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Who
would believe twelve
miles from Downtown
Boston in two of the
most affluent towns
in Massachusetts,
residents cheerfully
line up on Saturdays
to recycle and dispose
of their household
waste? “It’s
a point of pride to
take your stuff to
the dump,” says
Weston resident Bill
Symonds. “Everyone
does it.” Motivated
by concern for the
planet and a sense
of individual responsibility,
Wellesley and Weston
residents sort, rinse,
deposit, and share
recyclable and reusable
items.
Friends
of Recycling
In
the mid-1980s, Frank
Hays and Jim Olsen
joined forces to establish
Wellesley’s
Friends of Recycling
(FOR), a not-for-profit
that promotes awareness
of the 3 R’s:
Reduce, Reuse, Recycle.
Wellesley’s
Department of Public
Works (DPW) director
then was Pat Berdan,
who as a World War
II Navy veteran had
witnessed how recycling
had helped the war
effort. Today FOR
continues to educate
and build awareness
in the community while
supporting reuse at
Wellesley’s
RDF, the Recycling
and Disposal Facility
of the Department
of Public Works. Located
at 199 Great Plain
Avenue, the RDF welcomes
Wellesley residents
with colorful signage
and a loop layout
that brings visitors
first to the recycling
bays, then to the
Reusables Area and
other specialized
drop-off sections,
and finally to disposal.
“Recycling
is one of my passions,” says
FOR president Frank
Hays. “With
very little effort,
people can make a
difference. Wellesley
is on the map in waste
management around
the world, with visitors
from China, Japan,
and Europe.” With
FOR, recycling is
fun. FOR has held
recycling fairs with
a flea market, music,
and booths, and has
created floats made
entirely from RDF
items for Wellesley’s
Wonderful Weekend
Veterans’ Parade
in 2007 and 2008. “Our
holiday Yankee Swap
is the best ever,” says
Joany Sasso, FOR volunteer
coordinator. “All
gifts come from RDF
reusables, and we
have all year to hunt
for the perfect item.”
Wellesley
recycling requires
detailed sorting within
separate collection
bins, a specific place,
for example, for frosted
or translucent plastic
bottles, clear or
colored plastic bottles,
plastic non-bottles,
and plastic bags.
In the reuse section,
metals are separated
into aluminum, copper,
and metal/light iron.
Detailed signage shows
samples of what is
recyclable and which
items are excluded,
but there’s
a learning curve in
knowing what goes
where. It’s
important not to contaminate
categories.
Take
and Leave
In
2005, Wellesley DPW
budget cuts targeted
staff who maintained
the reusables area
and it had to close.
Sasso proposed that
townspeople organize
themselves to staff “Take
and Leave.” Now
in its fifth season,
FOR volunteers in
shifts of two to six
workers are present
whenever the RDF is
open. Saturdays are
the busiest day of
the week, when the
RDF is open from 7:00
am until 4:45 pm.
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Wellesley’s
Friends of Recycling
volunteers created
floats made entirely
from RDF items
for Wellesley’s
Wonderful Weekend
Veterans’ Parades
in 2007 and
2008.
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Take
and Leave is open
to Wellesley residents
with an RDF permit
sticker. These require
proof of residency
but are free. “Our
mission is to keep
the area safe and
coordinated and to
be helpful to people
coming to the Take
and Leave,” Sasso
says. “We
work as a team with
RDF staff; it’s
very rewarding.”
Reusables
include sporting goods,
furniture, children’s
toys and games, gardening
tools, household items,
and electronics including
televisions and computers.
FOR volunteers help
townspeople with the
guidelines, explaining,
for example, that
for health reasons
mattresses and box
springs have to be
discarded. Sasso describes
Take and Leave as “a
mini-Home Depot.” Families
come for parts for
school projects, dorm
or apartment furnishings,
and baby furniture
for visiting grandchildren.
She says, “We
have even saved toilets
for a school theater
production.”
Take
and Leave is open
rain or shine, April
through November,
and on the very first
Saturday the tables
are full. “You
name it; we’ve
had everything come
in,” says
Priscilla Messing,
FOR marketing and
data coordinator,
as people arrive with
items they have stored
all winter. Three
years ago the DPW
installed a fabric
roof structure to
protect items from
the weather. “Anything
good doesn’t
last long,” Sasso
says.
Recycling
Isn’t
New
Throughout
history, people have
reused materials like
metals, ash, and rags,
especially when resources
were scarce. Frugality
may have characterized
America through the
mid-19th century,
but more recently
our tendency to acquire
has been fueled by
prosperity, abundant
supplies of inexpensive
goods, and built-in
obsolescence. Municipal
and industrial waste
streams have grown
in response. As environmental
awareness blossomed
in the 1970s and 1980s,
citizen activists
in Weston and Wellesley
jumped into recycling
and pressed town officials
to give recycling
an important place
in the transfer stations
coming online.
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Wellesley’s
Friends
of Recycling
volunteers
work as
a team with
the RDF
staff.
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State
and federal regulations
have grown increasingly
stringent. Recycling
mandates apply to
materials like newspapers,
cardboard, glass,
tin cans, rigid plastics,
and yard waste. In
1983 Massachusetts
implemented the Beverage
Container Recovery
Law, or “Bottle
Bill,” that
attached a five-cent
per bottle deposit
to the purchase of
beer, soft drinks,
and mineral water.
An update of the Mass.
Bottle Bill HB3515/SB
1480 that will impose
a 10-cent deposit
on today’s
popular sport drinks,
flavored teas, and
bottled water is pending.
To limit the contamination
of land and water
by the precipitation
of mercury, items
like glass thermometers,
old thermostats, and
fluorescent tubes
must be deposited
in a special section.
Handle them very carefully
so they don’t
break! Both Wellesley
and Weston offer a
Hazardous Waste Day
each spring when residents
can dispose of items
like pesticides, weed
killers, and paint
removers.
“We
have a very unique
municipal operation,” says
Gordon Martin, superintendent
of the Wellesley RDF. “Every
community in Massachusetts
recycles, but we make
money.” Martin
explains that while
meeting state and
federal laws, “We
are able to get premium
dollars on our sales
of recyclables because
we use a worldwide
market and we cut
out the middleman.
In Fiscal Year 2008
we returned $760,000
to the General Fund
and in Fiscal Year
2009, $719,000.” Sales
revenues fluctuate
with worldwide markets
for various materials. “Just
because we are a government
agency doesn’t
mean we can’t
act like a business,” Martin
continues. “We
are successful because
everyone is pulling
in the same direction – voters,
DPW staff and board,
volunteers, and town
officials.” Wellesley’s
solid waste is trucked
to Seneca, New York
for disposal.
An
Integral Part of the
Community
Weston’s
Solid Waste Transfer
Station and Recycling
Center opened in June
1994. Located on Church
Street opposite the
Kendall Green train
station and adjoining
the former landfill,
Transfer Station planning
and design dominated
town politics for
several years. Residents
who had begun a recycling
program at the landfill
strongly advocated
that the town make
the new facility as
friendly to recycling
as it was to solid
waste.
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In
addition
to their daily
activities,
Wellesley’s
Friends
of Recycling
volunteers
host recycling
fairs and
other fun
activities
throughout
the year.
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The
resulting loop layout
permits one-stop access
to areas for recycling,
disposal, and reusables.
Residents can “Giveaway
and Takeaway” serviceable
items at the Swap
Shack, a small metal
building donated by
residents and maintained
by Transfer Station
staff. A sign asks
visitors to limit
shopping to ten minutes.
On a typical visit,
one might find vases,
glassware, books,
a computer monitor,
suitcases, small appliances,
stuffed animals, stainless
flatware, and framed
prints on the shelves.
Clothing and shoes
can be left in bins
for Goodwill Industries
or Planet Earth.
“My
boys love the dump,” says
Symonds. “It’s
like a treasure hunt.
Will was one year
old when we moved
to Weston. We’ve
progressed from preschool
things to hockey sticks,
and now Will is rebuilding
a computer he got
there.” Bill
and his wife Cathy
Symonds require their
two sons to help with
recycling.
“I
have lived all over
and I have never seen
a system like ours,” Symonds
says. “It’s
very New England.” Toronto,
where they lived prior
to Weston, had curbside
recycling and trash
pickup, a single source
system that is credited
with increasing overall
recycling in municipalities
by 30 percent. Cathy
Symonds didn’t
know what to expect
when the seller of
their Weston home
told them, “You
have to go to the
dump!” She
wondered if she would
need big boots to
wade through trash.
Arriving at the transfer
station, she was pleasantly
surprised and, as
a bonus, discovered
the social aspect. “It’s
such an integral part
of the community,” Cathy
Symonds says. “On
Saturdays we have
to wait to unload.
We always see people
we know.”
Weston’s
Transfer Station is
restricted to Town
residents with permit
stickers on their
vehicles, either fee-paid
for waste disposal
or free for recycling.
Permit sales offset
operating costs. Weston
uses E. L. Harvey,
a solid waste and
recycling management
company, to transport
and process materials
collected. Solid waste
is trucked to Millbury,
Massachusetts to fuel
a Wheelabrator waste-to-energy
plant. E. L. Harvey
sorts and processes
the recyclables and
distributes them to
various markets, according
to DPW foreman Bill
O’Neill.
In Fiscal Year 2009
the Weston Transfer
Station processed
2,190 tons of solid
waste and 1,556 tons
of recycling. Approximately
half of Weston’s
3,350 households use
the Transfer Station.
With the per ton cost
about $60 less than
solid waste to process,
recycling in FY 2009
saved the Town of
Weston more than $100,000.
A
Way of Life
Campaigning
at the Transfer Station
is a must for local
politicians, including
former Weston Selectman
Joe Mullin who served
three terms and ran
for Lieutenant Governor
in 1994. When Joe
and Madeline Mullin
moved to Weston in
1979, residents tossed
trash into a pit where
a machine compacted
and covered it. Gulls
circled overhead,
and when the dump
burned, residents
around town could
smell the smoke and
hear the fire department
responding.
Mullin
served on the Board
of Selectmen from
1989 to 1998 when
Weston was planning
and building the transfer
station. The process
was complicated, requiring
twenty-four permits,
Mullin recalls. On
balance he is happy
with how things worked
out. “We
got a positive location
for a difficult municipal
function, benefited
the City of Cambridge
by cleaning up a problem
we had created with
their water supply,
and we supplied an
environmentally friendly
procedure for disposal
of solid waste plus
got a recycling feature,” he
says.
About
half of Weston households
use commercial haulers.
Work schedules, weekends
away, and children’s
activities can make
it difficult to visit
the Transfer Station
regularly. However,
for Dave Hutcheson
of Weston and his
family, recycling
is a way of life.
Dave says he dislikes
messiness and waste
and makes several
visits a week with
items he picks walking
about town. His daughter
Marguerite Hutcheson
was active in Students
for Environmental
Action (SEA) at Weston
High School. Brandon
Blaesser and Jayme
O’Laughlin
are co-presidents
of SEA today.
SEA
recently collected
200 pairs of sneakers
for Nike’s
Reuse-A-Shoe program
in which athletic
shoes are ground to
produce Nike Grind
sport and play surfaces.
SEA also conducted
a binder swap. “It’s
easier for kids to
join in when they
see things changing,” Blaesser
says. “Some
want to save the planet
and others want to
design customized
water bottles that
kids will want to
carry.” Blaesser,
age 17, recently passed
the Green Building
accreditation exam
to become a Leadership
in Energy and Environmental
Design Accredited
Professional (LEED
AP).
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Friends
of Recycling
floats for Wellesley’s
Wonderful Weekend
parade.
|
Beverage
containers and paper
are recycled at the
high school under
an initiative instituted
by past superintendent
Alan Oliff and current
superintendent Cheryl
Maloney. Classrooms
have bins for both,
and SEA and other
students rinse hundreds
of bottles and cans. “It
takes a certain amount
of dedication,” says
Weston High biology
teacher Janet Kresl
Moffat, chairman of
the Weston District
Green Team. “If
it’s
not something that
people think makes
a difference, they’re
not going to do it.
At some level you
have to believe in
the correctness of
recycling.” In
2009 school recycling
efforts diverted 121
tons from solid waste,
Moffat notes. She
is a supporter of
the updated Bottle
Bill.
The
economic downturn
of 2008 resulted in
the production of
less solid waste and
fewer recyclables.
At the reusable areas,
staff reports more
shoppers, especially
younger families,
and fewer new, unopened
items. “Perhaps
people are using eBay
to sell these now,” says
Olsen, FOR chairman.
Recycling rates in
both towns seem to
have reached a plateau.
Wellesley has instituted
the Step Up! Program
to encourage everyone
to bring his or her
recycling up one notch.
It’s
important to remember
that recycling is
voluntary, and residents
make the difference. “You
can never recycle
enough,” Weston
DPW director of operations
Bob Hoffman says.
Some
say the amount we
are recycling is
a tiny fraction of
all the municipal,
commercial, and industrial
waste produced in
our nation and around
the globe. But Joany
Sasso cites the delight
on children’s
faces when, new to
Wellesley’s
Take and Leave,
they ask, “How
much is this?” and
are told, “You
can take it.” 
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