Main

Plastic Saving Tips Archives

December 1, 2007

Your Newspaper in a Plastic Bag???

What's up with that. I just received an email from Tony on a topic that has baffled me. Your thoughts???

Tony,

I hear you on this one. I took the Republic for a few weeks earlier this year and cancelled it because of that. I ran into the same story. Let your local paper know that you don't want you newspaper is a plastic bag - especially in Phoenix where we get over 320 days per year of sunshine.

Greg


Greg, Thanks for your article in the Republic about plastic bags, etc. Are you aware of the irony that the newspaper carrying your article--the AZ Republic--was delivered in an unnecessary plastic bag? I've written to the Republic a number of times to complain. Their reply is "recycle them at your local grocery store." This is an evasion of responsibility on their part. Anyway, my local grocery stores no longer accept plastic bags for recycling.

Thanks for your concern. Tony Chambers

February 2, 2008

Anne, a friend of mine here in town, is really taking the lead on banishing plastic bags through her program "Pollution Solutions", which has just received an Environmental Excellence Award. (www.resourcesforhealth.org)

Anne's motto is "Families taking action to care for their communities, the environment, and animals through service-learning projects." In a recent post regarding the use of plastic bags - reusable and otherwise - Anne writes:

"The education component that we and other nonprofits do is absolutely essential. When a store like Whole Foods hands out a reusable PPL bag, customers may use it, but do they still take a bunch of plastic bags for their produce? What I hear when we do our presentations is that people - kids and adults - are thinking about the other implications, such as what should I use to bag my garbage, pick up my pet's poop, isn't almost every product in the grocery store packaged in plastic, etc. Buying local (less packaging), gardening, and composting are the topics of conversation that almost automatically follow!"

Kudos to Anne for taking “the plastic discussion” to the next level. We all need to learn to live a smaller-carbon-footprint life. Buying local products from places like farmer’s markets and growing your own fruits and veggies cuts out a LOT of packaging. I even use reusable cotton bags for my produce and bulk item purchases. Encouraging folks to compost their food scraps and other waste materials (yes, if your compost is consistently hot enough, you can compost pet poop, etc) keeps untold tons of highly useful materials out of landfills. You may not get rid of plastic garbage bags quite yet but you'll certainly cut down on the number you use!

Jennifer – Your Guide to Green Blogger




About Plastic Saving Tips

This page contains an archive of all entries posted to Billion Bag Blog in the Plastic Saving Tips category. They are listed from oldest to newest.

Progress is the next category.

Many more can be found on the main index page or by looking through the archives.

Subscribe

 Subscribe in a reader

Add to Google Reader or Homepage

Subscribe in NewsGator Online

Subscribe in Bloglines

Enter your email address:

Delivered by FeedBurner

Powered by
Movable Type 3.34