2015 fall conference: event recycling-ragbrai

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Ragbrai Recycling Laurel Stelter

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Ragbrai RecyclingLaurel Stelter

About myself- Senior in high school from Pella, IA- Local bike shop employee- Favorite things to do:

- Bike- Explore- Play guitar

- Six RAGBRAIs- Everyone is capable of making a

positive change

About RAGBRAI- Register’s Annual Great Bicycle Ride

Across Iowa

- 15,000 - 40,000 participants

- 50-75 miles/day, 400+ miles/week

- LOTS OF FUN, food, and

whacky/inspiring/awesome people

Where it all began: 2012

Poor recycling = highly disappointed teenager

First steps- Emailed TJ Juskiewicz

- Invited to first presentation- received invitation to speak at pass through town meeting

- encouraged pass through towns to recycle

- Shared recycling facts and lots of encouragement

- Youth groups, boy/girl scouts

- Iron Eyes Cody, “People start pollution, people can stop it.”

2013 Results- Rated each town on a 1-5 scale on effort of recycling:

labels, placement, practicality, success

- Noticeably more recycling than previous years

- Made observations and created more detailed

solutions

- Some towns had majorly overflowing containers

2014 Results- Learned that labels are critical

- Trash MUST be next to recycling

- Visibility of labels is very important

- Don’t be so structured - it’s okay to have fun with

recycling containers!

2015 Results- Many towns used my document to decide which types of

containers to use

- Where there was effort put into recycling, it was amazingly

obvious - a great thing!

- Either huge successes in towns or major failures (no

recycling at all)

- Western Iowa needs to step up their game!

Tip Sheet

Conclusions: Failures - Location

Fence: not practical to empty, in a far location, not in a visible area.

Poor labels: AKA the Culprit

Poor labeling of trash vs. recycling created mixed trashmixed trash: noun, 1. trash and perfectly recyclable bottles mixed together. 2. my pet peeve.

Poor labeling

“Labeled” Bins: labels need to be visible from all sides!

More Poor Labeling

Labels MUST be visible from all angles!

More Failures

Colored Bins: interesting idea if executed well, must include labels

Trash Bins: Do not work well. They are not only difficult to label but simply look like trash belongs in them.

Successes: Creativity

Creative containers: These work well and riders enjoy a challenge.

Successes: More Creativity

Painted Boxes: Eye-catching and work/look nicely.

Successes: Plastic BagPlastic Bag Container:

Easy to transport and refill. Easy to observe what goes

in the container.

Successes: Cardboard boxes

Colored Cardboard Boxes: Easily differentiated, separates trash and bottles ~beautifully~.

Successes: Cardboard Appliance Boxes

Cardboard Appliance Boxes: very easy to label, can hold

plenty of containers, great use of store boxes.

Successes: Container with hole - THE BEST ONE!

Container with Hole: Easy to place on any container, limits needs for labeling, obvious to riders.

Future questions to solve- How can communities be encouraged to compost?- Plastic Bottles vs. Aluminum Cans - are three

containers necessary?- Why does Eastern Iowa do significantly better than

Western Iowa with their recycling?

Contact Info:

Laurel Stelter

[email protected]

Ragbrai 2015: Recycling Tip Sheet 1. Place recycling bins next to trash bins

a. Cut a circle out in the top of the recycling container so it is obvious bottles and cans go in it.

2. Place labels in visible areas a. Place labels high enough on containers b. Put labels on every side to ensure there will be no confusion.

3. Use containers that your community already has (bins, watermelon boxes, barrels, appliance boxes). For watermelon like boxes that are quite huge, write recycling on the inside of the box, as well. 4. On short or shallow boxes use 2” wide blue masking tape around the perimeter and write ‘recycling’ with a thick marker.

5. If using containers that require a bag, make sure the bag doesn’t cover the recycling print. Print sticker labels and place on the inside of the bag for an extra precaution. 6. For fence type containers, be sure to make the label high enough so bike do not block it if leaning against it and be sure to use cardboard attached with zip ties to the structure so the label does not fly off. 7. If choosing to differentiate trash bins and recycle bins by container color, it is not necessary to paint the entire bin. Painting the top a bright color with recycling or trash written should do the trick. 8. In the morning or near stands where fruit is sold a lot, it is great to have a compost bin. Put labels on the inside of the box if it is a small box, like mentioned in tip four. Note: Your town will not need to place many aluminum can containers as they have plastic recycling. Most aluminum can containers will just need to be in the area of the

beer garden. Riders drink more Gatorade, bottles of water, and other energy drinks that come in a plastic container compared to pop.