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While the Slippery
Rock Recycling Program recycles a wide variety of materials,
currently the program is focused on taking the following materials
out of the university's waste stream: office paper, newspaper,
magazines, cans, glass, and plastics. In order to make recycling
easier for everyone these main materials are collected in three
categories: OFFICE PAPER, NEWSPAPER & MAGAZINES, and CANS,
GLASS, & PLASTICS.
Office
Paper
| Facts about Paper
Did you know that 1 ton of recycled
paper...
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saves 20 trees
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saves 7,000 gallons of water
-
eliminates three cubic yards of landfill
space
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eliminates 60 pounds of air pollutants
-
saves enough every to power the average home for six
months
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The Debate about Recycled
Paper
Many people still believe that paper
made with recycled content does not look as good, or perform at the
same, level as virgin paper, While this may have been true in the
past, technological changes in the late 1980s and 1990s have
brought recycled paper up to the same standards as virgin paper in
all respects, including copy ability, brightness, moisture content
archival quality, etc.
Appearance
While some recycled papers with 100%
recycled content will not be bright white and may contain flecks,
this is not true for copy paper which meets the minimum federal and
state recycled content standards of 20% post-consumer content. If
you doubt this fact put together a packet of several, recycled
paper sheets from the state contract with several virgin sheets and
ask a friend or office mate to tell you which ones are the recycled
papers (make sure you keep track!). Nine times out of ten, recycled
paper will be indistinguishable from the virgin and people will not
be able to tell them apart.
Performance
Perhaps the largest concern about
recycled paper has to do with its performance in copy machines and
laser printers. Blaming copy machine jams on recycled content is a
common refrain in offices and among technicians. However, the
Operational Services Division has conducted ongoing research into
this matter and determined.that copy paper should work as well as
virgin paper in virtually all types of machines. Here are some tips
to help guide you through the process of addressing copy machine
jams.
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Copy paper has a right side up (look
for the arrow on the wrapper) and should be placed in machines
according to the instructions, otherwise jamming may result whether
or not the paper is recycled.
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If paper is left out of its wrapper
on a table or desk for any extended period (even overnight) it will
gather dust and moisture, especially if it is humid, leading to
jams. Make sure all paper ream contents are placed side machines
after they are opened.
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Some machines may require the
removal of the top, and bottom sheets of each ream Since these
sheets may be contaminated with glue from the paper,wrapper (do not
forget to recycle them).
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Some copy papers may work
differently in different machines., If you are having trouble with
a specific copy paper, do not blame all recycled papers, but try
another brand. That is why there are five different copy papers on
state contract.
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Do not let your copy machine
technician tell you that recycled paper will void warranties and
does not, work in your machine. This is just not true. Ask your
technician to adjust your machine if you"are having trouble with
your recycled paper. The new Commonwealth contract for copy
machines forbids technicians from blaming recycled paper for
machine problems and requires that machines be able to accept all
paper on state contract. No vendor has raised any concerns about
these provisions.
Glass Containers
Common
Materials that contaminate cullet
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Ceramic cups, plates
and pottery
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Clay garden
pots
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Laboratory
glass
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Crystal and opaque
drinking glasses
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Heat-resistant
ovenware
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Lead collars from
wine and champagne bottles
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Stones and
dirt
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Light
bulbs
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Metal caps, lids and
neck ring
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Ceramic and wire
caps for beer or wine
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Drinking
glasses
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Hazardous glass
containers-acid containers
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Mirrors, windshields
and window glass
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Excess
moisture.
*****Ceramic
is the most common contaminant*****
Glass
Facts
America's
Oldest Industry
In the 1600's, glass
was an expensive luxury item in England. British manufacturers
could not meet demand, and few Englishmen had mastered the
painstaking art of glass-blowing. What's more, expansion of the
industry was limited due to the depletion of the forest wood needed
for fuel.
To the London
Company of Virginia, this seemed like an opportunity. Recruiting
some Polish and Dutch glassmakers, they established a primitive
glass factory at their American colony of Jamestown in 1608. With
the abundant natural resources of the New World, they believed that
glass products manufactured in Virginia could be exported to Europe
and sold for less than those coming from Italy and elsewhere.
Alas, it did not
happen. Though the factory began making product, believed to be
bottles, window glass and drinking glasses, it failed during the
"Starving Time" following the autumn of 1609 when sixty of
Jamestown's five hundred settlers died.
A later effort, in
1621, to revive glassmaking, was even less successful. The glass
house blew down, there was an Indian attack, and the glassmakers
suffered sickness and even death. The second attempt ended in 1624,
possibly without having ever produced any glass.
Despite this
inauspicious start, glassmaking developed into a stable industry
during the colonial period and examples of this early ware are now
prized collector's items. What's more, you could say that the third
attempt at glassmaking on the Virginia peninsula did succeed; today
a modern glass container plant near Williamsburg is just a few
miles from the original site of the colonists' early efforts.
If you visit
Jamestown, Virginia, you will see an operating recreation of the
early glassmaking facility, developed with the assistance of the
Glass Packaging Institute. And, yes, early glassmakers did
recycle!
Glass in
Roadways and Runways
Since 1993, the City
of Allentown, Pennsylvania, has used 120,000 tons of "glassphalt"
to pave its streets. The program has been such a success that in
1997 almost 100% percent of the city's roadway material will
include post-consumer glass.
Director of Public
Works Neal Kearn admits that there was initial skepticism about
using glass in a roadway wearing course, but when they observed the
results in a test section at the municipal garage it allayed all
fears. The glassphalt held up even under the heavy truck traffic
entering that busy facility .
"It's very important
to work with a glass processor to get the glass to its proper
graduation of 3/8-inch or less," Kearn notes. Allentown used the
Pennsylvania Department of Transportation specification, placing
ten percent glass in the mixture.
"Last fall, we held
a roundtable of the city's paving gurus to determine whether to
continue with glassphalt or not," Kearn says. "It was unanimous to
continue with and increase the program. Our track record speaks for
itself. If we were having problems, we wouldn't have included it
for 100 percent of this year's road material."
Meanwhile, in
Missouri, the Rolla Downtown Airport recently paved its 3000-foot
runway with glassphalt. The glass is believed to make the runway
more visible for landings and the runway is striped with reflective
paint which also includes ground waste glass.
Tests made by the
Missouri Department of Transportation show the runway has
exceptionally high skid resistance. Dr. Delbert Day of the
University of Missouri, Rolla, pioneered the concept of recycling
glass into road material.
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