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Research Project Proposal Maggie Brown Biology Department Park University December 2 th , 2009

This research project proposal aims to study the volume of glass bottles being disposed of by restaurants and bars in Kansas City and compare it to the amount being recycled. The hypothesis is that the volume of recyclable glass disposed of is greater than 20 tons per month. The methods include distributing worksheets, measuring the amount of glass recycled, and analyzing the data. The preliminary results indicate that smaller establishments generate approximately 2 tons of glass waste, while larger establishments generate around 4 tons. The goal is to increase glass recycling and decrease waste management costs.

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Research Project Proposal Maggie Brown Biology Department Park University December 2 th , 2009

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  1. The Accumulation of Glass Containers by Northland Restaurants: The Effect of Dumping Versus Recycling Research Project Proposal Maggie Brown Biology Department Park University December 2th, 2009

  2. Let’s Go Green • Social-Norm (Carlson, 2001) • Celebrities (Gibson, 2008) • Act Green • Cameron Diaz • Gwyneth Paltrow • Tee Shirts • Park University • C.H.E.M Club • Blue bins • White paper • Mixed paper • Aluminum & steel cans • Plastic bottles www.park.edu/recycling/

  3. Glass • Composition: silica sand soda ash limestone • 100% Recyclable • Non-Toxic to the environment • Broken down glass is called cullet • Cullet is added to raw materials to low temperature need to make new glass (Glassworks Recycling, 1999)

  4. Glass Recycling Circle • Manufacturer • Recycling bin • Separated by color • Transported to manufacturer • Crush (cullet) • Melted • New glass • Back to retail (Glassworks Recycling, 2006)

  5. Benefits of Recycling Glass • Reduces energy • Energy drops 2-3 percent for every 10% cullet used in manufacturing process (Baetz, 1994) • Saves natural resources • Alternative usages: (Ward, 1993) • Fiberglass insulation • Reflective paints • Tiles and Flooring • Abrasive materials • Decorative applications

  6. Kansas City and Recycling • Major part of the community (Ray,2006) • Mandatory residential curbside pick-up recycling • Deffenbaugh Industries • Two times per week • All materials except glass • Residents contribution of glass in local landfills is minimal. (Ward, 1993)

  7. Restaurants and Bar Establishments • Glass bottles primary container of beverages • California: 2.7 billion glass bottles of beer sold in 2003 with less than 50% return rate (Johnson, 2004) • US recycles less than 1/3 of glass beverage bottles – EPA (http://www.gpi.org) • What are Missouri’s figures? • 80,000 tons of containers of glass each year only 5% was recycled (www.rippleglasskc.com)

  8. Wilmington, North Carolina • Enforced 60 restaurant and bar owners to recycle • Owners billed for pick-up services • Fined if do not comply by alcohol law enforcement agents • Estimated 10-12 tons of beverage containers disposed of weekly (Granger,2007)

  9. My Concerns • Volume of glass bottles being disposed of by Kansas City restaurant and bar establishments • How much glass is actually being recycled compared to the actual number of glass containers in sales. • Can you teach an old dog new tricks?

  10. Hypothesis • The volume of recyclable glass disposed of by five local establishments is greater than 20 tons per month. • An individual establishment will recycle 40 percent of all recyclable glass sold and decrease waste management cost by 15 percent.

  11. Materials and Budget

  12. Stage 1 This part of the study will examine and calculate the volume of glass produced from: Paddy O’ Quigley’s 54th Street Granfallon Tomfooleries O’Dowds Stage 1 will be set in a two week time frame. Stage 2 This part of the study will observe and measure the ability of Paddy O’ Quigley’s to recycle glass bottles on a daily basis. Examines specific days and times of business Stage 2 will be perform within one month Methods

  13. This is the worksheet provided by the Glass Packaging Institute

  14. Methods- Stage 1 • Print 24 “How much recyclable glass does your business generate?” worksheets for distribution to each establishment • Contact business owners by phone • Meetings • Appointment for pick up will be set • Distribute of worksheets • Each business will fill out 2 worksheets • 1. Amount of glass products purchased • 2. Sales of recyclable glass products • Reminder calls for pick up of worksheets • Collection of worksheets • Calculations of data • Waste management evaluation per business • Follow up with business owners with results

  15. Methods- Stage 2 • Meeting with management and wait/cook staff • Delivery and placement of recycle bins • Schedule for recycling • Measure the amount of glass recycled • Day shift • Night shift • All Day • Days of week • Meeting with staff • Hanging of posters • Placement of table talkers • Measure the amount of glass recycled ** • After promotion • 1 Full week • Calculate results

  16. Preliminary Results • Results from the worksheets will be compared to one another • Smaller establishments 2 tons • Larger establishments 4 tons • Waste management savings • Paddy O’Quigleys predicted to recycle 35-50 percent of all recyclable glass • Improvement • Increase in sales

  17. Sources of Error • Measuring • Organization of data • Record keeping • Calculations • Time management • Businesses

  18. Discussion • Glass Processing Plant (www.rippleglasskc.com) • Changes coming soon • Ripple Glass • Voluntarily vs. Mandate • Incentives (Reschovsky,1994) • Costs • States with 5 cent deposits (Reschovsky,1994)

  19. Ripple Glass Created by: Boulevard Brewing Company Why: Kansas City’s growing glass problem Last year 10 million empty Boulevard bottles ended up in the local waste stream In addition to non Boulevard bottles Ripple Glass, LLCP.O. Box 414197Kansas City, MO 64141816.221.GLASS www.rippleglasskc.com

  20. Building a state-of-the-art processing plant Metro-wide collection network Local company fiberglass insulation Used in area homes-saves still more energy Its is not required to separate the glass by color, remove labs, or rinse Ripple Glass has the Solution Parkville: 64th Street & 9 Highway

  21. Questions, Comments, Concerns?

  22. Why recycle glass? • There are lots of myths out there about glass recycling. You've probably heard some of them – it's expensive, it's inefficient, blah, blah, blah. But we call them "myths" for good reason. Here are some important facts you should know about glass recycling. • Container glass is 100% recyclable, can be recycled endlessly, and is a primary ingredient in fiberglass insulation and new glass containers. • Burying perfectly good glass in the landfill wastes all the material, energy, and labor that went into making it. • Using recycled glass produces 20% less air pollution and 50% less water pollution than creating new glass (or fiberglass) from raw materials. • Every ton of glass that's recycled results in more than one ton of raw materials saved. That's 1,300 lbs. of sand, 410 lbs. of soda ash, 380 lbs. of limestone, and 150 lbs. of feldspar. • Recycling just one glass bottle saves enough electricity to light a 100-watt light bulb for four hours. (Imagine how long it would light a compact fluorescent!) • A six-pack of recycled beer bottles produces enough fiberglass insulation to fill a standard wall cavity. • Kansas Citians consume approximately 80,000 tons of container glass each year. In the past, because of the difficulty and inconvenience, only about 5% was recycled. (Nationally, the average recycling rate is nearly 30% and climbing; in many places in the world, it's north of 90%!) • Glass isn't collected in area curbside recycling programs, and for good reason. When mixed with other recyclables, broken glass degrades and contaminates those materials, causing them to be "downcycled" into lower quality products.

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