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Doing it in the Wairarapa

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nitpicker1
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« on: January 20, 2016, 01:07:11 pm »


Three-bin idea 'a little tough'    
 
 
 SCOTT MORGAN   

Last updated 15:35 02/05/2012

The idea of hauling three wheelie bins down a steep driveway on a wet winter's night doesn't thrill Barbara Aster.

But she could be doing it by 2015 if the Auckland Council adopts its proposed waste management and minimisation plan in its current form.

The plan would see three separate bins for rubbish disposal, recycling and food waste.

But the Papakura resident says waste management is much different for people in a rural environment, compared with urban dwellers.

"Some rural people have a windy driveway that may be more than a quarter of a kilometre long."

Mrs Aster is calling on other rural residents in the area to come up with ideas on how to solve the potential problem.

"Dealing with it in a positive manner is important, rather than getting trumped up about it."

Many rural residents around the new Auckland super-city area reacted negatively to the three-bin idea during the submission and hearings process in March.

Mrs Aster says she's happy to meet with residents who have ideas on how to deal with using three bins and pass those on to the council.

"Usually if you get a few people interested and take some time you can deal with the problem."

There must be a better way than having to take three bins down a steep driveway, she says.

"Most driveways are gravel. Coming up isn't as hard because it's empty.

"I don't mind doing one but three would be a little tough."

Her recycling bin is normally full and she produces just one rubbish bag per week.

"It's amazing how little trash you have when you recycle."

Deputy mayor Penny Hulse says the council is happy to listen to communities that have specific needs.

"The key thing is the council needs to get this waste plan underway but nothing is going to happen until 2015," she says.

"I'm really, really keen on community innovation.

"Rural communities are fantastic at doing that."

*Comments are now closed on this article.

http://www.stuff.co.nz/national/6846650/Three-bin-idea-a-little-tough

yeahbut


Just one rubbish bag a year: How do they do it?

By Don Farmer chiefrep@age.co.nz

9:26 AM Wednesday Jan 20, 2016

Garbage collectors don't linger long outside Robin and Heather List's Masterton home.

The retired Presbyterian minister and his wife only put out a council rubbish bag once a year, if that.

Sometimes it can be 16 months before the rubbish bag is full enough to warrant collection and that's because the Lists have mastered the art of reducing, re-using and recycling which helps their pocket and the environment.

News last week a family of five in Auckland had minimised household rubbish to the extent it took them a year to fill a wheelie bin was applauded by the Masterton couple who have been doing much the same thing for five years.

Mr List said to his mind it would be much easier for the two of them to cut rubbish back to a single bag than for the Auckland family that includes a 2-year-old girl and a baby.

Cutting back on rubbish is so ingrained in the Lists' psyche it is automatic but there are a few traps they have to work round.

"Basically nothing goes into the rubbish bag apart from some forms of plastic packaging, and dog roll wrappers.

"We refuse to buy anything that is on a polystyrene tray but sometimes we can get caught out by others buying things for us that are, so they go into the bag," Mr List said.

The couple's environmental efforts don't stop at cutting back on garbage, and composting.

They designed an environmentally friendly home 10 years ago, have solar power for generating electricity, grow most of their own vegetables and fruit, catch water off the roof into a 5000 gallon tank and even buy bamboo toothbrushes that can either be used as kindling for their woodburner or used as garden markers when their teeth-cleaning days are over.

The woodburner has a very long flue running through the centre of the house which has high ceilings, allowing it to radiate heat in winter which is then distributed throughout the house by a large fan.

Lawns are mowed using a hand mower.

When Mr and Mrs List do shop for food items they would never dream of accepting items in plastic bags, taking their own reusable bags along, including a small netting bag for fruit.

Environment protection has extended to trips into town also, with the couple preferring to cycle rather than drive.

"Once we would arrive at Pak'nSave and be the only bikes in the bike rack but things are changing.

"Very often the racks are now full," Mr List said.

Masterton District councillor and conservationist Chris Peterson describes the Lists as being "a marvellous example to all of us".

"It's great that they are doing this and there are others.

"There are lots of little endeavours by people in the community who are intent on making life less wasteful.

"If we were all to do something there would be an enormous reduction in the amount of rubbish that is accumulated," Mr Peterson said.

- Wairarapa Times-Age

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/wairarapa-times-age/news/article.cfm?c_id=1503414&objectid=11576553




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Kiwithrottlejockey
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« Reply #1 on: January 20, 2016, 03:30:43 pm »


I lived in Gisborne for 20½-years from March 1978 until October 1998.

During the entire period of time I was there, you were allowed to put out six containers of rubbish for collection each week. Each container could be a traditional rubbish bin (which the council's contractors would empty), or a multi-layer paper rubbish bag, or a plastic rubbish bag, or even cardboard boxes filled with rubbish. You were allowed to put garden waste in the rubbish you put out each week, including lawn clippings. Each container of rubbish was allowed to weigh up to 20kg. In other words, each household could put out up to 120kg of rubbish every week, week after week, and the council would take care of it for you.

As a result, people used to take full advantage of the council's rubbish policy, nobody ever recycled anything, and vast areas of land were turned into rubbish tips.

After the big council amalgamation when Gisborne City Council, Cook County Council and Waiapu County Council were amalgamated into Gisborne District Council, the rubbish policy was extended to all the other areas which had previously been covered by the county councils. It was bloody madness.

When I moved to Wairarapa and told my new neighbours (and workmates) what we had been allowed to put out for rubbish collection each week in Gisborne, they were staggered. About a year after I moved, Gisborne District Council finally saw sense and clamped down on virtually unrestricted rubbish collection like that and brought in recycling.
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If you aren't living life on the edge, you're taking up too much space! 
Donald
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« Reply #2 on: September 24, 2017, 03:32:27 pm »

....National wins again 😜


.......Good to see that most voters in Musturtun are equiped with a brain😜
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Kiwithrottlejockey
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« Reply #3 on: September 24, 2017, 03:39:10 pm »


Sorry....cannot locate any placename called Musturtun on any map, or any mapping software programme I have.

Either you are simply being stupid and making up a placename, or else you are a stupid moron who is too dumb to know how to spell properly.

As I am not a mind-reader, I wouldn't have a clue which of those senarios applies, or what you are referring to.
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If you aren't living life on the edge, you're taking up too much space! 
Donald
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« Reply #4 on: September 24, 2017, 03:47:27 pm »

Haha...thought you'd like that😜

....good to see Wairarapa being won by National......Again😉

....lefties in short supply down there?
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aDjUsToR
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« Reply #5 on: September 24, 2017, 04:04:23 pm »

From what I can gather most "recycling" is just an employment creation scheme that creates piles of unwanted shit that eventually winds up in the landfill!

A more sensible option would be to burn waste at high temperatures to generate electricity and recover valuable metals.
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aDjUsToR
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« Reply #6 on: September 24, 2017, 04:08:33 pm »

Creating employment by digging holes and filling them back in again is a net loss to the overall community.
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