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KIC/KAB
PO BOX 442
STATESVILLE, NC 28687
phone: 704-201-4150
or 704-872-6090
e-mail:
info@keepiredellclean.org
IREDELL COUNTY
RECYCLING COORD.
phone: 704-928-2023
fax: 704-878-5429
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EDUCATION
ENVIRONMENTAL
SPEAKERS BUREAU
Is
your group interested in learning more about Keep Iredell Clean? Call
us today to schedule an interesting environmental program for your company,
club, class or organization.
Additionally,
our region also offers a wide variety of other environmental programming
resources. Click
HERE to download and print a listing of Iredell environmental organizations
& contacts (.pdf format).
TEACHER
CREDIT
Did you know
that environmental classes for teacher credit are available through your
Iredell County recycling coordinator? Call today
to learn more.
LESSON
PLANS
Click HERE
to open the "Garbage Pizza" lesson plan from Keep America Beautiful's
Waste in Place Curriculum Supplement for grades K-6. If you would like
to learn about how to obtain additional lesson plans, please contact the
Iredell County recycling coordinator.
HOW
WE CAN ALL HELP
Taking
care of our environment is a very important job!
There's something
for everyone to do-including you! No matter where you live, there are
many things you can do around your home, neighborhood or school, such
as setting an example by not littering, helping to clean up a littered
area and learning about safe ways to handle trash.
You can start
by choosing one or more of these projects. Some are simple. Others will
need the help of a parent, older family member or teacher. You can involve
your friends and family in all of them.
Projects
for Kids
Always
set an example by not littering, no matter where you are.
- When you
put out the trash at home, make sure that garbage can lids are on tight,
and that all of the trash goes into the can.
- If your
parents own a car, make litterbags for them. Keep your yard clean and
free of things that can blow into the street and become litter.
- If your
school playground doesn't have a litter basket, have your teacher ask
the school to put one out. Your class can make and put up posters reminding
other students to put litter where it belongs.
- Ask a
parent or teacher to take you or your class to a recycling center or
sanitary landfill. Many recycling centers or landfills will let you
see how trash is managed. List the different kinds of items that the
recycling center collects, and how each one is prepared for shipment.
At the landfill, list the kinds of equipment you see, and what each
does.
- Make a
bulletin board that has pictures of areas that are clean, and those
that are spoiled by litter or trash. Write a story about the difference
between the two, and what can be done to make dirty areas clean again.
- Whenever
you visit a park or beach, carry out what you bring in and keep unwanted
items in a bag or backpack until you can put them in a litter basket.
- Ask an
older family member or teacher to find out who keeps your city's parks
and public areas clean. Have your class write letters inviting them
to come to the school and speak about the importance of not littering.
Learn more about how you can take care of your community's public lands
by reading Keep America Beautiful's brochure "Take Care of America."
- Have everyone
in your class or youth group write a letter to a different business
to ask that they help keep the city clean by keeping the lids on dumpsters
closed.
- If your
family puts recyclables in a bin at curbside, tie up loose papers that
could blow out.
- Draw a
map of your neighborhood or school and identify areas where there is
litter. Are they near busy roads, businesses, or places where people
gather?
- Make a
list of things that could be done to stop litter . Learn more about
litter by reading "Tips for Preventing Litter in Your Community."
- Contact
a forest service or conservation district office and find out if they
offer free tree seedlings to plant in parks or other public areas. Look
in the telephone directory under "Government Agencies."
- Ask your
teacher if your school can make a small model of a sanitary landfill.
Your class can fill it with items from home. Predict what will happen
to each item before it is buried. Before the school year ends, dig up
the site and see what actually happened. The model can be made with
the help of someone from the city's public works department or a landfill.
- Attend
the Earth Day/Arbor Day Children's Festival each spring!
Links
to Kid Fun
Kid's Recycle
http://www.kidsrecycle.org/start_here.php
Washington
State Dept. of Ecology Kid's Page
http://www.ecy.wa.gov/programs/swfa/kidspage/
Ten Suggestions
for Kids and Adults Alike - We Can All Help!
- Recycle
all you can - help save our limited natural resources
- Reduce
what you throw away - carry a milk jug by the handle rather than in
a bag.
- Reuse
instead of toss - reuse a whipped dessert topping bowl for popcorn.
- Clean
up litter - even if you didn't drop it.
- Ask friends
not to litter.
- Use less
water - turn off water while you brush your teeth.
- Use less
energy - turn off lights when you're not in the room.
- Use both
sides of a piece of paper.
- Have your
class, family or organization adopt a road to keep it clean - call Adopt-a-Highway
to register at 704-876-3947.
- Help your
community with the "Big Sweep" waterway cleanup in October
or "Litter Sweep" in April.
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