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- Where Do I Recycle THIS?
by Margie Suozzo Summer is over and the kids are back in school. Time to purge! I recently received an email from a friend in Los Altos who had done a bit of an “excavation” in her house. The kids were back in school and she had time to clear out rooms and closets of stuff they no longer wanted/needed. But she wanted to make sure that as little as possible of that stuff went to the landfill. THANK YOU! Together we made a plan for where to recycle her miscellaneous items: Old Shoes Source: torange.biz A Runner’s Mind in Los Altos has a bin at the back of the store, inside the door, for old shoes and other sporting equipment. How convenient! Old Blue Jeans DesignX accepts some denim and other fabrics in good condition. The company, which emphasizes sustainability, uses the material for its after school and summer session “upcycling” classes for kids. DesignX was founded by a local Los Altos mom who hails from the fashion industry. You can contact DesignX here. Old Sheets GreenTown Los Altos’ Waste Reduction Team uses old sheets and other cotton fabric to make produce bags to replace plastic produce bags. Cell Phones Source: flickr.com Target collects recyclables at the front of their store. One bin is for old cell phones and ink jet cartridges. Make sure to remove the SIM card and factory reset so your data doesn’t go with your phone. Mailer Pouches Some can be recycled at store drop off locations. In particular the white and blue packages from Amazon. Find the closest store drop-off location here. You can also drop off clean and dry plastic bread bags, cereal inserts, ziplock bags, etc. at these locations. Egg Cartons and Berry Baskets If you find you have been stockpiling old egg cartons and berry baskets because you just can’t throw them out, we have good news. Several farmers at the Los Altos and Mountain View farmers market take used egg cartons and virtually all of the berry farmers accept plastic berry baskets for reuse. Many berry farmers are also switching to fully biodegradable cardboard boxes, too. Woo hoo. The GreenTown Waste Reduction team is happy to help identify how you can reduce the environmental impact of “KonMari-ing” your home. In addition, here are a few good resources you may want to consult: City of Sunnyvale’s “How to Get Rid of Anything” website. A great source of info on where to recycle things locally. Some of the drop off locations, such as the SMARTStation, however, are not applicable to Los Altos and Los Altos Hills residents. Hope Services (collects good condition clothing, housewares, and electronics, etc. to benefit local developmentally disabled adults) Local recycling companies GreenWaste What Goes Where? Blue Cart(Los Altos Hills) Mission Trail Waste Systems residential service guide (Los Altos residents) Earth911.org. Sometimes helpful. Here you can search by material for places that recycle that material within your zipcode or nearby. Let us know if our Waste Reduction team can help you figure out where to recycle ANYTHING! For more information, visit our website here.
- Welcome Our 2019 Interns! Woohoo!
Every year, GreenTown Los Altos gets help in accomplishing our mission from students whose hearts are in environmental change for the better. Our 2019 interns are as impressive as ever: (in alphabetical order) Mahita Bobba is a rising Senior at Los Altos High School. She’s passionate about political science, business, and environmental justice. She’s a student leader and youth activist, and is super excited to intern for GreenTown Los Altos and help create a sustainable community. Lexie Crilley is a rising senior at Los Altos High School, a competitive swimmer, and a still-learning pianist. Her favorite subjects are biology and English, as she loves reading, writing, and learning about all aspects of science. In her free time, she enjoys art and photography, as well as spending time in nature by hiking, biking and exploring. She’s passionate about protecting the environment and is excited to be a part of GreenTown Los Altos! Ellen Hu is a rising senior at Summit Denali w They’ll be working on a variety of projects with each intern focusing on one capstone project – Mahita Bobba will focus on our effort to stop the use of gas-powered leaf blowers Lexie Crilley will focus on reducing waste, especially plastic waste Ellen Hu will work on our campaign to Plant 500 Trees by Arbor Day 2020 Chloe Olsen is on her way to Berkeley and will focus on our Eating Healthy, Eating Greencampaign. The internship program runs for 10 weeks in July and August, and we look forward to the energy and excitement that these students bring to GreenTown.
- How You Can Help “Clear” The Air!
Do you care about clean air?? If so, Greentown Los Altos has an easy way for you to do your part. Help GreenTown eliminate gas-powered leaf blowers from the City of Los Altos. This polluting equipment does more damage than most people realize. According to the Bay Area Air Quality Management District, “For the best-selling commercial leaf blower, one hour of operation emits smog-forming pollution comparable to driving a 2017 Toyota Camry about 1100 miles, or approximately the distance from Los Angeles to Denver.” In order to educate people, we have printed information to distribute to residents and landscape providers. If you hand a message to the blower operator when you see a gas-powered leaf blower in use, you can help us make a difference. To get a copy, send an email and we will deliver materials to your home. Good news from our code enforcement officer: gas leaf blowers are now on the list of complaints that can be emailed to the City on the City Code Enforcement complaint form on this page. Info on leaf blowers. Leaf-Blower-Ban-04-21-2019 Letter to gardeners in English English letter to gardeners Letter to gardeners in Spanish is below. Spanish letter to gardeners Here’s what the letter says: Landscape Service Provider, Using a gas leaf blower is prohibited in Los Altos. Los Altos Municipal Code 6.16.070 prohibits the use of gasoline powered leaf blowers at all times. The operator of the gas-powered leaf blower will receive an Administrative Citation of the following amounts. 1st violation in 12-month period – $100 2nd violation in a 12-month period – $200 Additional violations in a 12-month period – $500 Gas leaf blowers create lots of pollution and they can make you sick. They make the air unhealthy for many hours after the blower is used. ——————– Proveedor de servicios de jardinería, En Los Altos, es prohibido usar un soplador de hojas a gas. El código municipal 6.16.070 de Los Altos prohíbe el uso de sopladores de hojas a gasolina en todo momento. El operador del soplador de hojas a gas recibirá una citación administrativa (multa) de las siguientes cantidades. Primera violación en un período de 12 meses – $ 100 Segunda violación en un período de 12 meses – $ 200 Violaciones adicionales en un período de 12 meses – $ 500 Los sopladores de hojas de gas generan mucha contaminación y pueden enfermar a la gente. Hacen que el aire no sea saludable durante muchas horas después de que se usa el soplador.
- Keep Calm and Compost
~Chloe Olsen The Los Altos Farmers’ Market is a much anticipated time of the year, where family and friends can come together every Thursday during the summer to try some of the best food and drink in the Bay Area. From fresh organic fruits and veggies to colorful snow-cones and gourmet take-out, it is an event where adults and kids alike can find just about anything to suit their fancy. While it may not be difficult to find amazing food, the harder part surprisingly comes after: deciding where to put any wrappers, plastic utensils, or leftover scraps. That’s where GreenTown comes in! You can find us by the waste stations, which consist of recycling, compost, and landfill bins, where we help direct you on where to put the remainder of your meal and drink. Additionally, there are signs on the front of each bin that list which items go where. Some examples include: → Recycling: Plastics 1-7 (usually listed on the bottom of item with a recycling symbol and the number in the middle) Glass Foil → Compost Food Food-soiled paper Compostable cups (with liquid) → Landfill Plastic utensils (this one is surprising!) Foam containers By the end of our first night at the Market, we were very happy with what we saw! The most amount of waste was in compost which was filled to the very top, destroying the competition. Recycling came in second and took up about ¼ of the bin. The amount of landfill was minimal and was less than ¼ full. Throughout the Farmers’ Market, we noticed that many people were apt to looking to put their waste in either landfill or recycling first, but then saw the signs or received instruction from us and put it in the correct bin. Most people are confused with where to put their waste, so don’t worry–you are not alone! For some more guidance, here is a comprehensive list of where other items can be composted, recycled, or put in landfill. The fact that this much waste was composted is exciting. Not only does that mean less landfill, but composting adds nutrients to the soil without the use of chemical fertilizers, prevents soil erosion, and reduces the amount of methane by preventing organic material from rotting in landfills without oxygen (a greenhouse gas that is 70 times more powerful than carbon dioxide). The more composting, the better! Being on the lookout for compost bins is just one way you can help. You can also compost in your own backyard to minimize food waste, help your plants, and protect the environment! If you are interested, check out this link that shows you the types of composting, what foods to compost, and the steps to take to start your own composting at home. So next time you are at the Farmers’ Market, finished with your incredible meal and ready to throw away your leftovers, look to the green bin first! Your environment will thank you for it.
- Another Great Solstice Ride
~Gary Hedden The ride begins GreenTown led 30 cyclists on this year’s Summer Solstice Night Bike Ride. We had a good group of riders including families, members of the Los Altos High School Green Team, and one couple from San Jose. The weather was perfect as we headed from Peet’s on State Street, turned north on Los Altos Avenue, and continued to the Palo Alto Baylands Nature Preserve. The tide was up, there were lots of shorebirds, and the sunset was bright and beautiful. Leaving Baylands, we turned on our bike lights, headed home by way of the Stevens Creek Trail and made it back to Los Altos by about 9:30. It was dark but we all agreed it was a fun ride and it’s fun riding in the dark! Fun times! The group at sunset
- Outputs, Outcomes
~by Gary Hedden Grace Hammond, behind the podium, at the workshop Outputs vs. Outcomes and Why It Matters. How do you measure success? It’s important. We need to know if what we are doing is working. We need to know if all the effort is worth it. A workshop hosted by the Silicon Valley Council of Nonprofits offered some insight. GreenTown was there and we learned that the first step is to pick our goals. What is our objective and how will meeting the objective help us achieve our mission? Our presenter, Grace Hammond, hao two words for us to help explain the process. Outputs and Outcomes. Outputs are the “how” and they should be SMART – specific, measurable, attainable, relevant and time-limited. Outcomes are the “impact” and good outcomes will advance the mission. She offered an example to illustrate the concept. A health care organization with the mission that “no child shall die from a preventable disease” could have an output that they will inoculate 10,000 kids in Ghana in the next year to reduce polio by 75%. It’s very specific, can be measured, can likely be achieved, should reduce deaths and has a time limit of one year. After one year, the outcome is evaluated. Did it achieve the expected result? Did it advance the mission by reducing childhood deaths? She had other examples, but the point she made to the nonprofit organizations in the room, and there were about 40 participants representing a wide variety of groups, is that we should always measure the outcomes of our activities and test the results against our mission statement. GreenTown does that. With our anti-idling program, we surveyed driver behavior, then we began a program at Los Altos High School that included signage in the drop-off/pick-up areas, driver education, and stickers to remind folks to do the right thing. It worked! A follow-up survey showed a nearly 80% reduction in idling. That is the kind of information that our supporters/donors expect and it is important to our volunteers too. By measuring outcomes we really know we are accomplishing good things, and that’s an inspiring motivator.
- Healthy Food, Healthy Planet
~by Gary Hedden Ocean Robbins speaking. Ocean Robbins doesn’t eat ice cream. His grandfather co-founded Baskin-Robbins 31 Flavors and his grandson won’t touch ice cream. We love ice cream, but it’s dairy, fat, sugar, and flavorings – not healthy Ocean told us at GreenTown’s June community forum. He then listed the ills associated with an animal-based diet, especially with animals raised by ‘factory’ farming – obesity, heart disease, diabetes, cancer, and more. How does he know that? Among other things, he cited the ‘blue zone’ communities where people live long, healthy lives and eat a simple diet without much dairy or meat. He had a very personal example too. His grandfather. Yes, the fellow who founded Baskin-Robbins was overweight, pre-diabetic, and suffering from heart disease. His family convinced him to change his diet, and he lost the excess weight, regained his health, and cut seven strokes off his golf game. The interest in diet started with Ocean’s father. As a young man, he chose to walk away from the family business. He studied yoga, got married, had a family, named his son Ocean, and wrote a book, Diet for a New America. Ocean Robbins taking questions. It’s more than our own health. Ocean told us about the harmful effects of modern agriculture – wasteful use of water, topsoil erosion, and reliance on pesticides, weed killers and fertilizers. None of this is good for the planet. The situation with farm animals is no better with the overuse of antibiotics and the mistreatment of animals. His stories of caged chickens in cramped and dirty living quarters were particularly disturbing. The answer according to Ocean is that we can make a change by ‘voting’ with our purchases. Buy organic. Buy whole grain bread, almond milk, Beyond Burgers, Impossible Burgers, and eggs from free-range chickens. And just like his father, he wrote a book to help us make the change, 31-Day Food Revolution. It will be good for us and good for the planet.
- The Anti-Idling Campaign Results Are In. And Impressive!
We have the results from the Los Altos High School Anti-Idling Campaign! With total idling observed reduced by 79%. So how’d we gather the data? We surveyed idling before and after the installation of anti-idling signs and implementation of the campaign. Which is how we observed that total idling observed was reduced by 79%. At 88%, reduction was greatest at the front pick-up crescent where signs were installed and the driver contact was easy and efficient. Reduction in the back pick up area was less significant. Showing awareness and reinforcement make a difference in action. Interested In Creating A Similar Campaign? Here’s how. What we learned about anti-idling efforts can be used for similar efforts at other schools. Install anti-idling signs in the pick-up and drop-off area(s) Include anti-idling information in messages sent home to parents Implement a short campaign distributing informational flyers to parents and stickers to students (optional) All informational materials should be in the language(s) of the recipients One big takeaway is that even simply putting up signs can make a big difference!! Just that awareness can yield changes. Besides, installing signs can be easy and inexpensive. With the benefits of reducing idling a health and environmental issue, parents can get schools on board with at the very least installing signage. Further benefits are achievable with fuller implementation of the campaign. Additionally, similar results could be achieved in public areas of the town like parking spaces on Main and State Streets and in parking lots. GreenTown Los Altos is available to help other schools as well as help public and private entities reduce vehicle idling so drop us an email and ask away!
- Introducing The Carbon Bootcamp. Cool The Planet. #OneChoiceAtATime
Introducing the Carbon Bootcamp! An easy way for us to collectively make an impact at cooling the planet by the choices we make. One choice at a time. So what is it? The Carbon Bootcamp is a program that guides you in lowering your climate impact. You’ll receive free boxes filled with gear and challenges while engaging through an interactive text messaging platform. No app to download or learn! We all know the more carbon em GreenTown Los Altos evaluated the program. Its makes it easy, compelling and (dare we say) fun to make choices in real time that add up to a massive impact by combining deep expertise in climate science with an experience you can engage with on your own time, at your own pace. In other words you do what feels comfortable to you, #OneChoiceAtATime. Best of all? GreenTown Los Altos is sponsoring the Carbon Bootcamp for the first 300 participants in Los Altos and Mountain View (zip codes 94022, 94024, 94040 and 94041). To join, all you have to do is text the word “CARBON” to the number “474747” and follow the directions. Each “session” starts June 15, July 13, August 10 and September 7. Can’t wait to hear what you think!
- A New Twist For Fighting Climate Change: Show Us The Money!
At GreenTown Los Altos we’re always looking for innovative ways to fight climate change. And we found one. The keyword is Divestment. Both Los Altos and Los Altos Hills invest monies in an array of industries. Including the fossil fuel industry. Fossil fuel companies Chevron and Exxon and many offending lenders are in our local governments’ financial portfolios. We’d like to ask that our communities stay clear of all things related to the fossil fuel businesses and are asking your help to do so. What we’d like to encourage? No more investing in fossil fuel companies. No more investing in lending institutions that fund them or to the companies themselves. The top four offending lenders who’ve funded these companies to the tune of about $500 billion in the last three years alone (source: RAN 2019) ) are Bank of America, Citibank, J.P. Morgan, and Wells Fargo. The idea to divest isn’t unique. Neighboring communities including Mtn. View, Sunnyvale, Palo Alto and Fremont all have divestment ordinances in place already. We’d be jumping on the bandwagon that makes environmental sense. Make your voice heard by writing the councils: Contact Los Altos City Council: council@losaltosca.gov Contact Los Altos Hills Council: dpadovan@losaltoshills.ca.gov
- An Additional Way To Fight Climate Change.
Want to do more to fight climate change? Here’s a simple way to make a mark. Thanks to Silicon Valley Clean Energy (SVCE), we have a carbon-free electric power supply. Let’s make it count by building on that. Quite literally. SVCE and other agencies developed amendments to what’s called the “Reach Codes” to encourage healthier, safer, emissions-free buildings. Along with that, new energy efficiency standards for California buildings come into effect Jan. 2020. These codes apply to all construction permits. They promote the installation of solar photovoltaic systems and encourage battery storage and heat pump water heaters. EVEN MORE GOOD NEWS! Los Altos’ Community Center will be all-electric. Which is where reach codes come in. Reach codes form a foundation for greener building practices by: Encouraging all-electric buildings but allow for both all-electric and mixed-fuel buildings. Buildings with gas appliances will need to be more energy-efficient but improvements will pay for themselves in lower operation and maintenance costs Amendments to the EV code will make new buildings more “ready” for EV charging and all electric buildings. Some of the benefits include that it costs less to construct than buildings with gas appliances; offers better indoor air quality; are more energy efficient and best of all reduce carbon emissions. Reach codes for buildings and EV charging stations are cost-effective while also being environmentally sound. And this summer local City Councils will consider adopting the reach codes. Which means if you want to help you can ask Los Altos and Los Altos Hills’ city councils to do their part and adopt the Reach Codes. It’s that simple. It’s not a big ask, but it’s a big reward that will be good for us all. An easy way to do your part to get us to greener living. Their emails are: Los Altos Council is council@losaltosca.gov; Los Altos Hills’ Council is dpadovan@losaltoshills.ca.gov. If you’re curious for more information visit Peninsula Reach Codes here or email GreenTown here.
- Dr. Hardy Jones Memorial Bike Ride
Sam with Egan Viking For the third year, GreenTown Los Altos led a bike ride in memory of the late Dr. Hardy Jones of Los Altos. Hardy collected scrap metal and turned it into what he liked to call “found art.” As an orthopedic surgeon, he also called it “orthopedic art,” turning broken pieces of metal into artwork. Most of the schools in town have his artwork depicting their mascot. The group at Dr. Hardy’s home We saw Bobcats at Santa Rita, an Eagle at the High School, another eagle at Almond, a Lion at Loyola and Coyotes at Covington. At each stop, Hardy’s good friend Sam Harding would tell us a story or two. Most of the pieces are unfinished, somewhat rusty metal – just the look Hardy enjoyed. The two painted ones got a touch up by Sam just this week. Gary, Jane, and Sam at the studio A special treat this year was a visit to Hardy’s studio. It was clean and well organized. Jane Bryan-Jones explained that a son-in-law and his friend have taken up metal sculpture and the studio still gets a lot of use. They cleaned it up just for us. We had a fun and informative bike ride and we hope to be back next year. ~ Gary Hedden












