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Members Section

  January 2008
 


MEMBERS NEWS

Bridport TLC
Bridport residents were offered a novel solution to the problem of what to do with old Christmas trees. Community group Bridport TLC teamed up with family business Groves Nurseries to offer a variety of solutions to recycling used trees. Using their recently-launched bicycle rickshaw, which was sponsored by Clive Groves, community volunteers collected trees by arrangement for a suggested donation of £2. Alternatively customers could bring their tree to the Nurseries, where, for a donation, they were shredded and recycled as mulch or weed suppressant. Money raised will be used by Bridport TLC to broaden their recycling projects. Contact: Leon Edwards 01308 425916 leon@bridport-tlc.org.uk

Recycling in Ottery.
Recycling Ottery have been invited to carry out an environmental survey on their local church with a view to advising them on possible wind and solar installations. This installation work will help to raise the local profile of the organisation and also demonstrates the working partnership between diverse local community groups. Partnership working is also being demonstrated in the future tree planting days being organised by Recycling in Ottery, the parish tree warden, the local green councillor and the local schools.

Contact: Chris Cattigain 01404 815825 staff_and_serpent@yahoo.com

Bradford Environmental Action Trust
www.whywaste.org.uk a project run by Bradford Environmental Action Trust are delighted to announce that their Space Of Waste building - made from other people’s waste, has been nominated for the prestigious Architects’ Journal Small Projects Award.  Winners will be announced on the 4 March and an exhibition of the nominated entries is will take place at the Building Centre, London from 5 March for six weeks.

The innovative architecture project, which aims to raise awareness of diverting waste material from landfill, was commissioned by www.whywaste.org.uk, the free online waste exchange for businesses in Yorkshire and the Humber.  It was designed and built by postgraduate architecture Students from the University of Sheffield with structural calculations by Arup.

The project ran for 6 weeks from delivery of the brief to the temporary building’s opening to the public in Sheffield’s Tudor Square. Finding and using reclaimed and recycled material from the waste exchange set an interesting challenge for the young architects as form most definitely followed available material, with exciting results.

Sarah Hunt, one of the architecture students involved in the project said, “The construction industry is one of the UK’s most wasteful. By taking an unconventional approach to the design process, we were forced to rethink the way in which materials can be used. Architects and designers have the potential to divert a lot of waste from landfill and create building and objects that are both beautiful and original.”

The building is designed to be demountable and is going on tour this spring to cities throughout the region raising awareness for the valuable resource currently misnamed ‘waste’.

The construction aspect of the build has been overseen by Geoff Stow, self-build expert and timber-frame construction lecturer at the Centre for Alternative Technology in Wales. The project has also been supported by Arup, the Green Building Store, Sheffield City Council, South Yorkshire Women’s Construction Centre and reclaimed timber social enterprise, TP Trading.

Contact: Dan McTiernan on 01274 718420 or email dan@beat.org,.uk  

WyeCycle
The community recycling organisation that operates in the villages of Wye & Brook near Ashford in Kent, has been blowing its own trumpet over the news that the two parishes throw out the least amount of residual waste in the country.

During 2007 they undertook two waste audits, one in the summer and one in winter, for the Behavioural Change project funded by WRAP and Kent County Council. This detailed study of a household’s residual waste entailed collecting binbags left out for refuse collection from a random, cross section of the community, separating the waste into a number of categories - plastics, metals, glass, food, etc - and weighing the resulting collections. Having then established the proportions by weight of these selected waste types in the residual waste stream, the results are tabulated and used as a basis for strategies to improve recycling rates and decrease waste going to landfill.

For Wyecycle’s purpose, the quantity of recyclable material still remaining, and the means of its capture is of particular importance, as is the results for average weight of residual waste per household per year. In Wye and Brook this now stands at 262kg. From statistics taken in 2006, supplied by Defra, the average weight of residual waste from the ten best performing local authorities in the country was 471kg per household per year.

Project Manager Carolyn Chandler said the residents of Wye and Brook should be congratulated on their continued efforts to reduce waste going to landfill.

WyeCycle would welcome any residual waste figures from other community recyclers or local authorities for comparison purposes.

Contact: Carolyn Chandler 01233 813298 info@wyecycle.org.uk  www.wyecycle.co.uk

Cot-age Child Safety
This month Cot-age Child Safety celebrated its 20 birthday. Cot-age Child Safety was set up in 1987 and registered as a charity in 1993. It provides services across Sheffield and surrounding districts in South Yorkshire, working with a variety of children’s services in promoting the safety of young children living in poverty.

The organisation’s activities include:
Refurbishment of donated nursery equipment for redistribution to families in need
Fitting nursery safety equipment and smoke alarms for families in deprivation
Manufacture and erection of fencing (using 100%) reclaimed timber to create safe play areas for young children
Building or adapting equipment for children with special needs
Providing work experience and volunteering opportunities

They believe they are the only organisation in the country to offer this range of services. The quality of their services has been recognised through national awards such as BT Environment week Award and the Persil Civic Trust award for Recycling

Cot-age operates from a woodworking workshop, using a small staff of 6, supported by 8-10 volunteers at any one time.
Contact: Ray Beecher 0114 2797971
http://www.cot-age.org.uk/

Furniture Re-use Network
Dixons Stores Group (DSGi) and DHL have agreed an alliance with Furniture Re-use Network (FRN) for the re-use of WEEE collected by DSGi’s nationwide ‘takeback-on-delivery’ service. Each of DSGi’s 14 regional distribution centres across the UK are now partnered with an Approved Re-use Centre (ARC) through FRN Enterprises Ltd (FRN’s trading subsidiary) and each centre is reusing between 70 and 200 WEEE items per week. The arrangement will result in more than 100,000 electrical items a year being reused.

DSGi delivery staff will in future ask customers whether the product they are replacing is still functional and if so they will inform customers that the item will be reused by the local FRN organisation for social benefit. Labelling of these items will allow the distribution site staff to sort the returned items that can then be diverted for reuse and those to be sent for recycling. FRN’s 14 Approved Re-use Centres will collect reusable WEEE from DSGi’s Home Delivery sites.

DHL is the logistics provider to DSGi and manages the WEEE collection and recycling service for the group. Sean Hodges, Head of Environmental Solutions at DHL said: “What’s so exciting about this project is how it shows that benefiting local communities and delivering real corporate responsibility need not be costly.  By utilizing the existing supply chain infrastructure, we have been able to implement an efficient reverse logistics solution that is environmentally friendly in terms of reduced road miles, fuel use and emissions.”
 
Craig Anderson of FRN Enterprises Ltd said “We see this as a strong endorsement of our members’ services by both DSGi and DHL; since July we have worked together to design and implement a mutually agreeable re-use service that involves the commitment and action of all parties.  This type of structured approach is maximising the amount of electrical and electronic appliances that can be reused through a nationally prescribed agreement dovetailing with local relations between site operators and re-users.
 
We estimate that this partnership will generate at least 100,000 quality assured appliances a year for our members to distribute to the UK’s excluded consumers. As the FRN membership is supplying to people who cannot afford to purchase new items, re-use through our sector avoids any competition with new sales and therefore compliments the work of Dixons Stores Group whilst helping the company achieve WEEE compliance in partnership with DHL.”
 
Contact: Craig Anderson on 0117 954 3571 craiga@frn.org.uk

CSV Environment – Run a Muck Project
CSV Run a Muck introduced a groundbreaking new recycling service in Birmingham in September, their waste cooking oil doorstep collection scheme.  This unique service offers householders in east Birmingham the chance to turn their waste cooking oil into useful biodiesel, and at the same time reduce pollution in local streams and rivers.

CSV Run a Muck is now running fortnightly collections for six months in the Bordesley Green and Saltley areas.  Residents in the collection area can register to get involved, and receive a free collection vessel, funnel and information card. 

Julian Stanton, Run a Muck Project Manager, said at the launch “We are really looking forward to getting started on this project, which we believe to be one of the first of its kind nationwide.  While there are quite a lot of organisations collecting waste cooking oil from restaurants and takeaways, no-one has really tried to tap the potential resource from domestic sources.  We are proud of the fact that Birmingham is again leading the way nationally with innovation in recycling.”

Run a Muck Community Recycling has been operating in the east Birmingham area since 2002, with an initial focus on collecting and composting green garden waste.  Having inspired the establishment of city-wide garden waste composting, the programme has moved on to provide a range of recycling services, including recycling bulky waste and smaller items that are usually overlooked, such as jewellery, stamps and birthday cards. Funding for this project has been supplied by Birmingham Environment Partnership, and CSV Environment also acknowledges the support of Birmingham City Council and the Big Lottery Fund’s CRED programme.

Contact: Julian Stanton 0121 328 5330, or julian@csvenvironment.org.uk

ECT
The signing of a new contact between the Somerset Waste Partnership and ECT Recycling recently took place and paved the way for Somerset to reach record recycling rates.

From the 15 October, the collection of recycling and refuse has been carried out by recycling and waste management company ECT, and whilst the message to the public is to carry on as normal, the new contract opens up the potential for cardboard and plastic bottles to be added to the kerbside in the near future.

The news follows on from the recent announcement of the formation of the new Somerset Waste Partnership, which will take over the management of waste and recycling services from the six councils in Somerset.

Steve Read, Managing Director of the Somerset Waste Partnership said: 

“This is an important step towards our aim of recycling over 50 per cent of our household waste, and we are all delighted to be working with ECT, who have an excellent track record on recycling and waste management.  The new contract provides excellent value for money, with a projected saving of £1.7 million, and includes running trials next spring to add cardboard and plastic bottles to the kerbside, which will be another great boost to recycling in Somerset”.

Speaking at the signing of the new contract, Andy Bond, Managing Director of ECT Recycling said: “The ‘SORT IT!’ model at the heart of the partnership contract is the best approach to waste management in the UK.  Somerset has one of the highest recycling rates in the UK but more importantly one of the lowest amounts of residual waste.  By collecting food waste separately, people become more aware of the amount they are throwing out and start to minimise their waste themselves.  We’re delighted to be part of this partnership”.

As well as investigating options to add more materials to the kerbside, the new contract will look at harmonising recycling and waste collections throughout Somerset in order to provide a better service to the public.  The contract runs for seven years, with the option of two further extensions of up to seven years.

Info: http://www.ectgroup.co.uk/ info@ect.group.co.uk

Family First
Nottingham people looking for homes for affordable rent will be able to move in quicker thanks to recycling and housing charity Family First.

Family First will now collect unwanted furniture and electrical items that has been left in socially rented homes when tenants have moved out. This means the homes can be re-let quicker, less furniture is taken to landfill when the homes are being prepared to be re-let and those items can then be donated to those in need . Any furniture that is not suitable for re-distributing will be sold in Family First’s charity shops at Kilbourn Street, in Nottingham, and Low Street, in Sutton-In-Ashfield.

Family First, which is part of the LHA-ASRA group, is going to operate the new system in its own 400 homes in Nottinghamshire. Should the scheme be successful it may be rolled out to sister organisation LHA or other registered social landlords in the area.

Patrick Taylor Managing Director of Family First said, “The great thing about this new system is that it’s so simple and everyone will benefit. New tenants can move into their homes quicker, we’re helping the environment by recycling unwanted furniture and people who are in need are given a helping hand by Family First.”

The organisation helps people who are setting up home for the first time, for whom essential furniture and white goods, such as washing machines and fridges, can be prohibitively expensive. As well as furniture, Family First collects children’s clothing, buggies, cots, highchairs and toys through their Kidstuff project, and distribute to people on low incomes. During 2006-07 they collected 8,500 items, benefiting 1,100 tenants. Six vans collect donations from the general public and businesses across Nottinghamshire.  The items are checked, cleaned, reconditioned and distributed where they are needed most by a team of volunteers.

Contact: Patrick Taylor 0800 013 0497 www.familyfirst.org.uk

EMERGE
EMERGE Recycling receives nearly half a million to fund the ‘REAL Skills Programme’. The organisation has received a £460,550 cash injection to continue and expand an innovative schools, volunteer and community education programme, that will teach people across Greater Manchester valuable lessons on sustainable living. The project, aptly named 3Rs (Reduce, Reuse, Recycle) Enterprise and Leadership (REAL) Skills Programme, will also work to increase regional volunteers to get actively involved in the environmental sector, and High School Students to get involved in local Social Enterprises.

Jo-Anne Witcombe, Education and Community Liaison Team Leader said: “EMERGE Recycling is absolutely delighted to receive the Reaching Communities grant from the Big Lottery Fund to deliver the 'REAL skills programme' in Greater Manchester. The grant will be a huge boost to our organisation and to the communities we serve, and we feel very privileged to receive it.”

The programme will start in April 2008 and will run for 3 years.

Also EMERGE Recycling has implemented a new style of battery recycling, specifically for businesses, which will comply with the up and coming Batteries Directive, due to become law September 2008. The service is easy to use and complies with the 2005 Hazardous waste regulations. Fun and informative boxes are used to collect AAA to laptop batteries.

Contact: http://www.emergemanchester.co.uk/  0161 2238200

Monmouthshire Community Recycling Scheme
Monmouthshire Community Recycling (MCR) were delighted to find that they topped a recent Welsh Assembly survey, which identified their recycling operation as being one of the most cost effective recycling services in Wales. The Survey of Funding of Municipal Waste Management Kerbside Collection in Wales, published on 13 September 2007 examined collection costs for recycling and rubbish services in Wales.

MCR were shown to have the second lowest collection costs out of the 22 local authorities surveyed at 24p per household per week and £89.50 per tonne, and the lowest cost for collections in rural areas. 

The survey showed that source separated collections were much cheaper than co-mingled collections. Monmouthshire Community Recycling (MCR) a social enterprise run by the ECT Group in partnership with Monmouthshire Environment Trust provides a weekly black box for paper, cans, glass, textiles and foil to 28,000 households in Monmouthshire. It is also piloting a ‘Zero Waste Village’, offering comprehensive recycling services, and forming partnerships to compost and reduce what is left.

The Zero Waste Village Project in St Arvans is proving very successful in recycling nearly everything the village throws out, involving most of the residents, and changing attitudes. This wide partnership including CRN UK member MCR (Monmouthshire Community Recycling), Monmouthshire County Council and a number of local groups, was officially launched in St Arvans in June this year.  Residents are offered weekly kerbside collections of paper, glass, cans, foil, textiles, plastics, tetrapak cartons, green waste and food waste, and a local site to take any surplus recycling during the week.  In the most recent measurement 95% of the village were using these services. The residents of St Arvans have been surveyed, consulted at meetings, and given feedback on the project.  Several have signed Zero Waste pledges, and taken information back to friends and neighbours.  On one week, nearly half the village avoided putting out any rubbish at all, and in an average week as much as 80% is going to recycling or composting.

Contact: David Roman 01291 430550 admin@monrecycling.co.uk

Mid Devon Community Recycling Ltd & ECT
Congratulations to Ken Orchard of Mid Devon Community Recycling & Steve Sears of ECT who have both been selected as Social Enterprise Ambassadors as part of the Social Enterprise Ambassadors programme funded by the Cabinet Office and led by the Social Enterprise Coalition.

In November 2006, the Social Enterprise Action Plan was launched by the Chancellor to help foster a culture of social enterprise in Britain. The Social Enterprise Ambassadors Programme is a key part of this drive.
Twenty five Ambassadors were selected after a thorough recruitment process, involving a variety of stake-holders and interviews across the country.

Through the stories and experiences of some of the most inspirational social entrepreneurs in the country, the programme will help the movement to achieve more by raising awareness among key groups and attracting new entrants.  The ambassadors are passionate about their work and they want to share that passion to inspire others to use business to tackle social and environmental needs.

Their aim, as ambassadors, is to show Britain that companies with social good at their core can be successful and financially secure. They can help society flourish, offer extremely practical solutions to a wide range of social and environmental problems – as well as presenting a viable and fulfilling career choice.

Visit: http://socialenterpriseambassadors.org/index.html

WISH
CRN UK Member Wessex Independent Self Help (WISH) have been working in partnership with charity Your Choice Furniture Recycling in North Dorset to assist people who have lost their possessions in Britain's worst flooding disaster for years. Your Choice, based in Sturminster Newton have been appealing to everyone in Dorset and the Wiltshire and Somerset borders to donate unwanted furniture and white goods to send to Gloucestershire for the many flood victims whose losses are not covered by insurance. Three piece suites, sofas, dining tables, chairs and white goods will be transported from its warehouse to the flood zone through the Furniture Re-use Network.
A new partnership has evolved with E On, WISH and Your Choice. E On donated 1,000 Eco kettles which are now being used by the disadvantaged, uninsured, and those on benefits. Collectively the 1,000 households which use them will be saving a massive £50,000 per annum in electricity bills! WISH have also distributed energy saving light bulbs to the value of £86,000 and are in the process of providing free ‘Power Down’ devices which send a home computer to sleep when it is not being

Bradford Environmental Action Trust (BEAT)
BEAT in Bradford are now running a free waste exchange throughout Yorkshire & the Humber called Why Waste. It enables business waste to be reused and recycled by community organisations. A team of experts identify availability and demand for materials and match willing traders.
Why Waste is funded by Yorkshire Forward (the Regional development Agency) and ERDF. A second year of Business Reuse Funding has also enabled Why Waste to build its links with the Community Waste Network, providing more support to community organisations such as scrapstores, re-paint schemes, wood recyclers and furniture stores. The enhanced service has already seen about 50 tonnes of university furniture passed on to communities in the region, including those hit by recent floods.
Why Waste offers a great opportunity for CRN UK members in Yorkshire and the Humber to access resources for their projects.
To find out more about the service, register your organisation and list your requirements visit http://www.whywaste.org.uk/   or tel: 01274 718420

**Job vacancies on the CRN UK website**

Don't forget that the CRN UK website has job pages showing current community waste sector vacancies

www.crn.org.uk/about/jobs/main.shtml it is free for all CRN UK members to advertise their jobs here! Visit the site and enter your job details or email them to info@crn.org.uk

 

 

 
       
The Waste Paper is produced by Resource Media Limited © CRN UK 2008
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