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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 7 page paper that begins by presenting data regarding the low participation in a neighborhood recycling program. The essay then presents facts about the millions of tons of different kinds of waste residents can recycle and the benefits. For example, one glass bottle recycled can produce enough energy to light a 100 watt bulb for four hours. The writer then presents a plan to increase recycling in a neighborhood. The innovative plan is based on education and motivation theory. Bibliography lists 6 sources.
Page Count:
7 pages (~225 words per page)
File: MM12_PGrecyc.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
the use of recycling, then provides research that justifies the need for everyone to recycle and finally, presents a plan to increase recycling in this neighborhood. The neighborhood selected is
the writers. There are 70 homes on this street, 35 on each side. The initial target is this street, then expansion to the neighboring streets. Our city provides each
home with three recycling bins: one for paper, one for aluminum and one for glass and plastic. These bins are to be placed at the curb each Wednesday for pickup
by city trucks. Observations for three weeks revealed: week 1, 10 homes with recycling bins at curb; week 2, 14 homes with bins at curb; and week 3, 8 homes
with bins at street. The paper recycling bin was always included, the bin for aluminum was second most frequent with 4, 8, 5 over the three weeks, respectively; glass and
plastic bins were only seen 4 times, twice the first week and once the other two weeks. There are more than 12 billion tons of waste disposed of in
this country every year, that includes residential, business and industrial waste (Martin, 2001). That is an enormous amount of waste and it became painfully apparent with the Mobro 4000 crisis
in 1987 - that was the trash barge that drove up and down for thousands of miles trying to find a place where they could dump over 3,000 tons of
garbage from New York (Martin, 2001). It acted as a wake-up call to some and provided support to others who had been promoting recycling and conservation. It acted as a
catalyst for the Environmental Protection Agency to recommend that within five years time, at least 25 percent of municipal waste should be recycled Environmental Protection Agency (Martin, 2001). Seven years
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