Tuesday, June 19, 2012

Plastic Free Film Screening

Is your life too plastic? 
Join us for Bag It!

Kailua Sailboards EcoLounge
Thursday, July 12, 6-8pm
130 Kailua Road, Kailua, HI

FREE film screening, keiki crafts, and conversation. Fun for the whole family!

Hosted in partnership with Kailua Sailboards and Kayaks and Ocean Devotion Hawaii. Refreshments provided by Whole Foods Kailua.

Crafts and refreshments begin at 6pm. Film will start at 6:30 ( lasts 45 mins).

RSVP at the Facebook Event page. Dowload and share the flier here.

More about Bag It here: http://www.bagitmovie.com/
 
Bag It has been garnering awards at film festivals across the nation. What started as a documentary about plastic bags evolved into a wholesale investigation into plastics and their effect on our waterways, oceans, and even our bodies. Join the Bag It movement and decide for yourself how plastic your life will be.

Kailua Sailboards will be hosting a series of documentaries so stay tuned!

More about Ocean Devotion Hawaii. Join them for a clean up at Kailua Beach Park on July 7th, 9-11am!

Tuesday, May 8, 2012

Speak up for Community Recycling Bins and the Plastic Bag Ban

A number of important developments are in the news concerning Oahu's waste stream. You can voice your opinion to the Mayor and City Council regarding the community recycling bin program and the bill to ban plastic bags. Save our incentives for Waste Reduction!

Are you keeping up with Oahu's latest trashy developments?
  1. A debate is brewing about where to place Oahu's next landfill and the growth of HPOWER. But where is the public discussion about waste reduction and recycling? 
  2. The City and County of Honolulu will be placing signs on community recycling bins around Oahu this weekend to notify the public that it is ending its white community bins program and renewing efforts to expand curbside and condo recycling. How will the end of the community bins affect you or your school? How can we improve our community recycling efforts?  
  3. The Honolulu City Council APPROVED Bill 10 last week that would prohibit businesses from providing nonbiodegradable plastic bags to their customers at the point of sale effective July 1, 2015 IF the mayor signs the bill.
Get involved and let your voice be heard... 
 *Save Community Recycling Bins
Please send in your support to the Honolulu City Council this morning to help keep Recycling at your school and/or keep the allocation of funding toward Recycling programs at schools throughout the island.

Here's some helpful tips from our partner Kanu Hawaii.
If the Community Recycling program ends, schools will lose an important source of community-supported funding. Since the start of the program, participating schools have received more than $1 million in returns for the cardboard, paper, and HI-5's collected in these bins. Many schools host monthly recycling drives that student activities clubs and after school programs rely on for funding.
  • Ending the recycling program sends the wrong message to the next generation of student stewards of the environment who have been learning and practicing recycling in their classrooms and homes.
  • The Community Recycling Bins are an important community resource. Have you used the white bins? Tell them why.
  • The White Bins provide community-supported funding for crucial after school programs, sports, and student clubs. This funding is especially important during a time when many creative and active programs in school are being cut from the curriculum due to budget constraints.
  • Thank them for their leadership and willingness to send a strong message that the City and County of Honolulu supports student and community efforts to reduce waste and is committed to recycling.
  • This budget allocation has support from Ann Kobayashi, chair of the Budget Committee, and Ernie Martin, chair of the City Council. They need to hear that the community supports this program in order to pass the amendment. Can you take 2 minutes now to send them an email?

    Testify in person this Thursday, May 10th at 9:00 am in the Council’s Committee Room in Honolulu Hale. Testimony can be faxed to 768-3827 or emailed above.  
    Link to Bill 14, CD1, FD1. Amendment List 22 under Refuse Collection and Disposal (third amendment from the top of the page)

    *Send Bag Ban Letters of Support to Mayor Carlisle by Wednesday!
    Mayor Carlisle said he'd review the bill and accept public input before making a decision on whether to sign it. Send a letter to Mayor Carlisle, urging him to sign the bill into law. Send your letter via fax 808-768-4242 or email mayor@honolulu.gov, or call the Mayor's office at 808-768-4141.

    Here is a sample letter you can use and personalize:  
    SUBJECT: Plastic Bag Ban, Bill 10 - SUPPORT
    Dear Honorable Mayor Carlisle, 
             Please support and sign into law Bill 10, an ordinance to prohibit businesses from providing nonbiodegradable plastic bags to their customers at the point of sale. Plastic ocean pollution is a global issue, with regional solutions. Hawaii's ocean-based economy is threatened by plastic bags that litter our beaches and streets and harm marine wildlife.
             Reducing single-use plastics is of utmost importance for the benefit our island and passage of this bill will positively impact the people, economy, wildlife, and environment of Hawaii.
          Maui, Kauai, and most recently Hawaii Counties have already passed ordinances to move towards this, and it's time for Honolulu County to do the same.
          Please sign Bill 10 to keep Honolulu green. Thank you for your leadership on this issue.
    Sincerely,
    NAME, ADDRESS, EMAIL, PHONE 

    Wednesday, April 25, 2012

    Honolulu Passes Ban on Plastic Bags!

    The Honolulu City Council APPROVED Bill 10 today to ban plastic shopping bags effective July 1, 2015 if the mayor signs the bill.
    www.khon2.com
    Plastic shopping bags will soon be a thing of the past on Oahu. The Honolulu City Council approved a bill Wednesday to ban plastic shopping bags effective July 1, 2015.
     
    www.civilbeat.com
    If mayor signs bill, city will join three other counties.

    Tuesday, April 17, 2012

    Groundhog Day: Let's rethink the plastic bag bill saga

    Aloha gang, I wanted share a post from my Kanu Hawaii blog last week...Best, Rachel

    All this nonsense and redirecting on the bag bills is disheartening to many. Just like with land rights/zoning/development bills in the County and State this year, legislators are not listening despite widespread public support, even outcry. It's getting to be like the film "Groundhog Day" to those of us who have worked so hard on the issue.

    If you are interested in the latest news on the State and County level bag bills check here with Civil Beat and here with Sierra Club. Be warned, it is bewildering. But there are still things you can do to help the fight. Sample testimony here...

    At Kanu Hawaii, we have done a good deal of research on plastics and bag related bills.
    No matter how much research we do, there are limits to our reasoned arguments, facts, and figures. For one, the "fee" idea elicits a lot of emotion because it makes many automatically think "tax." As I write in the piece linked above the price of bags is buried in your purchase price and in your taxes for litter clean up already. The next understandable retort is "What about "biodegradable" plastic?" Well, I'm very sorry to explain that biodegradable and compostable plastic is a scam and carries misinformation, just like those plant bottles by Coca-Cola. Look, film plastic is very nasty, expensive, and difficult to recycle. And biodegradable plastic requires an industrial composter. It will not just melt away to nothing in your yard or at the landfill. And it will certainly still pose a threat to our marine environment. Further, putting plant based- or mixed-plastic in the recycling bin totally screws up the chemistry of the recycling chain based on the 1-7 classification numbers. And these products still require oil and water resources to make and move.

    That said, there are some consquences to debate. What about the environmental impact of paper bags? How will this effect our use of other materials for trash bags? There is still research, education, and work to be done to offer the best alternatives. (Yes, I'm talking to those of you who keep asking what they will do with their dog poo. Rethink. Rethink your bread and produce bags, newspapers, compost pits.)
    For me, growing the personal commitment to this issue remains a key element. Bringing your own bag is so easy and so vital. Arguably, you can't just legislate and hope to change the way all people look at the world. We still have work to do to get Oahu on board with a positive message. I'm preaching to the choir here, so I invite you to comment below on how we can move in new directions to build a positive and effective campaign.

    For starters, I invite you to join a beach clean-up. After attending and organizing dozens of beach clean-ups, I'll let you in on a little secret: it's not (just) about cleaning the beach. If picking up an overflowing bag full of bottle caps, lighters, cigarette butts, and fishing gear doesn't change the way you look at what you buy and what you throw away, you are not paying attention. With Kokua Hawaii Foundation, we host 100s of children at our clean ups. The kids grasp it immediately and feel so much pride in bringing their own water bottle or shopping bag. So come on adults, time to step up.
    You can join in a clean up on the Windward side the next two Sundays, 4/15 in Kailua and 4/22 for Earth Day at Mokapu'u Meadows. Details here...I'd love to see you and your whole family there.