trash http://michiganradio.org en Ladies' trash collecting group goes after garbage as a hobby http://michiganradio.org/post/ladies-trash-collecting-group-goes-after-garbage-hobby <p>When you&rsquo;re driving around southeast Michigan, you might happen to see three women on the side of the road. They&rsquo;re all moms, but their kids are grown up. They work part time. They fill their free time by picking up trash... for fun.</p><p>&quot;This is a beautiful area, and yet we have piles of garbage there.&quot;</p><p>Melinda Fons is with her friends Moy Garretson and Karen Rooke in suburban Detroit.</p><p>Karen: &quot;Wagons roll!&quot;</p><p>They get plastic grabbers and garbage bags out of the trunk. And they head into a little wooded patch next to a busy two-lane road.</p><p>Karen Rooke starts on the edges.</p><p>&quot;I&rsquo;ve got some cups, a newspaper and a plastic bag. And a credit card... ooh this is good. I&rsquo;ll take that to the police.&quot;</p><p>The three women crawl under trees and into bushes to get the trash. There&rsquo;s a pile of Styrofoam peanuts, empty rum bottles, a tire... and two more credit cards.</p><p>Karen: &quot;I picked up 20 vodka bottles once and Listerine. I think it&rsquo;s the kids that go drink down there. It&rsquo;s just a quiet road, and have the Listerine so their parents &ndash; they think - don&rsquo;t know. We were young once too!&quot;</p><p> Tue, 19 Jun 2012 16:31:44 +0000 Rebecca Williams 7938 at http://michiganradio.org Ladies' trash collecting group goes after garbage as a hobby Lawmakers look to regulate trash burning http://michiganradio.org/post/lawmakers-look-regulate-trash-burning <p>The state Legislature could enact new restrictions soon on the types of household waste that can be burned in barrels and pits.</p><p>Household waste now includes a lot more toxic materials &ndash; such as computer parts, rubber, plastic, and treated wood. A rule proposed last year would have banned outdoor burning in communities that don&rsquo;t have local trash-burning ordinances.</p><p>Critics say that goes too far &ndash; especially in small towns and rural areas, where people have long burned their trash in burn barrels.</p><p>&ldquo;They have to have the ability to burn their trash and dispose of it properly and that&rsquo;s what we&rsquo;ve done for years and years,&rdquo; said Kenneth Kurtz (R-Coldwater).</p><p>The legislation would ban materials including rubber, plastic, and treated wood. Environmental groups don&rsquo;t think that goes far enough.</p><p>&ldquo;Burning is unnecessary. Burning is a bad idea,&rdquo; said Hugh McDiarmid of the <a href="http://www.environmentalcouncil.org/">Michigan Environmental Council</a>. &ldquo;We acknowledge that it&rsquo;s a practice that&rsquo;s gone on, that&rsquo;s been very convenient for people for a long time, so we welcome the step in the right direction this legislation is and hope that it can be stronger in the future.&rdquo;</p><p>McDiarmid says improved recycling programs would be a better alternative to burning trash. Thu, 29 Dec 2011 23:11:48 +0000 Rick Pluta 5586 at http://michiganradio.org Lawmakers look to regulate trash burning Lansing is expanding its 'single stream' recycling pilot programs http://michiganradio.org/post/lansing-expanding-its-single-stream-recycling-pilot-programs <p>The city of Lansing is expanding a&nbsp; pilot <a href="http://www.lansingmi.gov/pubserv/wastereduction/index.jsp">recycling </a>program. The &lsquo;single stream&rsquo; recycling program means businesses and individuals don&rsquo;t&nbsp; have to separate bottles, newspapers and other recyclables.&nbsp;</p><p>Chad Gamble is Lansing&rsquo;s Public Works director. He says making recycling easier means more things will be recycled, and the more that&#39;s recycled the less the program costs the city.&nbsp;&nbsp;</p><blockquote><p>&ldquo;There are several cities statewide that are doing &lsquo;single stream&rsquo; collection in varying degrees.&nbsp; But I think we are truly one of the leaders&hellip;branching out into the commercial recycling&hellip;the cart (residential) recycling for families and the public recycling.&nbsp; And so, I&rsquo;m very excited to pilot these programs.&quot;&nbsp;</p></blockquote><p>Gamble says city leaders are evaluating the &lsquo;single stream&rsquo; recycling program and&nbsp;may eventually expand it to the entire city. Sat, 17 Sep 2011 18:01:01 +0000 Steve Carmody 4170 at http://michiganradio.org Lansing is expanding its 'single stream' recycling pilot programs New debate over Detroit's incinerator http://michiganradio.org/post/new-debate-over-detroits-incinerator <p>Detroit is home to one of the world&rsquo;s largest incinerators. That facility burns around 800,000 tons of trash every year.</p><p>The issue has sparked passionate conflict in Detroit for more than 20 years. And a recent public hearing&mdash;on whether to give the incinerator&rsquo;s new owners tax credits&mdash;showed that <a href="http://environmentreport.org/show.php?showID=517">conflict is just as intense as ever</a>.</p> Thu, 31 Mar 2011 15:36:49 +0000 Sarah Cwiek 1864 at http://michiganradio.org New debate over Detroit's incinerator Michigan's planned trash burning ban snuffed out http://michiganradio.org/post/michigans-planned-trash-burning-ban-snuffed-out <p>Last year state officials approved a ban on burning trash starting April 1st, 2011.&nbsp; But with the date drawing near, it appears backyard burning appears safe, at least legally, for now.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</p> Mon, 21 Mar 2011 17:40:10 +0000 Steve Carmody 1730 at http://michiganradio.org Michigan's planned trash burning ban snuffed out Ontario cities no longer sending garbage to Michigan http://michiganradio.org/post/ontario-cities-no-longer-sending-garbage-michigan <p>Michigan Senator <a href="http://stabenow.senate.gov/">Debbie Stabenow</a> hailed what she called a "major milestone" in the fight to stop Canadian trash shipments to Michigan. Michigan Radio's Sarah Cwiek was at a <a href="http://stabenow.senate.gov/?p=press_release&amp;id=214">press conference that the Senator held</a> yesterday in Detroit. Cwiek sent this report:</p><blockquote><p>Michigan charges only 21 cents a ton to dump trash in landfills. That's far less than other Great Lakes states.</p><p>As a result, Ontario, as well as some U.S. states, export some of their trash to Michigan. But, Stabenow says as of January first, Ontario cities are no longer shipping their municipal waste. She credits a voluntary agreement she and Senator Carl Levin reached with Ontario officials in 2006.</p><p>But, Stabenow says that's not the end of the story because the agreement doesn't apply to non-municipal trash.</p><p>Commercial and industrial waste accounts for about 60-percent of the trash that's shipped from Canada to Michigan. Tue, 18 Jan 2011 11:36:53 +0000 Zoe Clark 912 at http://michiganradio.org Ontario cities no longer sending garbage to Michigan