Take a Trashy Trip
Visit your local landfill, recycling center or transfer station
with your parents, school, or group. Get to know what’s recyclable
in your community and what happens to your trash after the garbage
truck takes it away. Ask lots of questions. Recycling is different
in different places, so knowing your local rules is an important
first step. It might be a little smelly, but it’s worth it!
Don’t Be a Litterbug
We all make trash everyday. Make sure that your trash always goes
in the proper place – a trash can, of course! Dropping trash on the
ground is littering, and it doesn’t just make a place look ugly. It
hurts the environment by polluting the land and water, and that
affects all of us, including animals that can mistake litter for
food or get tangled up in trash. Stopping litter is easy – it begins
with you.
Reuse
It’s like recycling, only better. So, what do you do with a can
or bottle or book or ANYTHING when you’re finished with it? The
absolute best thing you can do is to reuse things so that they stay
out of the trash. Things like drink bottles and grocery bags can be
refilled. Books and magazines can be reused as art projects or gift
wrap. Old toys or electronics can be donated to a charity that will
give them to someone else. Be creative – the only limit is your
imagination!
Know Your Numbers
Look closely for the recycling symbol (three arrows going in a
circle) on plastic bottles, packages or containers. Plastic items
that have a number “1” or “2” in the middle of the symbol are the
easiest to recycle, and should be accepted by almost every recycler.
Some communities require that your plastic bottles have a “neck,” so
know your local rules (see #1).
Can It!
Metals are among the most valuable materials for recycling.
Aluminum and steel cans are always welcomed by recyclers, and most
metals can be recycled infinitely (that means over and over again,
forever) with no loss of quality.
Look Beyond the Daily Paper
Paper and cardboard are America’s most-recycled materials, and
between the classroom and homework, kids use a lot of paper! In
addition to newspaper recycling, most communities will accept
cardboard (especially the corrugated or “wavy in the middle” kind),
magazines, junk mail, catalogues, and phone books. But hold on to
your comic books and baseball cards. They might be worth something
someday.
Make Recycling Easy on the Road
Ask you parents to keep two bags in your car or truck to contain
your family’s trash - one bag for garbage, and one for recyclables.
Pre-sorting on the road makes it easier to move your recyclables to
the proper containers once you get to where you’re going.
Improve Your Neighborhood with a Cleanup Event
Clean neighborhoods are better places for everyone to live, work,
shop and play. Join or organize a local cleanup event, and be sure
to sort the recyclables you pick up. You’ll be amazed at what a
difference a little effort can make.
Teach Your Parents Well
Let’s face it, Mom and Dad might have learned about recycling way
back in the 1990’s. Things have changed a lot since then! Keep your
family updated on what you learn about recycling, waste and trash.
Talk with them about global warming. Parents can learn a lot from
kids, so be sure to set a good example for them.
Tell the World What you Think
Have something to say? Make a poster about litter or
recycling, or make a video about trash. Write a letter to your local
newspaper about an environmental issue that you care about. Hey, you
can’t protect the planet all by yourself. “Getting the word out”
shows that you care, and can get other people to think about what’s
important to kids. Speak up!