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DUBUQUE AREA RECYCLING NETWORK: Difference between revisions
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DUBUQUE AREA RECYCLING NETWORK (DARN). When the ideas of recycling were being discussed in the 1990s, four local groups began taking action. The Audubon Society, Boy Scout Troop 11, Dubuque Area Congregations United, and the Sierra Club at [[STEPHEN HEMPSTEAD HIGH SCHOOL]] established a weekly drop-off recycling program. (1) Using a trailer at 3355 John F. Kennedy Road from 8:00 a.m until 1:00 p.m. Saturday, the volunteers and organizations they represented were committed to operating the center until the city of Dubuque began | DUBUQUE AREA RECYCLING NETWORK (DARN). When the ideas of recycling were being discussed in the 1990s, four local groups began taking action. The Audubon Society, Boy Scout Troop 11, Dubuque Area Congregations United, and the Sierra Club at [[STEPHEN HEMPSTEAD HIGH SCHOOL]] established a weekly drop-off recycling program. (1) Using a trailer at 3355 John F. Kennedy Road from 8:00 a.m until 1:00 p.m. Saturday, the volunteers and organizations they represented were committed to operating the center until the city of Dubuque began [[CURBSIDE RECYCLING]]. (2) The city, beginning in July 1990, began charging $1.00 per month on refuse collection as a startup for a recycling program and was anticipating to collect $220,000 in fiscal 1991 ending June 30. (3) | ||
While magazines were not taken, the collection included a pile for No. 1 plastics like soft drink containers and No. 2 plastics like colored bottles. A truck collected newspapers for reprocessing into new newsprint or for farmers who requested it for livestock bedding. Aluminum cans were culled for those with Iowa refund labels and another area was reserved for glass. (4) | While magazines were not taken, the collection included a pile for No. 1 plastics like soft drink containers and No. 2 plastics like colored bottles. A truck collected newspapers for reprocessing into new newsprint or for farmers who requested it for livestock bedding. Aluminum cans were culled for those with Iowa refund labels and another area was reserved for glass. (4) |
Revision as of 21:30, 6 May 2016
DUBUQUE AREA RECYCLING NETWORK (DARN). When the ideas of recycling were being discussed in the 1990s, four local groups began taking action. The Audubon Society, Boy Scout Troop 11, Dubuque Area Congregations United, and the Sierra Club at STEPHEN HEMPSTEAD HIGH SCHOOL established a weekly drop-off recycling program. (1) Using a trailer at 3355 John F. Kennedy Road from 8:00 a.m until 1:00 p.m. Saturday, the volunteers and organizations they represented were committed to operating the center until the city of Dubuque began CURBSIDE RECYCLING. (2) The city, beginning in July 1990, began charging $1.00 per month on refuse collection as a startup for a recycling program and was anticipating to collect $220,000 in fiscal 1991 ending June 30. (3)
While magazines were not taken, the collection included a pile for No. 1 plastics like soft drink containers and No. 2 plastics like colored bottles. A truck collected newspapers for reprocessing into new newsprint or for farmers who requested it for livestock bedding. Aluminum cans were culled for those with Iowa refund labels and another area was reserved for glass. (4)
Representatives of Mississippi River Revival and Boy Scout Troop II addressed the city council about the need to expand recycling in February, 1991. The city had requested proposals from private companies for collection, processing and selling recyclables and applied for and received a $300,000 Iowa Department of Natural Resources grant for a citywide curbside program. Mississippi River Revival proposed the city pay "landfill diversion credits" to volunteer groups which operate recycling dropoff centers since the centers saved the city the $22 per ton tipping fee at the landfill. Another proposal for the city to participate in sponsoring a newspaper-to-livestock-bedding demonstration. (5) In 1991, according to the Dubuque Area Recycling Network, ten farmers in Dubuque County were using newspaper for animal bedding on a regular basis for the Network's collection site. According to studies, newspaper compared to straw bedding was less expensive, needed less storage space, decomposed more quickly in the field, created fewer odors, and was more absorbent and sterile. (6)
On February 4, 1991 budget recommendations made to the city council included voluntary curbside recycling beginning on September 1, 1991. This pilot program costing $100,000 would run through November and would include the collection of cans, glass, plastic and newspaper by city employees using leased trucks. Based upon the success of the pilot program, city-wide curbside recycling could be expected by the second half of 1992. (7) The council announced on February 10, 1991 that the pilot program would begin on July 1, 1991 with a $95,000 projected cost and would try to help volunteers running a dropoff program until the pilot program began. Representatives of six volunteer groups running the recycling program, said they would quit in the fall and refused to support the pilot program. (8)
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Source:
1. Giannakouros, Raki. "Don't Throw That Away, DARN It!", Julien's Journal, April 2013, p. 44.
2. Hanson, Lyn. "Recyclable Trash Pouring In," Telegraph Herald, January 27, 1991, p. 6A
3. Gilson, Donna. "Volunteers Want Recycling Soon," Telegraph Herald, February 1, 1991, p. 3A
4. Ibid.
5. Gilson, Donna.
6. Arnold, Bill. "Farmers Use Shredded Newspaper," Telegraph Herald, February 2, 1991, p. 3A
7. Gilson, Donna. "Recycling Program Proposed to Council," Telegraph Herald, February 5, 1991, p. 3A
8. Gilson, Donna. "Recycling Ok'd," Telegraph Herald, February 10, 1991, p. 1