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Waste & Recycling March 18, 2019 06:45:28 AM

Coca-Cola Foundation Rewards Charities Working to Improve U.S. Recycling

Waste Advantage
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The Recycling Partnership will work together with local governments and environmental organizations to catalyze a recycling movement in Atlanta through localized recycling education programs.

Coca-Cola Foundation Rewards Charities Working to Improve U.S. Recycling

SEATTLE (Waste 360): The Coca-Cola Foundation extended $5.4 million of charitable grants to organizations working on ambitious plans for improving recycling in its hometown of Atlanta and other cities across the country.

The Recycling Partnership, The Green Blue Institute in Orlando, Keep Houston Beautiful and the Boston Parks and Recreation Foundation are among the grant recipients. Each will receive funding for innovative pilots that will help address some of the barriers to consumer recycling in the United States.

The Recycling Partnership will work together with local governments and environmental organizations to catalyze a recycling movement in Atlanta through localized recycling education programs that can then be scaled to other cities. In Atlanta, the grant will support the expansion of The Recycling Partnership’s “Feet on the Street” recycling education program first piloted in select areas of Atlanta, Denver and Chicago in 2017. The initial pilot resulted in a 57 percent decrease in overall recycling contamination and a 27 percent increase in recycling participation in select areas of these cities.

The Recycling Partnership and the city of Atlanta will deploy Feet on the Street teams to every zip code in the city to tag recycling bins with scorecards that will let residents know how they are doing on recycling and how they can improve. In addition to the Feet on the Street program, The Coca-Cola Foundation grant will support recycling programs for multifamily residences and college campuses in Atlanta.

“These innovative recycling programs will help make recycling more accessible for everyone and result in more sustainable and waste-free cities over time, starting with our hometown of Atlanta,” said Helen Smith Price, president of The Coca-Cola Foundation, in a statement. “We hope these recycling programs will become a model that other cities can follow.”

“Two of the most pressing issues with recycling in the U.S. today are lack of access followed by contamination in the recycling stream. People want to recycle, but they don’t know how or where,” said Keefe Harrison, CEO of The Recycling Partnership, in a statement. “With funding from The Coca-Cola Foundation, and in partnership with community and government partners, we hope to address some of these challenges on a local level through direct consumer communication and improved access.

In addition to The Coca-Cola Foundation’s charitable grants, this spring, The Coca-Cola Company will separately introduce a new chapter of #COCACOLARENEW that aims to inspire people to think differently about packaging waste and rethink the possibilities of recycled plastic. The new initiative addresses some of the biggest barriers to consumer recycling—confusion and skepticism—by showing people the potential good that a recycled can or bottle can do.  

Courtesy: https://waste360.com

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