclables, he said. Whether companies sort recyclables by hand or invest in heavily automated sorting facilities, they are sometimes unable to separate out enough regular trash from the recyclables to satisfy the more stringent Chinese requirements.
 Waste Management, which has numerous municipal clients in New Jersey, has seen the volume of residue in recyclables go from about 7 percent to 20 percent. “We’ve seen bowling balls, garden hoses, bar bells,” said John Hambrose, Waste Management spokesman for the mid-Atlantic region.
China is taking a hard line on recyclables from America as it tries to clean up its industries’ reputation for lax standards. The rejections are also for economic reasons, said Chaz Miller, director of policy for the National Waste and Recycling Association. “Their economy has cooled down, so their mills aren’t screaming for raw materials right now,” he said.
The trade with China had long been good business for both sides. China sends so many products to the United States that the shipping containers were going back empty. Then shipping companies realized the containers could be filled with cardboard, paper and other recyclables collected in the United States and shipped back to China, where factories in China could buy it and reuse the material.
Because China has been rejecting so many shipments, recycling companies such as Atlantic Coast Fibers, Waste Management and Green Sky Industries are more closely inspecting the loads they receive from municipal and corporate customers and charging them if they find excessive amounts of non-recyclables.
The recycling companies pay the municipalities for a load of recyclables, but then have to sort out the trash, and pay to have the trash disposed in a landfill. Those extra processing and tipping costs reduce their profit. Add to that the increasing amounts of their material being rejected by China, which further reduces revenue.
“Basically recycling companies have to work more to make less money,” Miller said. “Single-stream can cut collection costs, but there are increasing processing costs.”
Marie Kruzan, executive director of the Association of New Jersey Recyclers, agreed. “Single-stream created a problem and China’s green fence makes it more difficult,” Kruzan said. “The green fence is definitely affecting the marketplace. And it’s not going away. The recycling world is changing.” The changes mean municipalities will see changes in their contracts, she said.
Municipalities can often earn several hundred thousand dollars a year selling their recyclables. And the more people recycle, the less towns must pay in tipping fees to dispose of garbage at landfills. Tipping fees currently run about $60 per ton.
The crackdown in China could cost towns. “There’s certainly going to be a reduction in recycling revenue for municipalities, and of course we’re concerned,” said Guy Picone, director of public works for Paramus.
Like many towns, Paramus has a five-year contract which guarantees the borough a floor price on its recyclables, but if the trend continues, the borough will likely see that floor price drop, Picone said.
Paramus has a dual-stream system, which insulates it a bit. Recyclables collected through a dual-stream system, where paper is collected separately from the other materials, are generally less contaminated with non-recyclables than those collected via a single-stream system. Paper can easily become contaminated by food, liquids and shards of glass mixed into the recycling stream.
Though contamination in recycling has increased because more municipalities have switched to a single-stream system, many in the industry say single-stream won’t be going away. “Single-stream is not a mistake,” Lobosco said. “It makes sense for some municipalities. It doesn’t make sense for others. It comes down to how much care residents take — how well a municipality educates its residents.”
Despite the trend toward the easier single-stream system of recycling, recycling numbers remain relatively low throughout the state, according to the latest data from the state Department of Environmental Protection. Statewide, there was a 40 percent recycling rate for municipal solid waste in 2011, down 31,250 tons from the prior year and well below the state goal of 50 percent.
Recycling, however, was up for a second year in Bergen County, which had a 45 percent recycling rate in 2011 — fourth best among the state’s 21 counties. It also ranked first in the total amount of waste recycled — about 525,000 tons. That was 42,000 tons more than in 2010.
Passaic County saw a 17 percent decline in municipal recycling in 2011, with 39,000 fewer tons of material collected. Passaic County’s municipal recycling rate was 30 percent, ranking it 18th among the 21 counties.
But looking at recyclables collected by weight can be a misleading way to gauge the rate of recycling, many say.
For instance, many products now get packaged in plastic rather than far heavier glass containers to cut down on shipping costs. And plastic bottles themselves are thinner and lighter than they used to be, said Miller.
“Is it so bad for recycling tonnage to be down?” said Al DuBois, Clifton’s recycling coordinator.
“Not necessarily. It could mean we are succeeding at source reduction. Bottlers and others are eliminating weight, and in the end that’s all better for the environment.”
Email: oneillj@northjersey.com Twitter: @JamesMONeill1
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