By Jim Johnson

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Waste and Recycling News- Roger Groen

So there was a time in my life when I was convinced I would stop working once I hit retirement age. Even dreamed about maybe kicking back at age 62, if everything worked out.

That's easy to say when you are in your 20s.

My, how things have changed.

Having children later in life -- and children who will go to college even later in life -- will do that to you. But seeing what others have gone through once they retire also can have a huge impact.

Meet Roger Groen, still doing work that would wear out somebody literally half is age.

Groen is a garbage man through and through. Doesn't know what else to do with himself, even at age 78.

If Dick Clark was the world's oldest teenager, then Groen might be the country's oldest garbage man. He's not sure, but doesn't know of anyone else doing what he does at his age.

Groen is a pretty humble guy. Most trash men are. It just comes with the territory. He's happy with a life that sees him getting to bed by 8 p.m. or so and waking up at around 3 a.m.

Those trash collection shifts still come early for Groen at GTI Inc. of Blue Island, Ill., where he works for his two sons.

His is certainly not a life of leisure, but it's one that he enjoys. The exercise of being on the route 5½ days a week keeps him healthy, he said.

Check out Groen's story in the latest print edition of Waste & Recycling News and online here.

Groen, for his part, does not know how much longer he'll keep collecting trash, but he has no plans to slow down. Sixty-three years and counting.

He's a guy who doesn't need to do the work for the money – a successful entrepreneur who has built and sold two other trash companies during his career. His children have tried to get him to slow down. But there's a need to keep going, and he so does.

All too often, you hear about folks who pass away not long after they retire. The theory for some is that they couldn't find anything to replace what they had in their work life.

As for me, I don't plan on continuing to write when I hit retirement age. I'll be doing something completely different, whatever that may be.

And I'm already starting to practice.

"Welcome to Wal-Mart."


 
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Former Greenwich resident Briggs Baugh, who recently won the Recycling Pioneer award from the Connecticut Recyclers Coalition for his decades of service, is seen at his home in Stamford. Baugh, who makes sculptures out of recyclables, was the first chairman of the Greenwich Recycling Advisory Board.
Though nearly four decades have passed since then-Greenwich resident Briggs Baugh spearheaded the town's recycling program, he said his friends still hail him as the uncontested "garbage czar."

Settling into his armchair amid clutter of a week's recyclable goods awaiting pickup, the bespectacled Baugh, now living in Stamford, recounted Earth Day 1970 as the genesis of his commitment to the environment. At the request of the first selectman, he coordinated a humble volunteer effort that year to recycle cans and paper goods in collaboration with Greenwich High School, then translated it into a mission for town recycling.

"The thing about pioneers is that, when you're ahead of the pack, you get arrows in your back," said Baugh. "When I started advocating for recycling, my friends thought I was a nutcase because recycling hadn't yet appeared on the scene."

Though his labors to develop a recycling program were a "frequent uphill battle," said Mary Hull, executive director of Greenwich Green & Clean and a longtime friend, Baugh eventually helped his hometown become one of the state's best recycling communities.

The Connecticut Recyclers Coalition, which educates and advocates for improved recycling, recently honored Baugh's achievements with its Recycling Pioneer award.

"He was very creative and ahead of his time," Hull said. "He was really an innovator who was doing stuff that no one had thought of before. People said recycling would never happen, but he got people excited about the future."

One of his most significant contributions was his formation of the Greenwich Recycling Advisory Board, which created a drop-off center for recyclables and continues as an advocate for the town's environment. He served as its first chairman and published its quarterly newsletter, "GRAB Bag," which explained the process of recycling after 1987 state legislation made it mandatory. He also negotiated a deal with Marcal Paper Mills to form a mixed paper drive that saved the town over $1 million, he said.

"Greenwich has tended to be a forerunner in recycling," said current board Chairman Sally Davies, who cited Baugh as a driving force behind innovation in the town's recycling. "One of the amazing things about Briggs is that he is as excited about recycling as he was 40 years ago. He has such enthusiasm."

The town's recycling program now continues to modernize, having switched last August to a single-stream system in which all recyclable goods are mixed into a collection truck and sorted at a resource recovery facility.

Patrick Collins, assistant superintendent at the Holly Hill facility, said single-stream has nearly doubled recycling in Greenwich -- 977 tons were collected from blue bins this February, compared to 527 tons in February 2011.

Baugh said he is heartened by how his successors have continued his mission of sustainable living. "There is a greater appreciation for the treasure of our planet."

Baugh exercises his enthusiasm for recycling at home by leaf composting in his backyard and creating art from recycled bottle caps.

"At his house, you can't eat at his dining room table because it is full of recycled products that he doesn't want to throw away," Hull said, laughing.

While Baugh never anticipated becoming a leader in Greenwich recycling, he said he eagerly took on the role when he realized that his plans had the potential to significantly reduce waste and do a service to the environment.

"When there's a new idea, somebody has to be a voice for it," Baugh said.


Read more: http://www.stamfordadvocate.com/local/article/Garbage-Czar-Greenwich-native-a-recycling-3547203.php#ixzz1uTiDvRNo 
 
Nov. 30 -- The General Motor’s Fort Wayne Assembly Plant in Indiana now diverts all of its waste from landfills.The facility is GM´s first assembly plant to reach to that goal, according to the News-Sentinel newspaper in Fort Wayne.

GM recycles around 92% of their waste worldwide, but the company still generates 2.5 million tons of waste. That’s enough to fill the beds of 6.8 million pick-up trucks, the paper reported.

Recycling efforts at the Fort Wayne plant generated $2 million in revenue in 2010 while also saving $1 million by using methane power from a landfill to power several boilers.

"We´ve always looked at Fort Wayne as being progressive and innovative," said John Bradburn, GM´s manager of waste-reduction efforts. "People don´t want to be wasteful. It´s really about finding innovative ways to get things done."

Article From: http://www.wasterecyclingnews.com/corporate_sustainability/corporate-sustainability.html?id=1322665763
 

Article by By Lois Courchaine
Posted 11-22-11

Last month, Gov. Jerry Brown signed a bill into law establishing a new California State goal of reducing solid waste going to landfills by 75 percent by the year 2020. Currently, municipalities are required to reduce, reuse or recycle a minimum of 50 percent of their trash.

Some may argue the merits of this new law. But one thing is for sure -- here in the Golden State we are shifting away from the old standard solid waste management systems, like landfilling, to newer ways of thinking about how we dispose of materials. For me, having chosen to make a career out of dealing with the way people discard their "waste" has been a challenging and fascinating time. It seems more people are becoming aware of the importance of their choices, both at the beginning of waste cycle (purchasing a particular product) and at the end (discarding a product or its packaging). Hence, the large increase in "environmentally preferable" products showing up on retailers' shelves, well as the increase in recycling we're seeing. In 2010, residents and businesses in Alamo, Blackhawk, Danville, Diablo, Lafayette, Moraga, Orinda and Walnut Creek together recycled 58 percent of their waste, compared to 51 percent in 2007.

It's clear that Californians are trying to steer away from landfilling and shift their efforts to "resource recovery." It's also clear that shift will, undoubtedly, increase costs for solid waste services.

Why? You would think that with all the recycling going on, the companies recovering and selling those materials would naturally be operating at a hefty profit. Let me explain why this is seldom true, by way of an example. An individual home or business owner's garbage is collected at least once per week. That garbage is taken from their property to the Martinez Transfer Station, where it is commingled with other people's waste and put into very large truck. That truck then heads off to Keller Canyon Landfill adjacent to Pittsburg, where the trash is buried, and will probably never see the light of day again. So that means two trucks and about four employees were involved in the landfill "transaction."

The recycling process is very different...

To read more from this article click this linkhttp://www.insidebayarea.com/my-town/ci_19391428