Recycling Update 2018 Speakers!

Over 20 presenters will inform and inspire the 23rd Annual Recycling Update conference.  See our ZWW/Recycling Update page under our Activities Tab to register for RU and to see the activities being planned for the annual Zero Waste Week.

David Allaway, Senior Policy Analyst, Oregon Department of Environmental Quality.  David will address Oregon’s efforts to move up the hierarchy with a focus on reducing wasted food, reuse/repair, and the built environment; Oregon’s transition to sustainable materials management; and the development of new statewide systems to measure progress towards broad sustainability goals that include – but go beyond – traditional weight-based waste recovery metrics.

Ric Anthony, Principal, Richard Anthony Associates, “Why Bottle Caps?” – Bottle caps are one of the most frequent plastic items found in coastal cleanups. There is need to bring the producers these products and packages to the World table to draft Zero Waste responsibility plans for proper management of discarded plastic via redesign for recyclability, buyback purchasing opportunities (closed circle), and recovery campaigns for vagrant plastics on land and sea. In ten minutes I will discuss the science and the campaign which includes legislative action to force the redesign to leash the lid, a lawsuit to fund the cleanup and a public education campaign that includes returning the caps found in coastal cleanups back to the producer.

Will Bakx, Soil Scientist/Owner, Sonoma Compost Company, “It Ain’t Over until the “Overs” have a Home” – When making finished compost or mulch, ‘overs’ are screened off to create a clean, uniform marketable product.  The ‘overs’ are the coarser woody fraction that used to go to biofuel plants for green energy.  As biofuel plants are shutting down or raising the bar on what products they accept, Woodageddon has arrived.  Or, Chunky Mulch is here.  Clean up your ‘overs’ and return all organics to the soil.  Mulch: the obstacles and the solutions.

Erin Cooke, Sustainability Director, San Francisco International Airport and Jennifer Acton, Environmental Operations Manager, San Francisco International Airport, “Achieving Zero: SFO’s Journey” – San Francisco International Airport’s (SFO or the Airport) has established the bold, Strategic Plan goal, of becoming the world’s first zero-waste Airport by 2021. In setting this target, our Airport asks the question of “how low can we go?” within its 14 million square foot campus materials system. To accomplish this bold goal, SFO drafted its first Airport Zero Waste Plan, which sets a pathway to respond to this question and achieve this goal. The Airport’s key implementation leads will walk attendees through SFO’s approach and gain feedback, from you, on what approaches will help our campus reach zero.

Sharon Daraphonhdeth, Interim Director of the Student Environmental Resource Center (SERC) at the University of California Berkeley, “UC Berkeley Students Make Zero Waste Possible” – UC Berkeley is committed to reaching zero waste by 2020. Sharon will be presenting on the major accomplishments, created and implemented by students on campus. She will touch on the importance and power of student leaders, and how they are shaping the conversation and paving the way towards zero waste.

Ken DaRosa, Chief Deputy Director, CalRecycle – Mr. DaRosa will share updates regarding SB1383 compost regulations.

Mikhail Davis, Director of Restorative Enterprise, Interface, “Making Closed Loop Carpet a Reality” – For nearly 25 years, Interface has been grappling with the challenge of making their new carpet tiles from old carpet, with many setbacks and breakthroughs along the way.  Mikhail will discuss the Interface journey to make carpet to carpet recycling a technical and economic reality and how and why they decided to break with the carpet industry in 2017 and support the passage of AB 1158, the nation’s first EPR law for carpet.

Jeff Denby, Co-Founder, The Renewal Workshop, “Enabling a Circular Economy for Apparel” – The reason we have waste in the apparel industry is the design of the industry itself. The Renewal Workshop leverages technology, systems thinking and marketplace drivers to start to evolve the industry towards a more regenerative model where resources are wisely used.

Tim Dewey-Mattia

Sara Fuentes, Sustainability Program Manager, Commercial Industrial Waste Applications, Inc. (CIWA, Inc.), “Putting the Zero Waste in Concierge Services” – Learn how CIWA uses emerging technology to help track trash and recycling services and save time and money. CIWA will share some best management practices and lessons learned through a few case studies from their large-scale tech clients in Palo Alto.

Hilary Gans, Manager, SBWMA – In 2016, the SBWMA had a large fire at the MRF. Hilary will tell the tale and share what he has learned from the experience.

Adam Gendell, Associate Director, Sustainable Packaging Coalition, “The State of Sustainable Packaging” – This presentation gives an overview of the most current understanding of packaging sustainability, including industry trends, regulatory happenings, and hot topics in sustainable packaging. Learn about the latest news and hear about the industry-facing work of the Sustainable Packaging Coalition.

Iain Gulland, Chief Executive Officer, Zero Waste Scotland – Ian Gulland will update us on the latest trends and policies in Zero Waste Scotland.

Zoe Heller, Assistant Director of Policy Development, CalRecycle – The export of recyclable material is a key component of California’s recycling infrastructure.  China’s import restriction is resulting in less recyclable materials leaving California, creating opportunities and challenges for how we manage our materials domestically.

Kevin Kumataka, Green Business Coordinator, San Francisco Green Business Program, “Creating Access to Environmental Recognition” – 2 years ago the San Francisco Green Business Program distinguished itself as the most stringent of Green Business Programs.  This created credibility but became a barrier to many businesses and business sectors in San Francisco.  To address this issue of access to working with the program and to maintain credibility, the SF Green Business Program has piloted a tiered certification model approach.  Come to this talk to learn about developments of not just the SF Green Business Program, but the development of the CA Green Business Program and expansion of the Green Business model to other states.

Alexandra Lalor, Greg Dudish, Alina Bekkerman, Dennis Uyat, “Lessons Learned from Zero Waste Youth Brazil” – From Brazil to the United States, people are coming together and collaborating to create a zero waste world. Representatives from Zero Waste Youth USA will share their experiences from attending the Brazil Zero Waste Youth conference, including challenges we face, similarities we share, and connections we’ve made as we continue to build an international zero waste movement.

Michael Lok, Planning Associate, Asian Health Services – Michael staffs the California Healthy Nail Salon Collaborative which was funded by AHS and has grown into a statewide coalition focused on making the nail salon industry safer, healthier and more just for the 129,000 nail salon workers statewide most of whom are immigrant women of color. Michael will give an overview of the Collaborative’s environmental justice work which stands on a foundation of community outreach, research and policy advocacy.

Jack Macy, Commercial Zero Waste Senior Coordinator, San Francisco Dept. of Environment, “San Francisco Upgrades MRF And Expands Materials Recycled” – San Francisco made major upgrades at Recology’s Recycle Central @ Pier 96 to increase the types of materials recovered, improve quality and reduce residual. These upgrades, along with efforts to reduce plastic in compostables and pursue the highest and best use of resources, resulted in San Francisco moving paper cups and cartons from composting into recycling, as well as moving aseptic cartons and plastic film from trash to recycling. Hear how these changes were made, and the latest status and results of the in-progress 2-year citywide rollout of outreach along with smaller trash and larger recycling bins, while addressing recent challenging market conditions.

Patrick Mathews, Salinas Valley Recycles, “Organics Management Planning in the Salinas Valley, the Perfect Storm” – The presentation will overview the expansion of SVR’s Organics Management Program and how we will utilize the $1.34 million grant awarded by CalRecycle under their Greenhouse Gas Reduction, Organics Grant Program for 2016-17.  The topics will include selected technology review, Ag waste recovery, collections, and food recovery and distribution in the Salinas Valley.  The discussion will also outline the unique organics “perfect storm” SVR is planning for in the near future: increased organics recovery, cannabis wastes, and growing challenges for the cattle feedstock (culls) markets.

Kelly McBee, Policy Analyst, Californians Against Waste, “Preserving California’s Bottle Bill” – California’s unique beverage container recycling law was enacted in 1987 and is one of the largest and most successful Bottle Bill programs in North America.  However, over the last few years, unsustainable losses of revenue for recyclers has led to the closing of hundreds of bottle buyback centers, denying California the full scope of the program’s greenhouse gas emission reduction benefits and others. Kelly will discuss opportunities for comprehensive program reform, legislative efforts to date, and next steps.

Terry McDonald, DR3 Mattress Recycling, and Saint Vincent de Paul Lane County, “Building Blocks from Broken Stuff” -Most retail thrift stores send worn and damaged materials to the landfill.  At St. Vincent de Paul Society of Lane County, we use the broken stuff as building blocks for new products. Scratched vinyl records, ripped leather sofas, shirts with blown-out elbows, table tops with no legs? No problem. Our upcycling team creates unique products that attract buyers looking for something that didn’t come off an assembly line. The revenue supports a unique range of services to those struggling financially.

John Moore, Legal Counsel, NCRA, “Winning Isn’t Everything” – Presentation will discuss three local litigation cases from the past year.

Kate O’Neill, Associate Professor in the Department of Environmental Science, Policy and Management at UC Berkeley, “The Global (and Local) Impacts of China’s Scrap Ban” – This presentation addresses the unfolding impacts of China’s crackdown on scrap imports, with an emphasis on scrap plastics. I trace out implications for California, the US and the rest of the world, and discuss the many different options currently on the table.

Kerry Parker, Recycling Specialist, City of Alameda, and Samantha Sommer, Waste Prevention Program Manager, Rethink Disposable, “Straws-on-Request, and ReThink Disposable: Unpackaging Alameda Initiative” – The City of Alameda, now implementing a new law that bans plastic straws and other single-use plastics, has found itself suddenly in the midst of ongoing arguments regarding the branding of that whipped coffee drink everyone loves; responding to tough questions like whether or not something deemed “compostable” or “recyclable” actually is, and finding the way through tricky policy-making where most disposable single-use plastic food ware is now banned in the small island city.  Find out about how Alameda’s partnership with Clean Water Action’s ReThink Disposable program to create a demonstration project to “unpackage” a Bay Area community has brought expertise, resources, and technical assistance to hundreds of island businesses, and supports the city’s ambitious source reduction policy to keep our coastlines and bays free from plastics and other debris.

Jerame Rentaria, Organics Marketing Specialist/Company Landscape Designer at Zanker Road Resource Management, Ltd., “DM Reduction System at Zanker Facility” – The DM Reduction system processes materials categorized as miscellaneous debris, as well as residuals from Zanker’s other operations, including bulky items such as furniture, which are collected from local garbage collection companies. The fines are conveyed to a General Kinematics Air Classifier. Here, materials are fluidized with a high-velocity air stream which removes heavy items such as glass, metals, wood, and stones to be removed from lighter items such as paper, plastic and insulation. The heavy items are marketed as ADC, and the lighter items are shipped to a landfill for disposal.

Nicole Tai, CEO, GreenLynx – Nicole will discuss the growth of GreenLynx, which started in 2013 as a deconstruction coordination group and has grown into a full service reclaimed materials company with a Woodworks, Retail Store, Deconstruction service, and Green Building division. GreenLynx opened its store in Santa Rosa in August 2017 and is currently expanding to include reclaimed furniture and finish products, a reclaimed lumber retail and receiving yard, and on-site pickups of reclaimed lumber. Nicole Tai will also briefly discuss the recent Deconstruction Workshop GreenLynx hosted along with the EPA, and the amazing group formed out of this gathering.

Monica Wilson, US and Canada Program Director, Global Alliance for Incinerator Alternatives (GAIA), “Recycling is Not Enough: Findings from our Global Plastic Recycling Research Project” – Working with organizations in China, Southeast Asia, EU, and US, GAIA’s research project on plastic recycling found that as exports increase to Southeast Asia processing may increase by the informal recycling sector, which would have environmental and health impacts on workers and surrounding communities. We also found that international plastic recycling trade transparency is nearly nonexistent and that stronger coordinated action needs to be taken by governments and other actors to curb the overproduction and consumption of plastic.

2017 Recycling Update Speakers Announced!

REGISTER HERE!

Over 20 Presenters will inform and inspire the 2017 Recycling Update conference.  Not all Speaker synopses have been submitted to NCRA yet, but here are a handful to whet your Zero Waste & material recovery appetites!

John Wick, Marin Carbon Project – “Creating Healthy Working Landscapes in California and Beyond.” John will present his current work connecting the California Healthy Soils Initiative, local community Climate Action Plans, organic waste recycling, and Carbon Farm Planning (based on the USDA COMET-Planner) to create healthy working landscapes across the state and beyond.

Jackie Nunez, The Last Plastic Straw – “Speaking Truth to Plastic -The Last Plastic Straw Movement – A tipping point from Awareness to Action.”   Over 500,000,000 plastic straws are used each day in the United States. In just the last few decades, people have come to expect plastic straws in every drink, an example of extreme waste generated for minimal convenience. These “tools” are quickly dropped into waste bins with little further thought, instantly becoming a growing source of plastic pollution.  The continued use of this unnecessary disposable plastic additionally perpetuates our dependence on fossil fuels and exacerbates climate change, as nearly all plastic straws are made from petroleum. True fossil fuel divestment requires the eliminating our reliance on single-use plastics, like straws.

Heidi Sanborn, Executive Director of the California Product Stewardship Council – “How Stewardship Efforts Are Impacting Operations and Budgets”.   This will be a quick overview of the voluntary and mandatory producer responsibility efforts in California and how they are impacting local governments, haulers, retailers and consumers.  Learn about the big success stories, lessons learned, and what the current discussions are around producers sharing responsibility for pharmaceuticals, packaging, marine flares, and other products and what you can do to help support producers taking responsibility to reduce product waste.

Wendi Shafir, EPA Pacific Southwest Region – “How K-12 Schools can improve student nutrition, save money and avoid wasting food.”  EPA along with USDA and U of Arkansas has developed a K-12 Food Waste Audit Guide to show how to conduct plate waste audits to pinpoint reasons for wasted food and identify strategies to get kids to eat more and waste less.

Adam Lowy, Move For Hunger – “Donate Your Food When You Move.” When people move, they throw away a lot of stuff; unfortunately, some of that stuff is perfectly good, non-perishable food that could be given to a family in need rather than thrown away. For 7 years, Move For Hunger has been mobilizing moving companies across the US to pick up these non-perishable food items during the move and deliver them to local food banks. This year, they are launching a new program to rescue the unopened, non-perishables from people moving out of multifamily communities. Listen to Move For Hunger’s Founder discuss plans to roll out this new program across Northern California to reduce food waste and fight hunger.

Melissa Romero, Policy Associate for Californians Against Waste – “Legislative Update & What to Expect”.   Melissa will discuss significant legislative action that occurred in the past year and how these new laws will influence the future of waste reduction and recycling in California. Along with information on bills and other policies that are currently in progress.

Vanessa Pan, GO Box – “Filling in Emerging Needs Around Reuse.” GO Box will present on being an ongoing environmental ambassador in the field of reuse, providing a reusable take-out container service and a system for managing the returns. This presentation will speak on bridging the gap between those who are active in environmentalism and those who are not, along with new value adds GO Box brings to the table.

Susan Miller-Davis and Susan Blachman – “Measuring and Recovering Wasted Edible Food in Alameda County.”  While the Bay Area is a foodie mecca, nearly 15% of the people in Alameda County don’t know where their next meal is coming from. And wasted edible food is found in our green bins and landfills. Susan Blachman and Susan Miller Davis (two members of the NCRA Zero Wasted Food Team) determined that there is enough wasted edible food in Alameda County to significantly address local food insecurity as well as reduce GHG emissions, and water and energy consumption.

Emily Coven, Recyclist – “A Silicon Valley Executive Walks Into the Solid Waste Industry…”  How are we using technology in the solid waste industry, and how can we do better? Emily has been studying this question for the past two years, working with municipalities, haulers, and consultants to create cloud-based solutions to help communities move toward zero waste. She will share what she sees as opportunities for the industry as a whole to evolve through better, smarter use of data, technology, and digital communications. By the end of this 10 minutes, you’ll know what terms such as Organic Search (hint: it’s nothing to do with AB 1826), Responsive Design, Vanity URL, CRM, and API mean, and why you should care about them.

Tim Aagard, Tiny Tots Diaper Service – “The Three R’s and Diapers.”  Since 1939, Tiny Tots has been providing local families with a sustainable source for diapering their child. A cotton option has been provided since 1939.  Since 2009 a compost option has been available to customers. It is estimated that each baby uses 5,000 diapers until they are potty trained, a quantity which adds up in the landfill. Tim will discuss the benefits of cotton and compost both for the ecosystem and for the child.

Garth Schultz, Principal and Manager, R3 Consulting – “Rates, Rates, Rates – Recent Trends in Solid Waste Rate Setting.” Mr. Schultz will discuss new and innovative trends in solid waste procurements, rate structures, and high diversion/zero waste planning. Via his presentation, attendees will learn about ways in which current solid waste procurements are addressing continued progress towards high diversion, means of recovering revenues to pay for the costs of those services, considerations for moving towards cost-of-service rates, and the results of recent efforts to calculate target areas for future diversion.

Giri Veeramuthu, Director of Quality, American Licorice Company “Retailers and Manufacturers Striving for Sustainability Goals”.   
In a retail world the big box stores influence how manufacturing and processes get fine-tuned not only to the zero waste initiatives but how sustainable culture occurs by partnering with vendors, associates and the Corporate philosophy. Their actions have a potential to ensure better world, financially stable and a responsible citizen.  Their direction has led us to proactively believe in and investing our efforts towards cleaner energy, zero waste certification, responsible sourcing and carbon emission controls.  The practice is extended to personal life by promoting car-pooling, initiatives of reducing waste at house to water conservation.

Maria Javier“Planning for Trash: A Regional Look at Municipal Perceptions of Solid Waste Management in Urban Planning.”
With growing solid waste management regulations, municipalities are faced with the challenge of implementing comprehensive integrated waste management (IWM) strategies to effectively manage resources and comply with solid waste regulations. Rather than seeing collaboration as a hurdle, solid waste professionals can look to urban planning as a partner in helping the municipality achieve its IWM goals. For her Master’s thesis, Maria thoroughly examined several Bay Area cities for their current solid waste-planning practices through document analyses and municipal staff interviews. Maria will present the results of her research as a comprehensive list of strategies to effectively incorporate solid waste management into the permit approval process for commercial development projects.

Dan Kurzrock, Co-Founder, ReGrained – “Edible Upcycling: Circular Economy Applications for the Food System.” 40% of all edible food is wasted. This isn’t just wasted resources and squandered nutrition, it is also a massive business opportunity. Dan Kurzrock, co-founder of ReGrained, will be discussing a concept that he calls “edible upcycling,” which takes ideas from the circular economy and applies them to the food system.

Komal Ahmad, CEO and Founder, Copia – “Solving the World’s Dumbest Problem: Food Waste.”  We waste 3X as much food in America as there are mouths to feed. Hunger isn’t a scarcity problem; it’s a logistics problem. And for the first time in human history, we have the technology to effectively redistribute excess food to the people who need it most. Copia makes this process smarter and faster than ever before — enabling us to solve the dumbest, most intractable and unnecessary problems of our time.

Wade Laughter, Cannabis Activist – “The Importance of Compost in the Production of Commercial Medical Cannabis.” Wade Laughter will be presenting on the importance of compost in the production of commercial medical cannabis. Medical cannabis flourishes in soil that is rich and alive with compost. There is going to be a huge need for compost that is suitable for use in medical cannabis cultivation.  Find out how compost can become a gift for cannabis cultivators, patients and the environment.

Shana Levy McCracken – “Innovations in Fashion—Implications for Waste.”  Fashion is one of the most wasteful industries; however, many in the field are interested in sustainability and working to reduce their impact. Shana McCracken will share the latest in sustainable fashion innovations and get us thinking about what they mean for waste.

Amy Hammes, Recycling Specialist, City of Burbank – “The City of Burbank’s Master Recycler Program.”  The City of Burbank’s Master Recycler Program is a free citizen engagement and training program designed for residents who want to learn more about Zero Waste and how to engage the community on upstream design, consumption and recycling issues. Over the course of seven classes, students will have learned how to lead their own personal projects on such issues as packaging, reuse and repair, organics and composting, business social responsibility, hazardous materials and resource management.

Bob Hollis, The Mobius Network LLC – “GreenEducation.US Offers National Certification.”  GreenEducation.US provides a means for professionals to connect with subject matter experts through a variety of training and professional development opportunities.  GreenEducation.US was recently accredited by the National Recycling Coalitions’, National Standards Board to provide the Certified Sustainable Resource Management Professional training in California. This program provides 30-hours of web or classroom based training on  Zero Waste and Sustainable Resource Management.  GreenEducation.US also provides a platform for industry experts to share their knowledge through interactive webinars, online classes and recorded sessions.

 

ZWW/RU Just Around The Corner

SAVE-THESE-DATES!Miguel Robles 2015
March 20 – 26: Zero Waste Week 2016
March 22: Recycling Update
March 26: Zero Waste Youth Convergence

Zero Waste Week 2016 will be held March 20 – 26. Our premier event, the 21st annual Recycling Update, will be held March 22 at Freight and Salvage in Berkeley. (One week later than usual.) The 4th Zero Waste Youth Convergence will be held Saturday, March 26. Tours and trainings are being planned. Registration will be available on the NCRA website in late January. Read More “ZWW/RU Just Around The Corner”