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I believe education needs to hit towards behavior
and one of the best ways to work on behavior as
I've heard many times is working with
young people. Students, or young students.
Sometimes these students actually educate their parents as well
And the behavior, it's not just focusing on what
commodity what product what low-value resources. It is a whole
ethic of not wasting. It's funny to me
that there are some people that feel it's okay to throw out the cigarette butt on
the ground but it's not okay to throw out
an empty sugar packet.
Why? It needs to be a total behavior. Not just focused on
a particular product. I think it needs to start young.
The type of materials we have change over time
and how we manage those may change as well. So, it's a whole ethic
of stewardship of all our low value resources.
I think starting at a young age there some great programs out there
I recently heard of landfill camp, which is one of things I just thought was
was just kind of neat. It's a day camp to work with children
about environmental and solid waste related issues
That's just kind of a neat idea that I hadn't heard of until recently.
I would agree with that but I'm also a big fan
of education through
the design and of the built environment so
on hap tying education not to just
abstract information or even information that is conveyed
on paper or electronically but
linking it to the consistent provision receptacles
signage on those receptacles
and clearly identifiable receptacles
so that you have this constant physical material
reminder as an educator that is reinforcing
your recycling behavior and in my experience
I've seen some of the most well intentioned
educational materials fall down because
somebody fails to put
a trash receptacle next to the recycling bin in a public place
and you know there isn't this kind of
physical reinforcement of the options that you have
for source separation. That's just one example.
- Well, leading up Samantha just said, I think that bad recycling system in a
public space
is such a negative a education point because it basically says to users that
this is not a really big deal and that these
it can look like window dressing and sort of a key part of the building as
important as the
the ramps and the water fountains is that the trash management system except
oh then!
Here's this! Then! I guess! Maybe! and you see a bad recycling bin
you can't help but wonder if what you put in there is actually gonna get
recycled
and that just undermines the entire
system in people's participation in it. - And, I would add also
to that consistency which in
in my travels I haven't really seen but I understand for example in San Francisco
there's great consistency so
you don't have different setups and different
forms of describing you know let's say bottles and cans in one place and
metal and glass in another. In New York City we have
all this kind of ad hoc terminology that a
that businesses and other managers of public spaces are
applying to describe the recycling
infrastructure in place in front of them and
and a really except good example of what not to do is here
in the subway system in New York City which is administered
in completely separately from other city government agencies
they have on their cans just they say throw everything in this can we will
sort it out later and they
too because the majority of trash
that's discarded in the subway is newspapers
and some cans but
this creates tremendous confusion for residents that don't understand why
they're being told basically to throw everything in one receptacle
underground and then they go up to the street and they've got
three bins for dual stream recycling and trash
- Something I've seen recently which
maybe it's a little bit a civil disobedience but I think if it's
adopted at a broader arena it may be effective
in those public spaces that only have a waste receptacle
i've seen there the common recyclables are actually sat on the ground
around that waste receptacle because there wasn't recycling container
provided
if many people continue to do that I think
it will compel managers to put in a recycling receptacle
adjacent to the waste receptacle otherwise they got to pick up the stuff on
the ground
and throw it out themselves and do an extra step to recycle
I think that's just something very interesting and maybe
that'll be adopted more places.