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Big Brother Is Watching You!

Started by Lloyd Danforth, May 06, 2010, 09:11 PM NHFT

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Lloyd Danforth

He's over there. Near the back door. In the yellow box.......................


New recycling bins with tracking chips coming to Alexandria
By: Markham Heid
Examiner Staff Writer
May 6, 2010

Alexandria residents soon will have to pay for larger home recycling bins featuring built-in monitoring devices.

The City Council added a mandatory $9 charge to its residents' annual waste collection fee.

That cash -- roughly $180,000 collected from 19,000 residents-- will pay for new larger recycling carts equipped with computer microchips, which will allow the city to keep tabs on its bins and track resident participation in the city's recycling program.

"If you know who's participating in the programs, you can focus your education and outreach to those who are not participating," said Stacy Herring, Alexandria's recycling coordinator.

Rich Baier, Alexandria's environmental services program director, said the city will use direct mailing campaigns and public presentations to target neighborhoods -- not individuals -- that lag when it comes to recycling.

"We're just trying to get the biggest bang where we need it for the buck," Baier said. "We don't want to get into exactly what people are recycling."

The new carts will come in sizes ranging form 25 to 65 gallons, and will sport wheels and lids. While the $9 charge is mandatory, residents may keep their old 18-gallon bins if they so choose.

Councilman Frank Fannon, the lone City Council member to oppose the new recycling bins, said he was against increased government spending, not recycling.

    A a glance 

    »  Cost to Alexandria residents: Roughly $180,000, or about $9 per bin

    »  Bin size: Ranges from 25 to 65 gallons, replacing the old 18-gallon bins

    »  Time frame for implementation: August or September

    »  Alexandria's current recycling rate: About 29 percent

    »  Alexandria's target: 35 percent

    »  Expected recycling rate increase using new bins: At least 2 percent

    Source: Alexandria Department of Transportation and Environmental Services

"I thought this was just another fee that we didn't have to pass on to the residents," he said.

Herring said the city conducted a survey among Old Town residents last May that found 60 percent wanted larger bins. She also said other jurisdictions had implemented bigger recycling bins and had seen recycling rates shoot up as a result.

"The larger the container, the more people recycle," Herring said, citing a study conducted by Eureka Recycling, a Minnesota nonprofit organization that promotes recycling.

Alexandria recently reported a 29 percent recycling rate to the state. Virginia requires most localities to recycle 25 percent of its waste, while the Environmental Protection Agency advocates a 35 percent target.

Baier said larger bins increase recycling rates because residents tend to throw their excess recyclables into regular trash cans once their recycling bins fill up.

He also said litter was a problem with the current bins, which don't have lids to prevent light materials from blowing out into area neighborhoods.

Venishka Hurdle, who coordinates recycling education programs in Arlington, said the county implemented larger, tracking-chip loaded recycling bins last year and saw the curbside recycling rate jump roughly 24 percent. The county's overall recycling rate is about 40 percent, she said.

"They've been a huge success," Hurdle said of the new bins. "Residents love them, and they recycle more materials as well."

Hurdle said Arlington County is collecting data from the bins' microchips, but had not yet used that data to improve recycling outreach and education programs.

Alexandria residents can expect to see their waste collection fees jump up in July, and likely will receive their new bins this summer.

Read more at the Washington Examiner: http://www.washingtonexaminer.com/local/New-recycling-bins-with-tracking-chips-coming-to-Alexandria-92880219.html#ixzz0nCnlZKGP


Kat Kanning

Isn't this what Katherine Albrect's been warning about?

Lloyd Danforth


Ogre

Incredible, isn't it? I can see this leading to people stealing other people's trash, just so they can get the governmentally-approved "correct" amount of recycling in their own trash. Because otherwise, they will be jailed for not using the bin enough. It just shows how far from freedom this country truly is.

Heck, in my town, they recently took a poll of people related to recycling. Now in my area, it costs the government money to recycle. They have to pay for bins and they have to literally pay someone to take the recycling away. At the same time, there is a private company here that will give you a bin and they will take your recycling away FOR FREE. So, government runs a poll of our town (20K people) and finds that few want to recycle, but 70% think that everyone should PAY so that those who want to recycle can. And no, there's not a damn thing anyone can do about it here, because the only option to stop funding this is to not pay your property taxes -- which will get you thrown in jail forever.

Damn, I just want freedom. Too bad that its too much to ask for.

Kat Kanning

What about people like me who don't buy much packaged food, so no recycling?  :o

Ogre


Jim Johnson