Encyclopedia Dubuque
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Affiliated with the Local History Network of the State Historical Society of Iowa, and the Iowa Museum Association.
DUBUQUE AREA RECYCLING NETWORK
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)
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. (3)
Between May and December 1991 a total of 81 tons of trash and 352 tons of newspapers had been collected. Prices received for recycled material, however, were not the motivation for all the effort. The recycling effort collected about $75 each week with another $75 from each farmer who took newspaper bundles. (4)
In 2013 in response of the economic challenges facing the Dubuque landfill, a new Dubuque Area Recycling Network was announced. Based on estimates that over one million dollars of marketable materials and items were buried in the landfill annually, the Network announced its goals. (5)
1) Increase commercial food scraps diversion by 1,000 tons annually.
2) Bring together eight stakeholders to plan for a facility established to take in used building materials and market them for reuse.
3) Increase the number of identified businesses engaged in significantly improved diversion of their discards to recycling by fifty businesses annually.
4) Develop a collaborative campaign to increase the volume of marketable reusables being diverted to beneficial use venues by 5% annually.
5) Reduce toxins in the home by helping to divert household hazardous materials from landfill by 5% annually.
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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. Ibid.
4. Ibid.
5. Giannakouros