About the issue and the project One of the main issues with waste is that it needs to be transpo...
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45 | stevie |
October 21, 2016 15:24
| about 8 years ago
About the issue and the projectOne of the main issues with waste is that it needs to be transported. Local landfills have long since been replaced by large, regional landfills where waste from more metropolitan areas is gathered and then sent to be landfilled or recycled at a faraway location. When a garbage truck picks up your weekly curbside waste, that waste will likely make its way to a landfill or recycling facility only after it has traveled many miles on interstate and highways, passing through several transfer stations, and then more roads. In some cases, your trash will cross multiple county lines, or perhaps a state line, before it is finally recycled or landfilled. Using the region of Southern California as a case study, we would like to investigate the real environmental impact of transporting waste in the era of mega-landfills. Do waste-by-rail projects, such as Los Angeles' Mesquite Regional Landfill, result in lower greenhouse gas emissions and do they offer a less deleterious solution as we make our way toward a zero-waste society? The process of sending waste to transfer stations and to other municipalities also has the effect of obscuring the waste picture for a town or city. This effect can be quite serious, since not knowing how much waste your town produces or knowing where it goes may result in difficulties when advocating for and implementing responsible waste policies. In practice, it can also present problems when researchers, agencies and individuals and interpret and respond to environmental impact reports, such as planning documents required for the California Environmental Quality Act, (CEQA). People who are involvedProject Lead: Sara Sage Participants: If you are interested in being involved with this project, please comment below, contact the Project Lead, write a research note, join the LA Google Group and drop a note, or directly contribute to this wiki. Groups: Students at Learn Beyond the Book in Santa Clarita, California, including instructor, Elizabeth Rydall, who teaches the class, "Art & Science of Recycling, Repurposing & Re-using" Join us to chat here on the LA Google Group Next steps:What are we working on now:
Updates[notes:SoCalWasteStream-blog] “SoCalWasteStream-blog” https://publiclab.org/tag/evidence-project https://publiclab.org/blog/evidence-project Activities we’ve done in our project[activities:TAG] => “activity:TAG” vs. “TAG” DataList of Waste Facilities by County This list is a work-in-progress hosted on Google Sheets. Please contact the Project Lead for permission to edit this document. Questions*What is the definition of Southern California? *Where do waste regions end and begin? How defined are they? *What is the burden of industrial waste compared to consumer waste? *How does bio-waste move within the waste stream? *What type of awareness/advocacy tools can we develop as a result of this project? (i.e. infographics, spreadsheets, long-form articles, animation). *How do privately-run landfills compare to landfills run by government agencies? [notes:question:TAG] ResourcesImportant Links for Obtaining Waste Data CalRecycle Facility Search Entering the name of a landfill or waste-sorting facility in the field, SWIS site name, will bring up information for that particular facility. Please explore the tabs marked, inspection, enforcement, maps & documents. We’re looking for: *People with expertise in calculating and modeling GHG emissions of waste-industry traffic *An individual who is willing to spearhead and organize GPS-tracking project *Artists with film/animation skills, graphic design skills, as well as pen-and-paper skills *Educators with experience writing lesson plans *Individuals who are interested in gathering, sorting and analyzing state and local data *Your ideas and feedback! __ Our project tag: SoCalWasteStream Others we follow: |
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44 | stevie |
October 21, 2016 15:24
| about 8 years ago
About the issue and the projectOne of the main issues with waste is that it needs to be transported. Local landfills have long since been replaced by large, regional landfills where waste from more metropolitan areas is gathered and then sent to be landfilled or recycled at a faraway location. When a garbage truck picks up your weekly curbside waste, that waste will likely make its way to a landfill or recycling facility only after it has traveled many miles on interstate and highways, passing through several transfer stations, and then more roads. In some cases, your trash will cross multiple county lines, or perhaps a state line, before it is finally recycled or landfilled. Using the region of Southern California as a case study, we would like to investigate the real environmental impact of transporting waste in the era of mega-landfills. Do waste-by-rail projects, such as Los Angeles' Mesquite Regional Landfill, result in lower greenhouse gas emissions and do they offer a less deleterious solution as we make our way toward a zero-waste society? The process of sending waste to transfer stations and to other municipalities also has the effect of obscuring the waste picture for a town or city. This effect can be quite serious, since not knowing how much waste your town produces or knowing where it goes may result in difficulties when advocating for and implementing responsible waste policies. In practice, it can also present problems when researchers, agencies and individuals and interpret and respond to environmental impact reports, such as planning documents required for the California Environmental Quality Act, (CEQA). People who are involvedProject Lead: Sara Sage Participants: If you are interested in being involved with this project, please comment below, contact the Project Lead, write a research note, join the LA Google Group and drop a note, or directly contribute to this wiki. Groups: Students at Learn Beyond the Book in Santa Clarita, California, including instructor, Elizabeth Rydall, who teaches the class, "Art & Science of Recycling, Repurposing & Re-using" Join us to chat here on the LA Google Group Next steps:What are we working on now: Uploading and ongoing analysis of CalEPA/CalRecycle waste-origin data Inventory of waste disposal sites and transfer stations throughout Southern California Develop a unit lesson plan for educators who ware interested in investigating their local waste stream with students -- with hands-on educational activities and options by grade level Investigating the potential of GPS-tracking technology to analyze (near) real-time movement of waste in Southern California. *Developing outreach and partnerships with organizations that promote understanding of waste and zero-waste policies Updates[notes:SoCalWasteStream-blog] “SoCalWasteStream-blog” https://publiclab.org/tag/evidence-project https://publiclab.org/blog/evidence-project Activities we’ve done in our project[activities:TAG] => “activity:TAG” vs. “TAG” DataList of Waste Facilities by County This list is a work-in-progress hosted on Google Sheets. Please contact the Project Lead for permission to edit this document. Questions*What is the definition of Southern California? *Where do waste regions end and begin? How defined are they? *What is the burden of industrial waste compared to consumer waste? *How does bio-waste move within the waste stream? *What type of awareness/advocacy tools can we develop as a result of this project? (i.e. infographics, spreadsheets, long-form articles, animation). *How do privately-run landfills compare to landfills run by government agencies? [notes:question:TAG] ResourcesImportant Links for Obtaining Waste Data CalRecycle Facility Search Entering the name of a landfill or waste-sorting facility in the field, SWIS site name, will bring up information for that particular facility. Please explore the tabs marked, inspection, enforcement, maps & documents. We’re looking for: *People with expertise in calculating and modeling GHG emissions of waste-industry traffic *An individual who is willing to spearhead and organize GPS-tracking project *Artists with film/animation skills, graphic design skills, as well as pen-and-paper skills *Educators with experience writing lesson plans *Individuals who are interested in gathering, sorting and analyzing state and local data *Your ideas and feedback! __ Our project tag: SoCalWasteStream Others we follow: |
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43 | stevie |
October 21, 2016 15:23
| about 8 years ago
About the issue and the projectOne of the main issues with waste is that it needs to be transported. Local landfills have long since been replaced by large, regional landfills where waste from more metropolitan areas is gathered and then sent to be landfilled or recycled at a faraway location. When a garbage truck picks up your weekly curbside waste, that waste will likely make its way to a landfill or recycling facility only after it has traveled many miles on interstate and highways, passing through several transfer stations, and then more roads. In some cases, your trash will cross multiple county lines, or perhaps a state line, before it is finally recycled or landfilled. Using the region of Southern California as a case study, we would like to investigate the real environmental impact of transporting waste in the era of mega-landfills. Do waste-by-rail projects, such as Los Angeles' Mesquite Regional Landfill, result in lower greenhouse gas emissions and do they offer a less deleterious solution as we make our way toward a zero-waste society? The process of sending waste to transfer stations and to other municipalities also has the effect of obscuring the waste picture for a town or city. This effect can be quite serious, since not knowing how much waste your town produces or knowing where it goes may result in difficulties when advocating for and implementing responsible waste policies. In practice, it can also present problems when researchers, agencies and individuals and interpret and respond to environmental impact reports, such as planning documents required for the California Environmental Quality Act, (CEQA). People who are involvedProject Lead: Sara Sage Participants: If you are interested in being involved with this project, please comment below, contact the Project Lead, write a research note, join the LA Google Group and drop a note, or directly contribute to this wiki. Groups: Students at Learn Beyond the Book in Santa Clarita, California, including instructor, Elizabeth Rydall, who teaches the class, "Art & Science of Recycling, Repurposing & Re-using" Join us to chat here on the LA Google Group Next steps:What are we working on now: Uploading and ongoing analysis of CalEPA/CalRecycle waste-origin data Inventory of waste disposal sites and transfer stations throughout Southern California Develop a unit lesson plan for educators who ware interested in investigating their local waste stream with students -- with hands-on educational activities and options by grade level Investigating the potential of GPS-tracking technology to analyze (near) real-time movement of waste in Southern California. *Developing outreach and partnerships with organizations that promote understanding of waste and zero-waste policies Updates[notes:SoCalWasteStream-blog] “SoCalWasteStream-blog” https://publiclab.org/tag/evidence-project https://publiclab.org/blog/evidence-project Activities we’ve done in our project[activities:TAG] => “activity:TAG” vs. “TAG” DataList of Waste Facilities by County This list is a work-in-progress hosted on Google Sheets. Please contact the Project Lead for permission to edit this document. Questions*What is the definition of Southern California? *Where do waste regions end and begin? How defined are they? *What is the burden of industrial waste compared to consumer waste? *How does bio-waste move within the waste stream? *What type of awareness/advocacy tools can we develop as a result of this project? (i.e. infographics, spreadsheets, long-form articles, animation). *How do privately-run landfills compare to landfills run by government agencies? [notes:question:TAG] ResourcesImportant Links for Obtaining Waste Data CalRecycle Facility Search Entering the name of a landfill or waste-sorting facility in the field, SWIS site name, will bring up information for that particular facility. Please explore the tabs marked, inspection, enforcement, maps & documents. We’re looking for: *People with expertise in calculating and modeling GHG emissions of waste-industry traffic *An individual who is willing to spearhead and organize GPS-tracking project *Artists with film/animation skills, graphic design skills, as well as pen-and-paper skills *Educators with experience writing lesson plans *Individuals who are interested in gathering, sorting and analyzing state and local data *Your ideas and feedback! __ Our project tag: SoCalWasteStream Others we follow: |
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42 | stevie |
October 21, 2016 15:22
| about 8 years ago
About the issue and the projectOne of the main issues with waste is that it needs to be transported. Local landfills have long since been replaced by large, regional landfills where waste from more metropolitan areas is gathered and then sent to be landfilled or recycled at a faraway location. When a garbage truck picks up your weekly curbside waste, that waste will likely make its way to a landfill or recycling facility only after it has traveled many miles on interstate and highways, passing through several transfer stations, and then more roads. In some cases, your trash will cross multiple county lines, or perhaps a state line, before it is finally recycled or landfilled. Using the region of Southern California as a case study, we would like to investigate the real environmental impact of transporting waste in the era of mega-landfills. Do waste-by-rail projects, such as Los Angeles' Mesquite Regional Landfill, result in lower greenhouse gas emissions and do they offer a less deleterious solution as we make our way toward a zero-waste society? The process of sending waste to transfer stations and to other municipalities also has the effect of obscuring the waste picture for a town or city. This effect can be quite serious, since not knowing how much waste your town produces or knowing where it goes may result in difficulties when advocating for and implementing responsible waste policies. In practice, it can also present problems when researchers, agencies and individuals and interpret and respond to environmental impact reports, such as planning documents required for the California Environmental Quality Act, (CEQA). People who are involvedProject Lead: Sara Sage Participants: If you are interested in being involved with this project, please comment below, contact the Project Lead, write a research note, join the LA Google Group and drop a note, or directly contribute to this wiki. Groups: Students at Learn Beyond the Book in Santa Clarita, California, including instructor, Elizabeth Rydall, who teaches the class, "Art & Science of Recycling, Repurposing & Re-using" Join us to chat here on the LA Google Group Next steps:What are we working on now: *Uploading and ongoing analysis of CalEPA/CalRecycle waste-origin data *Inventory of waste disposal sites and transfer stations throughout Southern California *Develop a unit lesson plan for educators who ware interested in investigating their local waste stream with students -- with hands-on educational activities and options by grade level *Investigating the potential of GPS-tracking technology to analyze (near) real-time movement of waste in Southern California. *Developing outreach and partnerships with organizations that promote understanding of waste and zero-waste policies Updates[notes:SoCalWasteStream-blog] “SoCalWasteStream-blog” https://publiclab.org/tag/evidence-project https://publiclab.org/blog/evidence-project Activities we’ve done in our project[activities:TAG] => “activity:TAG” vs. “TAG” DataList of Waste Facilities by County This list is a work-in-progress hosted on Google Sheets. Please contact the Project Lead for permission to edit this document. Questions*What is the definition of Southern California? *Where do waste regions end and begin? How defined are they? *What is the burden of industrial waste compared to consumer waste? *How does bio-waste move within the waste stream? *What type of awareness/advocacy tools can we develop as a result of this project? (i.e. infographics, spreadsheets, long-form articles, animation). *How do privately-run landfills compare to landfills run by government agencies? [notes:question:TAG] ResourcesImportant Links for Obtaining Waste Data CalRecycle Facility Search Entering the name of a landfill or waste-sorting facility in the field, SWIS site name, will bring up information for that particular facility. Please explore the tabs marked, inspection, enforcement, maps & documents. We’re looking for: *People with expertise in calculating and modeling GHG emissions of waste-industry traffic *An individual who is willing to spearhead and organize GPS-tracking project *Artists with film/animation skills, graphic design skills, as well as pen-and-paper skills *Educators with experience writing lesson plans *Individuals who are interested in gathering, sorting and analyzing state and local data *Your ideas and feedback! __ Our project tag: SoCalWasteStream Others we follow: |
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41 | stevie |
October 21, 2016 15:21
| about 8 years ago
Mapping the Waste Stream of Southern CaliforniaAbout the issue and the projectOne of the main issues with waste is that it needs to be transported. Local landfills have long since been replaced by large, regional landfills where waste from more metropolitan areas is gathered and then sent to be landfilled or recycled at a faraway location. When a garbage truck picks up your weekly curbside waste, that waste will likely make its way to a landfill or recycling facility only after it has traveled many miles on interstate and highways, passing through several transfer stations, and then more roads. In some cases, your trash will cross multiple county lines, or perhaps a state line, before it is finally recycled or landfilled. Using the region of Southern California as a case study, we would like to investigate the real environmental impact of transporting waste in the era of mega-landfills. Do waste-by-rail projects, such as Los Angeles' Mesquite Regional Landfill, result in lower greenhouse gas emissions and do they offer a less deleterious solution as we make our way toward a zero-waste society? The process of sending waste to transfer stations and to other municipalities also has the effect of obscuring the waste picture for a town or city. This effect can be quite serious, since not knowing how much waste your town produces or knowing where it goes may result in difficulties when advocating for and implementing responsible waste policies. In practice, it can also present problems when researchers, agencies and individuals and interpret and respond to environmental impact reports, such as planning documents required for the California Environmental Quality Act, (CEQA). People who are involvedProject Lead: Sara Sage Participants: If you are interested in being involved with this project, please comment below, contact the Project Lead, write a research note, join the LA Google Group and drop a note, or directly contribute to this wiki. Groups: Students at Learn Beyond the Book in Santa Clarita, California, including instructor, Elizabeth Rydall, who teaches the class, "Art & Science of Recycling, Repurposing & Re-using" Join us to chat here on the LA Google Group Next steps:What are we working on now: *Uploading and ongoing analysis of CalEPA/CalRecycle waste-origin data *Inventory of waste disposal sites and transfer stations throughout Southern California *Develop a unit lesson plan for educators who ware interested in investigating their local waste stream with students -- with hands-on educational activities and options by grade level *Investigating the potential of GPS-tracking technology to analyze (near) real-time movement of waste in Southern California. *Developing outreach and partnerships with organizations that promote understanding of waste and zero-waste policies Updates[notes:SoCalWasteStream-blog] “SoCalWasteStream-blog” https://publiclab.org/tag/evidence-project https://publiclab.org/blog/evidence-project Activities we’ve done in our project[activities:TAG] => “activity:TAG” vs. “TAG” DataList of Waste Facilities by County This list is a work-in-progress hosted on Google Sheets. Please contact the Project Lead for permission to edit this document. Questions*What is the definition of Southern California? *Where do waste regions end and begin? How defined are they? *What is the burden of industrial waste compared to consumer waste? *How does bio-waste move within the waste stream? *What type of awareness/advocacy tools can we develop as a result of this project? (i.e. infographics, spreadsheets, long-form articles, animation). *How do privately-run landfills compare to landfills run by government agencies? [notes:question:TAG] ResourcesImportant Links for Obtaining Waste Data CalRecycle Facility Search Entering the name of a landfill or waste-sorting facility in the field, SWIS site name, will bring up information for that particular facility. Please explore the tabs marked, inspection, enforcement, maps & documents. We’re looking for: *People with expertise in calculating and modeling GHG emissions of waste-industry traffic *An individual who is willing to spearhead and organize GPS-tracking project *Artists with film/animation skills, graphic design skills, as well as pen-and-paper skills *Educators with experience writing lesson plans *Individuals who are interested in gathering, sorting and analyzing state and local data *Your ideas and feedback! __ Our project tag: SoCalWasteStream Others we follow: |
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40 | sarasage |
October 20, 2016 16:07
| about 8 years ago
Mapping the Waste Stream of Southern CaliforniaAbout the issue and the projectOne of the main issues with waste is that it needs to be transported. Local landfills have long since been replaced by large, regional landfills where waste from more metropolitan areas is gathered and then sent to be landfilled or recycled at a faraway location. When a garbage truck picks up your weekly curbside waste, that waste will likely make its way to a landfill or recycling facility only after it has traveled many miles on interstate and highways, passing through several transfer stations, and then more roads. In some cases, your trash will cross multiple county lines, or perhaps a state line, before it is finally recycled or landfilled. Using the region of Southern California as a case study, we would like to investigate the real environmental impact of transporting waste in the era of mega-landfills. Do waste-by-rail projects, such as Los Angeles' Mesquite Regional Landfill, result in lower greenhouse gas emissions and do they offer a less deleterious solution as we make our way toward a zero-waste society? The process of sending waste to transfer stations and to other municipalities also has the effect of obscuring the waste picture for a town or city. This effect can be quite serious, since not knowing how much waste your town produces or knowing where it goes may result in difficulties when advocating for and implementing responsible waste policies. In practice, it can also present problems when researchers, agencies and individuals and interpret and respond to environmental impact reports, such as planning documents required for the California Environmental Quality Act, (CEQA). People who are involvedProject Lead: Sara Sage Participants: If you are interested in being involved with this project, please comment below, contact the Project Lead, write a research note, join the LA Google Group and drop a noe, or directly contribute to this wiki. Groups: Students at Learn Beyond the Book in Santa Clarita, California, including instructor, Elizabeth Rydall, who teaches the class, "Art & Science of Recycling, Repurposing & Re-using" Join us to chat here on the LA Google Group Next steps:What are we working on now: *Uploading and ongoing analysis of CalEPA/CalRecycle waste-origin data *Inventory of waste disposal sites and transfer stations throughout Southern California *Develop a unit lesson plan for educators who ware interested in investigating their local waste stream with students -- with hands-on educational activities and options by grade level *Investigating the potential of GPS-tracking technology to analyze (near) real-time movement of waste in Southern California. *Developing outreach and partnerships with organizations that promote understanding of waste and zero-waste policies Updates[notes:SoCalWasteStream-blog] “SoCalWasteStream-blog” https://publiclab.org/tag/evidence-project https://publiclab.org/blog/evidence-project Activities we’ve done in our project[activities:TAG] => “activity:TAG” vs. “TAG” DataList of Waste Facilities by County This list is a work-in-progress hosted on Google Sheets. Please contact the Project Lead for permission to edit this document. Questions*What is the definition of Southern California? *Where do waste regions end and begin? How defined are they? *What is the burden of industrial waste compared to consumer waste? *How does bio-waste move within the waste stream? *What type of awareness/advocacy tools can we develop as a result of this project? (i.e. infographics, spreadsheets, long-form articles, animation). *How do privately-run landfills compare to landfills run by government agencies? [notes:question:TAG] ResourcesImportant Links for Obtaining Waste Data CalRecycle Facility Search Entering the name of a landfill or waste-sorting facility in the field, SWIS site name, will bring up information for that particular facility. Please explore the tabs marked, inspection, enforcement, maps & documents. We’re looking for: *People with expertise in calculating and modeling GHG emissions of waste-industry traffic *An individual who is willing to spearhead and organize GPS-tracking project *Artists with film/animation skills, graphic design skills, as well as pen-and-paper skills *Educators with experience writing lesson plans *Individuals who are interested in gathering, sorting and analyzing state and local data *Your ideas and feedback! __ Our project tag: SoCalWasteStream Others we follow: |
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39 | sarasage |
October 18, 2016 00:00
| about 8 years ago
Mapping the Waste Stream of Southern CaliforniaAbout the issue and the projectOne of the main issues with waste is that it needs to be transported. Local landfills have long since been replaced by large, regional landfills where waste from more metropolitan areas is gathered and then sent to be landfilled or recycled at a faraway location. When a garbage truck picks up your weekly curbside waste, that waste will likely make its way to a landfill or recycling facility only after it has traveled many miles on interstate and highways, passing through several transfer stations, and then more roads. In some cases, your trash will cross multiple county lines, or perhaps a state line, before it is finally recycled or landfilled. Using the region of Southern California as a case study, we would like to investigate the real environmental impact of transporting waste in the era of mega-landfills. Do waste-by-rail projects, such as Los Angeles' Mesquite Regional Landfill, result in lower greenhouse gas emissions and do they offer a less deleterious solution as we make our way toward a zero-waste society? The process of sending waste to transfer stations and to other municipalities also has the effect of obscuring the waste picture for a town or city. This effect can be quite serious, since not knowing how much waste your town produces or knowing where it goes may result in difficulties when advocating for and implementing responsible waste policies. In practice, it can also present problems when researchers, agencies and individuals and interpret and respond to environmental impact reports, such as planning documents required for the California Environmental Quality Act, (CEQA). People who are involvedProject Lead: Sara Sage Participants: If you are interested in being involved with this project, please comment below, contact the Project Lead, write a research note, join the LA Google Group and drop a noe, or directly contribute to this wiki. Groups: Students at Learn Beyond the Book in Santa Clarita, California, including instructor, Elizabeth Rydall, who teaches the class, "Art & Science of Recycling, Repurposing & Re-using" Join us to chat here on the LA Google Group Next steps:What are we working on now: *Uploading and ongoing analysis of CalEPA/CalRecycle waste-origin data *Inventory of waste disposal sites and transfer stations throughout Southern California *Develop a unit lesson plan for educators who ware interested in investigating their local waste stream with students -- with hands-on educational activities and options by grade level *Investigating the potential of GPS-tracking technology to analyze (near) real-time movement of waste in Southern California. *Developing outreach and partnerships with organizations that promote understanding of waste and zero-waste policies Updates[notes:SoCalWasteStream-blog] “SoCalWasteStream-blog” https://publiclab.org/tag/evidence-project https://publiclab.org/blog/evidence-project Activities we’ve done in our project[activities:TAG] => “activity:TAG” vs. “TAG” DataList of Waste Facilities by County This list is a work-in-progress hosted on Google Sheets. Please contact the Project Lead for permission to edit this document. Questions*What is the definition of Southern California? *Where do waste regions end and begin? How defined are they? *What is the burden of industrial waste compared to consumer waste? *How does bio-waste move within the waste stream? *What type of awareness/advocacy tools can we develop as a result of this project? (i.e. infographics, spreadsheets, long-form articles, animation). *How do privately-run landfills compare to landfills run by government agencies? [notes:question:TAG] ResourcesImportant Links for Obtaining Waste Data CalRecycle Facility Search Entering the name of a landfill or waste-sorting facility in the field, SWIS site name, will bring up information for that particular facility. Please explore the tabs marked, inspection, enforcement, maps & documents. We’re looking for: *People with expertise in calculating and modeling GHG emissions of waste-industry traffic *An individual who is willing to spearhead and organize GPS-tracking project *Artists with film/animation skills, graphic design skills, as well as pen-and-paper skills *Educators with experience writing lesson plans *Individuals who are interested in gathering, sorting and analyzing state and local data *Your ideas and feedback! __ Our project tag: SoCalWasteStream Others we follow: |
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38 | sarasage |
October 17, 2016 23:48
| about 8 years ago
Mapping the Waste Stream of Southern CaliforniaAbout the issue and the projectOne of the main issues with waste is that it needs to be transported. Local landfills have long since been replaced by large, regional landfills where waste from more metropolitan areas is gathered and then sent to be landfilled or recycled at a faraway location. When a garbage truck picks up your weekly curbside waste, that waste will likely make its way to a landfill or recycling facility only after it has traveled many miles on interstate and highways, passing through several transfer stations, and then more roads. In some cases, your trash will cross multiple county lines, or perhaps a state line, before it is finally recycled or landfilled. Using the region of Southern California as a case study, we would like to investigate the real environmental impact of transporting waste in the era of mega-landfills. Do waste-by-rail projects, such as Los Angeles' Mesquite Regional Landfill, result in lower greenhouse gas emissions and do they offer a less deleterious solution as we make our way toward a zero-waste society? The process of sending waste to transfer stations and to other municipalities also has the effect of obscuring the waste picture for a town or city. This effect can be quite serious, since not knowing how much waste your town produces or knowing where it goes may result in difficulties when advocating for and implementing responsible waste policies. In practice, it can also present problems when researchers, agencies and individuals and interpret and respond to environmental impact reports, such as planning documents required for the California Environmental Quality Act, (CEQA). People who are involvedProject Lead: Sara Sage Participants: If you are interested in being involved with this project, please comment below, contact the Project Lead, write a research note, join the LA Google Group and drop a noe, or directly contribute to this wiki. Groups: Students at Learn Beyond the Book in Santa Clarita, California, including instructor, Elizabeth Rydall, who teaches the class, "Art & Science of Recycling, Repurposing & Re-using" Join us to chat here on the LA Google Group Next steps:What are we working on now: *Uploading and ongoing analysis of CalEPA/CalRecycle waste-origin data *Inventory of waste disposal sites and transfer stations throughout Southern California *Develop a unit lesson plan for educators who ware interested in investigating their local waste stream with students -- with hands-on educational activities and options by grade level *Investigating the potential of GPS-tracking technology to analyze (near) real-time movement of waste in Southern California. *Developing outreach and partnerships with organizations that promote understanding of waste and zero-waste policies Updates[notes:SoCalWasteStream-blog] “SoCalWasteStream-blog” https://publiclab.org/tag/evidence-project https://publiclab.org/blog/evidence-project Activities we’ve done in our project[activities:TAG] => “activity:TAG” vs. “TAG” DataList of Waste Facilities by County This list is a work-in-progress hosted on Google Sheets. Please contact the Project Lead for permission to edit this document. Questions*What is the definition of Southern California? *Where do waste regions end and begin? How defined are they? *What type of awareness/advocacy tools can we develop as a result of this project? (i.e. infographics, spreadsheets, long-form articles, animation). *How do privately-run landfills compare to landfills run by government agencies? [notes:question:TAG] ResourcesImportant Links for Obtaining Waste Data CalRecycle Facility Search Entering the name of a landfill or waste-sorting facility in the field, SWIS site name, will bring up information for that particular facility. Please explore the tabs marked, inspection, enforcement, maps & documents. We’re looking for: *People with expertise in calculating and modeling GHG emissions of waste-industry traffic *An individual who is willing to spearhead and organize GPS-tracking project *Artists with film/animation skills, graphic design skills, as well as pen-and-paper skills *Educators with experience writing lesson plans *Individuals who are interested in gathering, sorting and analyzing state and local data *Your ideas and feedback! __ Our project tag: SoCalWasteStream Others we follow: |
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37 | sarasage |
October 17, 2016 23:42
| about 8 years ago
Mapping the Waste Stream of Southern CaliforniaAbout the issue and the projectOne of the main issues with waste is that it needs to be transported. Local landfills have long since been replaced by large, regional landfills where waste from more metropolitan areas is gathered and then sent to be landfilled or recycled at a faraway location. When a garbage truck picks up your weekly curbside waste, that waste will likely make its way to a landfill or recycling facility only after it has traveled many miles on interstate and highways, passing through several transfer stations, and then more roads. In some cases, your trash will cross multiple county lines, or perhaps a state line, before it is finally recycled or landfilled. Using the region of Southern California as a case study, we would like to investigate the real environmental impact of transporting waste in the era of mega-landfills. Do waste-by-rail projects, such as Los Angeles' Mesquite Regional Landfill, result in lower greenhouse gas emissions and do they offer a less deleterious solution as we make our way toward a zero-waste society? The process of sending waste to transfer stations and to other municipalities also has the effect of obscuring the waste picture for a town or city. This effect can be quite serious, since not knowing how much waste your town produces or knowing where it goes may result in difficulties when advocating for and implementing responsible waste policies. In practice, it can also present problems when researchers, agencies and individuals and interpret and respond to environmental impact reports, such as planning documents required for the California Environmental Quality Act, (CEQA). People who are involvedProject Lead: Sara Sage Participants: If you are interested in being involved with this project, please comment below, contact the Project Lead, write a research note, join the LA Google Group and drop a noe, or directly contribute to this wiki. Groups: Students at Learn Beyond the Book in Santa Clarita, California, including instructor, Elizabeth Rydall, who teaches the class, "Art & Science of Recycling, Repurposing & Re-using" Join us to chat here on the LA Google Group Next steps:What are we working on now: *Uploading and ongoing analysis of CalEPA/CalRecycle waste-origin data *Inventory of waste disposal sites and transfer stations throughout Southern California *Develop a unit lesson plan for educators who ware interested in investigating their local waste stream with students -- with hands-on educational activities and options by grade level *Investigating the potential of GPS-tracking technology to analyze (near) real-time movement of waste in Southern California. *Developing outreach and partnerships with organizations that promote understanding of waste and zero-waste policies Updates[notes:SoCalWasteStream-blog] “SoCalWasteStream-blog” https://publiclab.org/tag/evidence-project https://publiclab.org/blog/evidence-project Activities we’ve done in our project[activities:TAG] => “activity:TAG” vs. “TAG” DataList of Waste Facilities by County This list is a work-in-progress hosted on Google Sheets. Please contact the Project Lead for permission to edit this document. Questions*What is the definition of Southern California? *Where do waste regions end and begin? How defined are they? *What type of awareness/advocacy tools can we develop as a result of this project? (i.e. infographics, spreadsheets, long-form articles, animation). *How do privately-run landfills compare to landfills run by government agencies? [notes:question:TAG] ResourcesImportant Links for Obtaining Waste Data CalRecycle Facility Search Entering the name of a landfill or waste-sorting facility in the field, SWIS site name, will bring up information for that particular facility. Please explore the tabs marked, inspection, enforcement, maps & documents. We’re looking for: *People with expertise in calculating and modeling GHG emissions of waste-industry traffic *An individual who is willing to spearhead and organize GPS-tracking project *Artists with film/animation skills, graphic design skills, as well as pen-and-paper skills *Educators with experience writing lesson plans *Individuals who are interested in gathering, sorting and analyzing state and local data *Your ideas and feedback! __ Our project tag: SoCalWasteStream Others we follow: |
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36 | sarasage |
October 17, 2016 23:07
| about 8 years ago
Mapping the Waste Stream of Southern CaliforniaAbout the issue and the projectOne of the main issues with waste is that it needs to be transported. Local landfills have long since been replaced by large, regional landfills where waste from more metropolitan areas is gathered and then sent to be landfilled or recycled at a faraway location. When a garbage truck picks up your weekly curbside waste, that waste will likely make its way to a landfill or recycling facility only after it has traveled many miles on interstate and highways, passing through several transfer stations, and then more roads. In some cases, your trash will cross multiple county lines, or perhaps a state line, before it is finally recycled or landfilled. Using the region of Southern California as a case study, we would like to investigate the real environmental impact of transporting waste in the era of mega-landfills. Do waste-by-rail projects, such as Los Angeles' Mesquite Regional Landfill, result in lower greenhouse gas emissions and do they offer a less deleterious solution as we make our way toward a zero-waste society? The process of sending waste to transfer stations and to other municipalities also has the effect of obscuring the waste picture for a town or city. This effect can be quite serious, since not knowing how much waste your town produces or knowing where it goes may result in difficulties when advocating for and implementing responsible waste policies. In practice, it can also present problems when researchers, agencies and individuals and interpret and respond to environmental impact reports, such as planning documents required for the California Environmental Quality Act, (CEQA). People who are involvedProject Lead: Sara Sage Participants: If you are interested in being involved with this project, please comment below, contact the Project Lead, write a research note, join the LA Google Group and drop a noe, or directly contribute to this wiki. Groups: Students at Learn Beyond the Book in Santa Clarita, California, including instructor, Elizabeth Rydall, who teaches the class, "Art & Science of Recycling, Repurposing & Re-using" Join us to chat here on the LA Google Group Next steps:What are we working on now: *Uploading and ongoing analysis of CalEPA/CalRecycle waste-origin data *Inventory of waste disposal sites and transfer stations throughout Southern California *Develop a unit lesson plan for educators who ware interested in investigating their local waste stream with students -- with hands-on educational activities and options by grade level *Investigating the potential of GPS-tracking technology to analyze (near) real-time movement of waste in Southern California. *Developing outreach and partnerships with organizations that promote understanding of waste and zero-waste policies Updates[notes:SoCalWasteStream-blog] “SoCalWasteStream-blog” https://publiclab.org/tag/evidence-project https://publiclab.org/blog/evidence-project Activities we’ve done in our project[activities:TAG] => “activity:TAG” vs. “TAG” DataStay tuned for spreadsheets... Questions*What is the definition of Southern California? *Where do waste regions end and begin? *What type of awareness/advocacy tools can we develop as a result of this project? (i.e. infographics, spreadsheets, long-form articles, animation). *How do privately-run landfills compare to landfills run by government agencies? [notes:question:TAG] ResourcesImportant Links for Obtaining Waste Data CalRecycle Facility Search Entering the name of a landfill or waste-sorting facility in the field, SWIS site name, will bring up information for that particular facility. Please explore the tabs marked, inspection, enforcement, maps & documents. We’re looking for: *People with expertise in calculating and modeling GHG emissions of waste-industry traffic *An individual who is willing to spearhead and organize GPS-tracking project *Artists with film/animation skills, graphic design skills, as well as pen-and-paper skills *Educators with experience writing lesson plans *Individuals who are interested in gathering, sorting and analyzing state and local data *Your ideas and feedback! __ Our project tag: SoCalWasteStream Others we follow: |
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35 | sarasage |
October 17, 2016 23:06
| about 8 years ago
Mapping the Waste Stream of Southern CaliforniaAbout the issue and the projectOne of the main issues with waste is that it needs to be transported. Local landfills have long since been replaced by large, regional landfills where waste from more metropolitan areas is gathered and then sent to be landfilled or recycled at a faraway location. When a garbage truck picks up your weekly curbside waste, that waste will likely make its way to a landfill or recycling facility only after it has traveled many miles on interstate and highways, passing through several transfer stations, and then more roads. In some cases, your trash will cross multiple county lines, or perhaps a state line, before it is finally recycled or landfilled. Using the region of Southern California as a case study, we would like to investigate the real environmental impact of transporting waste in the era of mega-landfills. Do waste-by-rail projects, such as Los Angeles' Mesquite Regional Landfill, result in lower greenhouse gas emissions and do they offer a less deleterious solution as we make our way toward a zero-waste society? The process of sending waste to transfer stations and to other municipalities also has the effect of obscuring the waste picture for a town or city. This effect can be quite serious, since not knowing how much waste your town produces or knowing where it goes may result in difficulties when advocating for and implementing responsible waste policies. In practice, it can also present problems when researchers, agencies and individuals and interpret and respond to environmental impact reports, such as planning documents required for the California Environmental Quality Act, (CEQA). People who are involvedProject Lead: Sara Sage Participants: If you are interested in being involved with this project, please comment below, contact the Project Lead, write a research note, join the LA Google Group and drop a noe, or directly contribute to this wiki. Groups: Students at Learn Beyond the Book in Santa Clarita, California, including instructor, Elizabeth Rydall, who teaches the class, "Art & Science of Recycling, Repurposing & Re-using" Join us to chat here on the LA Google Group Next steps:What are we working on now: *Uploading and ongoing analysis of CalEPA/CalRecycle waste-origin data *Inventory of waste disposal sites and transfer stations throughout Southern California *Develop a unit lesson plan for educators who ware interested in investigating their local waste stream with students -- with hands-on educational activities and options by grade level *Investigating the potential of GPS-tracking technology to analyze (near) real-time movement of waste in Southern California. *Developing outreach and partnerships with organizations that promote understanding of waste and zero-waste policies Updates[notes:SoCalWasteStream-blog] “SoCalWasteStream-blog” https://publiclab.org/tag/evidence-project https://publiclab.org/blog/evidence-project Activities we’ve done in our project[activities:TAG] => “activity:TAG” vs. “TAG” DataStay tuned for spreadsheets... Questions*What is the definition of Southern California? *Where do waste regions end and begin? *What type of awareness/advocacy tools can we develop as a result of this project? (i.e. infographics, spreadsheets, long-form articles, animation). *How do privately-run landfills compare to landfills run by government agencies? [notes:question:TAG] ResourcesImportant Links for Obtaining Waste Data CalRecycle Facility Search Entering the name of a landfill or waste-sorting facility in the field, SWIS site name," will bring up information for that particular facility. Please explore the tabs marked, inspection, enforcement, maps & documents. We’re looking for: *People with expertise in calculating and modeling GHG emissions of waste-industry traffic *An individual who is willing to spearhead and organize GPS-tracking project *Artists with film/animation skills, graphic design skills, as well as pen-and-paper skills *Educators with experience writing lesson plans *Individuals who are interested in gathering, sorting and analyzing state and local data *Your ideas and feedback! __ Our project tag: SoCalWasteStream Others we follow: |
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34 | sarasage |
October 17, 2016 22:49
| about 8 years ago
Mapping the Waste Stream of Southern CaliforniaAbout the issue and the projectOne of the main issues with waste is that it needs to be transported. Local landfills have long since been replaced by large, regional landfills where waste from more metropolitan areas is gathered and then sent to be landfilled or recycled at a faraway location. When a garbage truck picks up your weekly curbside waste, that waste will likely make its way to a landfill or recycling facility only after it has traveled many miles on interstate and highways, passing through several transfer stations, and then more roads. In some cases, your trash will cross multiple county lines, or perhaps a state line, before it is finally recycled or landfilled. Using the region of Southern California as a case study, we would like to investigate the real environmental impact of transporting waste in the era of mega-landfills. Do waste-by-rail projects, such as Los Angeles' Mesquite Regional Landfill, result in lower greenhouse gas emissions and do they offer a less deleterious solution as we make our way toward a zero-waste society? The process of sending waste to transfer stations and to other municipalities also has the effect of obscuring the waste picture for a town or city. This effect can be quite serious, since not knowing how much waste your town produces or knowing where it goes may result in difficulties when advocating for and implementing responsible waste policies. In practice, it can also present problems when researchers, agencies and individuals and interpret and respond to environmental impact reports, such as planning documents required for the California Environmental Quality Act, (CEQA). People who are involvedProject Lead: Sara Sage Participants: If you are interested in being involved with this project, please comment below, contact the Project Lead, write a research note, join the LA Google Group and drop a noe, or directly contribute to this wiki. Groups: Students at Learn Beyond the Book in Santa Clarita, California, including instructor, Elizabeth Rydall, who teaches the class, "Art & Science of Recycling, Repurposing & Re-using" Join us to chat here on the LA Google Group Next steps:What are we working on now: *Uploading and ongoing analysis of CalEPA/CalRecycle waste-origin data *Inventory of waste disposal sites and transfer stations throughout Southern California *Develop a unit lesson plan for educators who ware interested in investigating their local waste stream with students -- with hands-on educational activities and options by grade level *Investigating the potential of GPS-tracking technology to analyze (near) real-time movement of waste in Southern California. *Developing outreach and partnerships with organizations that promote understanding of waste and zero-waste policies Updates[notes:SoCalWasteStream-blog] “SoCalWasteStream-blog” https://publiclab.org/tag/evidence-project https://publiclab.org/blog/evidence-project Activities we’ve done in our project[activities:TAG] => “activity:TAG” vs. “TAG” DataStay tuned for spreadsheets... QuestionsWhat is the definition of Southern California? Where do waste regions end and begin? What type of awareness/advocacy tools can we develop as a result of this project? _(i.e. infographics, spreadsheets, long-form articles, animation). [notes:question:TAG] ResourcesImportant Links for Obtaining Waste Data *CalRecycle Facility Search Entering the name of a landfill or waste-sorting facility on We’re looking for: *People with expertise in calculating and modeling GHG emissions of waste-industry traffic *An individual who is willing to spearhead and organize GPS-tracking project *Artists with film/animation skills, graphic design skills, as well as pen-and-paper skills *Educators with experience writing lesson plans *Individuals who are interested in gathering, sorting and analyzing state and local data *Your ideas and feedback! __ Our project tag: SoCalWasteStream Others we follow: |
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33 | sarasage |
October 17, 2016 21:16
| about 8 years ago
Mapping the Waste Stream of Southern CaliforniaAbout the issue and the projectOne of the main issues with waste is that it needs to be transported. Local landfills have long since been replaced by large, regional landfills, where waste from more metropolitan areas is gathered, then sent to be buried in a faraway location. When a garbage truck picks up your weekly curbside waste, that waste will likely make its way to a landfill or recycling facility only after it has traveled many miles on interstate and highways, passing several transfer stations. In some cases, your trash will cross multiple county lines, or perhaps a state line, before it is finally recycled or landfilled. Using the region of Southern California as a case study, we would like to investigate the real environmental impact of transporting waste in the era of mega-landfills? Do waste-by-rail projects, such as Los Angeles' Mesquite Regional Landfill, result in lower greenhouse gas emissions and do they offer a less deleterious solution as we make our way toward a zero-waste society. The process of sending waste to transfer stations and to other municipalities also has the effect of obscuring the waste picture for a town or city. This effect can be quite serious, since not knowing how much waste your town produces or knowing where it goes can result in real difficulties when advocating for and implementing responsible waste policies in everyday policy decisions. This can also present problems when researching and responding to environmental impact reports. People who are involvedProject Lead: Sara Sage Participants: If you are interested in being involved with this project, please comment below, contact the Project Lead, write a research note, join the LA Google Group and drop a noe, or directly contribute to this wiki. Groups: Students at Learn Beyond the Book in Santa Clarita, California, including instructor, Elizabeth Rydall, who teaches the class, "Art & Science of Recycling, Repurposing & Re-using" Join us to chat here on the LA Google Group Next steps:What are we working on now: *Uploading and ongoing analysis of CalEPA/CalRecycle waste-origin data *Inventory of waste disposal sites and transfer stations throughout Southern California *Developing a unit lesson plan for educators who ware interested in investigating their local waste stream with students -- with hands-on educational activities and options by grade level *Investigating the potential of GPS-tracking technology to analyze (near) real-time movement of waste in Southern California. *Developing outreach and partnerships with organizations that promote understanding of waste and zero-waste policies Updates[notes:SoCalWasteStream-blog] “SoCalWasteStream-blog” https://publiclab.org/tag/evidence-project https://publiclab.org/blog/evidence-project Activities we’ve done in our project[activities:TAG] => “activity:TAG” vs. “TAG” DataStay tuned for spreadsheets... QuestionsWhat is the definition of Southern California? Where do waste regions end and begin? What type of awareness/advocacy tools can we develop as a result of this project? _(i.e. infographics, spreadsheets, long-form articles, animation). [notes:question:TAG] ResourcesWe have: data from CalEPA and CalRecycle We’re looking for: *People with expertise in calculating and modeling GHG emissions of waste-industry traffic *An individual who is willing to spearhead and organize GPS-tracking project *Artists with film/animation skills, graphic design skills, as well as pen-and-paper skills *Educators with experience writing lesson plans *Individuals who are interested in gathering, sorting and analyzing state and local data *Your ideas and feedback! __ Our project tag: SoCalWasteStream Others we follow: |
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32 | sarasage |
October 17, 2016 21:15
| about 8 years ago
Mapping the Waste Stream of Southern CaliforniaAbout the issue and the projectOne of the main issues with waste is that it needs to be transported. Local landfills have long since been replaced by large, regional landfills, where waste from more metropolitan areas is gathered, then sent to be buried in a faraway location. When a garbage truck picks up your weekly curbside waste, that waste will likely make its way to a landfill or recycling facility only after it has traveled many miles on interstate and highways, passing several transfer stations. In some cases, your trash will cross multiple county lines, or perhaps a state line, before it is finally recycled or landfilled. Using the region of Southern California as a case study, we would like to investigate the real environmental impact of transporting waste in the era of mega-landfills? Do waste-by-rail projects, such as Los Angeles' Mesquite Regional Landfill, result in lower greenhouse gas emissions and do they offer a less deleterious solution as we make our way toward a zero-waste society. The process of sending waste to transfer stations and to other municipalities also has the effect of obscuring the waste picture for a town or city. This effect can be quite serious, since not knowing how much waste your town produces or knowing where it goes can result in real difficulties when advocating for and implementing responsible waste policies in everyday policy decisions. This can also present problems when researching and responding to environmental impact reports. People who are involvedProject Lead: Sara Sage Participants: If you are interested in being involved with this project, please comment below, contact the Project Lead, write a research note, join the LA Google Group and drop a noe, or directly contribute to this wiki. Groups: Students at Learn Beyond the Book in Santa Clarita, California, including instructor, Elizabeth Rydall, who teaches the class, "Art & Science of Recycling, Repurposing & Re-using" Join us to chat here on the LA Google Group Next steps:What are we working on now: *Uploading and ongoing analysis of CalEPA/CalRecycle waste-origin data *_Inventory of waste disposal sites and transfer stations throughout Southern California *Developing a unit lesson plan for educators who ware interested in investigating their local waste stream with students -- with hands-on educational activities and options by grade level *Investigating the potential of GPS-tracking technology to analyze (near) real-time movement of waste in Southern California. *Developing outreach and partnerships with organizations that promote understanding of waste and zero-waste policies Updates[notes:SoCalWasteStream-blog] “SoCalWasteStream-blog” https://publiclab.org/tag/evidence-project https://publiclab.org/blog/evidence-project Activities we’ve done in our project[activities:TAG] => “activity:TAG” vs. “TAG” DataStay tuned for spreadsheets... QuestionsWhat is the definition of Southern California? Where do waste regions end and begin? What type of awareness/advocacy tools can we develop as a result of this project? _(i.e. infographics, spreadsheets, long-form articles, animation). [notes:question:TAG] ResourcesWe have: data from CalEPA and CalRecycle We’re looking for: *People with expertise in calculating and modeling GHG emissions of waste-industry traffic *An individual who is willing to spearhead and organize GPS-tracking project *Artists with film/animation skills, graphic design skills, as well as pen-and-paper skills *Educators with experience writing lesson plans *Individuals who are interested in gathering, sorting and analyzing state and local data *Your ideas and feedback! __ Our project tag: SoCalWasteStream Others we follow: |
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31 | sarasage |
October 17, 2016 21:13
| about 8 years ago
Mapping the Waste Stream of Southern CaliforniaAbout the issue and the projectOne of the main issues with waste is that it needs to be transported. Local landfills have long since been replaced by large, regional landfills, where waste from more metropolitan areas is gathered, then sent to be buried in a faraway location. When a garbage truck picks up your weekly curbside waste, that waste will likely make its way to a landfill or recycling facility only after it has traveled many miles on interstate and highways, passing several transfer stations. In some cases, your trash will cross multiple county lines, or perhaps a state line, before it is finally recycled or landfilled. Using the region of Southern California as a case study, we would like to investigate the real environmental impact of transporting waste in the era of mega-landfills? Do waste-by-rail projects, such as Los Angeles' Mesquite Regional Landfill, result in lower greenhouse gas emissions and do they offer a less deleterious solution as we make our way toward a zero-waste society. The process of sending waste to transfer stations and to other municipalities also has the effect of obscuring the waste picture for a town or city. This effect can be quite serious, since not knowing how much waste your town produces or knowing where it goes can result in real difficulties when advocating for and implementing responsible waste policies in everyday policy decisions. This can also present problems when researching and responding to environmental impact reports. People who are involvedProject Lead: Sara Sage Participants: If you are interested in being involved with this project, please comment below, contact the Project Lead, write a research note, join the LA Google Group and drop a noe, or directly contribute to this wiki. Groups: Students at Learn Beyond the Book in Santa Clarita, California, including instructor, Elizabeth Rydall, who teaches the class, "Art & Science of Recycling, Repurposing & Re-using" Join us to chat here on the LA Google Group Next steps:What are we working on now: *Uploading and ongoing analysis of CalEPA/CalRecycle waste-origin data *_Inventory of waste disposal sites and transfer stations throughout Southern California *Developing a unit lesson plan for educators who ware interested in investigating their local waste stream with students -- with hands-on educational activities and options by grade level *Investigating the potential of GPS-tracking technology to analyze (near) real-time movement of waste in Southern California. *Developing outreach and partnerships with organizations that promote understanding of waste and zero-waste policies Updates[notes:SoCalWasteStream-blog] “SoCalWasteStream-blog” https://publiclab.org/tag/evidence-project https://publiclab.org/blog/evidence-project Activities we’ve done in our project[activities:TAG] => “activity:TAG” vs. “TAG” DataStay tuned for spreadsheets... QuestionsWhat is the definition of Southern California? Where do waste regions end and begin? What type of awareness/advocacy tools can we develop as a result of this project? _(i.e. infographics, spreadsheets, long-form articles, animation). [notes:question:TAG] ResourcesWe have: data from CalEPA and CalRecycle We’re looking for: *People with expertise in calculating and modeling GHG emissions of waste-industry traffic *An individual who is willing to spearhead and organize GPS-tracking project *Artists with film/animation skills, graphic design skills, as well as pen-and-paper skills *Educators with experience writing lesson plans *Individuals who are interested in gathering, sorting and analyzing state and local data *Your ideas and feedback! __ Our project tag: SoCalWasteStream Others we follow: |
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30 | warren |
October 17, 2016 19:58
| about 8 years ago
Mapping the Waste Stream of Southern CaliforniaAbout the issue and the projectOne of the main issues with waste is that it needs to be transported. Local landfills have long since been replaced by large, regional landfills, where waste from more metropolitan areas is gathered, then sent to be buried in a faraway location. When a garbage truck picks up your weekly curbside waste, that waste will likely make its way to a landfill or recycling facility only after it has traveled many miles on interstate and highways, passing several transfer stations. In some cases, your trash will cross multiple county lines, or perhaps a state line, before it is finally recycled or landfilled. Using the region of Southern California as a case study, we would like to investigate the real environmental impact of transporting waste in the era of mega-landfills? Do waste-by-rail projects, such as Los Angeles' Mesquite Regional Landfill, result in lower greenhouse gas emissions and do they offer a less deleterious solution as we make our way toward a zero-waste society. The process of sending waste to transfer stations and to other municipalities also has the effect of obscuring the waste picture for a town or city. This effect can be quite serious, since not knowing how much waste your town produces or knowing where it goes can result in real difficulties when advocating for and implementing responsible waste policies in everyday policy decisions. This can also present problems when researching and responding to environmental impact reports. People who are involvedProject Lead: Sara Sage Participants: If you are interested in being involved with this project, please comment below, contact the Project Lead, write a research note, join the LA Google Group and drop a noe, or directly contribute to this wiki. Groups: Students at Learn Beyond the Book in Santa Clarita, California, including instructor, Elizabeth Rydall, who teaches the class, "Art & Science of Recycling, Repurposing & Re-using" Join us to chat here on the LA Google Group Next steps:What are we working on now: Uploading and ongoing analysis of CalEPA/CalRecycle waste-origin data Developing a unit lesson plan for educators who ware interested in investigating their local waste stream with students -- with hands-on educational activities and options by grade level Investigating the potential of GPS-tracking technology to analyze (near) real-time movement of waste in Southern California. Developing outreach and partnerships with organizations that promote understanding of waste and zero-waste policies Updates[notes:SoCalWasteStream-blog] “SoCalWasteStream-blog” https://publiclab.org/tag/evidence-project https://publiclab.org/blog/evidence-project Activities we’ve done in our project[activities:TAG] => “activity:TAG” vs. “TAG” DataStay tuned for spreadsheets... QuestionsWhat is the definition of Southern California? Where do waste regions end and begin? What type of awareness/advocacy tools can we develop as a result of this project? _(i.e. infographics, spreadsheets, long-form articles, animation). [notes:question:TAG] ResourcesWe have: data from CalEPA and CalRecycle We’re looking for: individuals with expertise in calculating and modeling GHG emissions of waste-industry traffic; an individual willing to spearhead a GPS-tracking project; artists with film/animation skills, graphic design skills, as well as pen-and-paper skills; educators with experience writing lesson plans; as well as individuals who are interested in gathering, sorting and analyzing state and local data __ Our project tag: SoCalWasteStream Others we follow: |
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29 | warren |
October 17, 2016 19:55
| about 8 years ago
Mapping the Waste Stream of Southern CaliforniaAbout the issue and the projectOne of the main issues with waste is that it needs to be transported. Local landfills have long since been replaced by large, regional landfills, where waste from more metropolitan areas is gathered, then sent to be buried in a faraway location. When a garbage truck picks up your weekly curbside waste, that waste will likely make its way to a landfill or recycling facility only after it has traveled many miles on interstate and highways, passing several transfer stations. In some cases, your trash will cross multiple county lines, or perhaps a state line, before it is finally recycled or landfilled. Using the region of Southern California as a case study, we would like to investigate the real environmental impact of transporting waste in the era of mega-landfills? Do waste-by-rail projects, such as Los Angeles' Mesquite Regional Landfill, result in lower greenhouse gas emissions and do they offer a less deleterious solution as we make our way toward a zero-waste society. The process of sending waste to transfer stations and to other municipalities also has the effect of obscuring the waste picture for a town or city. This effect can be quite serious, since not knowing how much waste your town produces or knowing where it goes can result in real difficulties when advocating for and implementing responsible waste policies in everyday policy decisions. This can also present problems when researching and responding to environmental impact reports. People who are involvedProject Lead: Sara Sage Participants: If you are interested in being involved with this project, please comment below, contact the Project Lead, write a research note, join the LA Google Group and drop a noe, or directly contribute to this wiki. Groups: Students at Learn Beyond the Book in Santa Clarita, California, including instructor, Elizabeth Rydall, who teaches the class, "Art & Science of Recycling, Repurposing & Re-using" Join us to chat here on the LA Google Group Next steps:What are we working on now: Uploading and ongoing analysis of CalEPA/CalRecycle waste-origin data Developing a unit lesson plan for educators who ware interested in investigating their local waste stream with students -- with hands-on educational activities and options by grade level Investigating the potential of GPS-tracking technology to analyze (near) real-time movement of waste in Southern California. Developing outreach and partnerships with organizations that promote understanding of waste and zero-waste policies Updates[notes:SoCalWasteStream-blog] “SoCalWasteStream-blog” https://publiclab.org/tag/evidence-project https://publiclab.org/blog/evidence-project Activities we’ve done in our project[activities:TAG] => “activity:TAG” vs. “TAG” DataStay tuned for spreadsheets... QuestionsWhat is the definition of Southern California? Where do waste regions end and begin? What type of awareness/advocacy tools can we develop as a result of this project? _(i.e. infographics, spreadsheets, long-form articles, animation). [notes:question:TAG] ResourcesWe have: data from CalEPA and CalRecycle We’re looking for: individuals with expertise in calculating and modeling GHG emissions of waste-industry traffic; an individual willing to spearhead a GPS-tracking project; artists with film/animation skills, graphic design skills, as well as pen-and-paper skills; educators with experience writing lesson plans; as well as individuals who are interested in gathering, sorting and analyzing state and local data __ Our project tag: SoCalWasteStream Others we follow: |
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28 | warren |
October 17, 2016 19:52
| about 8 years ago
Mapping the Waste Stream of Southern CaliforniaAbout the issue and the projectOne of the main issues with waste is that it needs to be transported. Local landfills have long since been replaced by large, regional landfills, where waste from more metropolitan areas is gathered, then sent to be buried in a faraway location. When a garbage truck picks up your weekly curbside waste, that waste will likely make its way to a landfill or recycling facility only after it has traveled many miles on interstate and highways, passing several transfer stations. In some cases, your trash will cross multiple county lines, or perhaps a state line, before it is finally recycled or landfilled. Using the region of Southern California as a case study, we would like to investigate the real environmental impact of transporting waste in the era of mega-landfills? Do waste-by-rail projects, such as Los Angeles' Mesquite Regional Landfill, result in lower greenhouse gas emissions and do they offer a less deleterious solution as we make our way toward a zero-waste society. The process of sending waste to transfer stations and to other municipalities also has the effect of obscuring the waste picture for a town or city. This effect can be quite serious, since not knowing how much waste your town produces or knowing where it goes can result in real difficulties when advocating for and implementing responsible waste policies in everyday policy decisions. This can also present problems when researching and responding to environmental impact reports. People who are involvedProject Lead: Sara Sage Participants: If you are interested in being involved with this project, please comment below, contact the Project Lead, write a research note, join the LA Google Group and drop a noe, or directly contribute to this wiki. Groups: Students at Learn Beyond the Book in Santa Clarita, California, including instructor, Elizabeth Rydall, who teaches the class, "Art & Science of Recycling, Repurposing & Re-using" Join us to chat here on the LA Google Group Next steps:What are we working on now: Uploading and ongoing analysis of CalEPA/CalRecycle waste-origin data Developing a unit lesson plan for educators who ware interested in investigating their local waste stream with students -- with hands-on educational activities and options by grade level Investigating the potential of GPS-tracking technology to analyze (near) real-time movement of waste in Southern California. Developing outreach and partnerships with organizations that promote understanding of waste and zero-waste policies Updates[notes:SoCalWasteStream-blog] “SoCalWasteStream-blog” https://publiclab.org/tag/evidence-project https://publiclab.org/blog/evidence-project Activities we’ve done in our project[activities:TAG] => “activity:TAG” vs. “TAG” DataStay tuned for spreadsheets... QuestionsWhat is the definition of Southern California? Where do waste regions end and begin? What type of awareness/advocacy tools can we develop as a result of this project? _(i.e. infographics, spreadsheets, long-form articles, animation). [notes:question:TAG] ResourcesWe have: data from CalEPA and CalRecycle We’re looking for: individuals with expertise in calculating and modeling GHG emissions of waste-industry traffic; an individual willing to spearhead a GPS-tracking project; artists with film/animation skills, graphic design skills, as well as pen-and-paper skills; educators with experience writing lesson plans; as well as individuals who are interested in gathering, sorting and analyzing state and local data __ Our project tag: SoCalWasteStream Others we follow: |
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27 | warren |
October 17, 2016 19:51
| about 8 years ago
Mapping the Waste Stream of Southern CaliforniaAbout the issue and the projectOne of the main issues with waste is that it needs to be transported. Local landfills have long since been replaced by large, regional landfills, where waste from more metropolitan areas is gathered, then sent to be buried in a faraway location. When a garbage truck picks up your weekly curbside waste, that waste will likely make its way to a landfill or recycling facility only after it has traveled many miles on interstate and highways, passing several transfer stations. In some cases, your trash will cross multiple county lines, or perhaps a state line, before it is finally recycled or landfilled. Using the region of Southern California as a case study, we would like to investigate the real environmental impact of transporting waste in the era of mega-landfills? Do waste-by-rail projects, such as Los Angeles' Mesquite Regional Landfill, result in lower greenhouse gas emissions and do they offer a less deleterious solution as we make our way toward a zero-waste society. The process of sending waste to transfer stations and to other municipalities also has the effect of obscuring the waste picture for a town or city. This effect can be quite serious, since not knowing how much waste your town produces or knowing where it goes can result in real difficulties when advocating for and implementing responsible waste policies in everyday policy decisions. This can also present problems when researching and responding to environmental impact reports. People who are involvedProject Lead: Sara Sage Participants: If you are interested in being involved with this project, please comment below, contact the Project Lead, write a research note, join the LA Google Group and drop a noe, or directly contribute to this wiki. Groups: Students at Learn Beyond the Book in Santa Clarita, California, including instructor, Elizabeth Rydall, who teaches the class, "Art & Science of Recycling, Repurposing & Re-using" Join us to chat here on the LA Google Group Next steps:What are we working on now: Uploading and ongoing analysis of CalEPA/CalRecycle waste-origin data Developing a unit lesson plan for educators who ware interested in investigating their local waste stream with students -- with hands-on educational activities and options by grade level Investigating the potential of GPS-tracking technology to analyze (near) real-time movement of waste in Southern California. Developing outreach and partnerships with organizations that promote understanding of waste and zero-waste policies Updates[notes:SoCalWasteStream-blog] “SoCalWasteStream-blog” https://publiclab.org/tag/evidence-project https://publiclab.org/blog/evidence-project Activities we’ve done in our project[activities:TAG] => “activity:TAG” vs. “TAG” DataStay tuned for spreadsheets... QuestionsWhat is the definition of Southern California? Where do waste regions end and begin? What type of awareness/advocacy tools can we develop as a result of this project? _(i.e. infographics, spreadsheets, long-form articles, animation). [notes:question:TAG] ResourcesWe have: data from CalEPA and CalRecycle We’re looking for: individuals with expertise in calculating and modeling GHG emissions of waste-industry traffic; an individual willing to spearhead a GPS-tracking project; artists with film/animation skills, graphic design skills, as well as pen-and-paper skills; educators with experience writing lesson plans; as well as individuals who are interested in gathering, sorting and analyzing state and local data __ Our project tag: SoCalWasteStream Others we follow: |
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26 | sarasage |
October 17, 2016 19:12
| about 8 years ago
Mapping the Waste Stream of Southern CaliforniaAbout the issue and the projectOne of the main issues with waste is that it needs to be transported. Local landfills have long since been replaced by large, regional landfills, where waste from more metropolitan areas is gathered, then sent to be buried in a faraway location. When a garbage truck picks up your weekly curbside waste, that waste will likely make its way to a landfill or recycling facility only after it has traveled many miles on interstate and highways, passing several transfer stations. In some cases, your trash will cross multiple county lines, or perhaps a state line, before it is finally recycled or landfilled. Using the region of Southern California as a case study, we would like to investigate the real environmental impact of transporting waste in the era of mega-landfills? Do waste-by-rail projects, such as Los Angeles' Mesquite Regional Landfill, result in lower greenhouse gas emissions and do they offer a less deleterious solution as we make our way toward a zero-waste society. The process of sending waste to transfer stations and to other municipalities also has the effect of obscuring the waste picture for a town or city. This effect can be quite serious, since not knowing how much waste your town produces or knowing where it goes can result in real difficulties when advocating for and implementing responsible waste policies in everyday policy decisions. This can also present problems when researching and responding to environmental impact reports. People who are involvedProject Lead: Sara Sage Participants: If you are interested in being involved with this project, please comment below, contact the Project Lead, write a research note, join the LA Google Group and drop a noe, or directly contribute to this wiki. Groups: Students at Learn Beyond the Book in Santa Clarita, California, including instructor, Elizabeth Rydall, who teaches the class, "Art & Science of Recycling, Repurposing & Re-using" Join us to chat here on the LA Google Group Next steps:What are we working on now: Uploading and ongoing analysis of CalEPA/CalRecycle waste-origin data Developing a unit lesson plan for educators who ware interested in investigating their local waste stream with students -- with hands-on educational activities and options by grade level Investigating the potential of GPS-tracking technology to analyze (near) real-time movement of waste in Southern California. Developing outreach and partnerships with organizations that promote understanding of waste and zero-waste policies Updates[notes:SoCalWasteStream-blog] “SoCalWasteStream-blog” https://publiclab.org/tag/evidence-project https://publiclab.org/blog/evidence-project Activities we’ve done in our project[activities:TAG] => “activity:TAG” vs. “TAG” DataStay tuned for spreadsheets... QuestionsWhat is the definition of Southern California? Where do waste regions end and begin? What type of awareness/advocacy tools can we develop as a result of this project? _(i.e. infographics, spreadsheets, long-form articles, animation). [notes:question:TAG] ResourcesWe have: data from CalEPA and CalRecycle We’re looking for: individuals with expertise in calculating and modeling GHG emissions of waste-industry traffic; an individual willing to spearhead a GPS-tracking project; artists with film/animation skills, graphic design skills, as well as pen-and-paper skills; educators with experience writing lesson plans; as well as individuals who are interested in gathering, sorting and analyzing state and local data __ Our project tag: SoCalWasteStream Others we follow: |
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