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Lifelong Pittsburgh resident David Mazza is an advocate for the environment. As regional director of the Pennsylvania Resources Council's Pittsburgh office on the South Side since 2000, he has worked to develop and implement a number of new and innovative environmental programs, including Zero Waste Pittsburgh, Scenic Pittsburgh and the Household Chemical Collection program. Prior to his joining the resources council, he served as recycling coordinator for the city of Pittsburgh, where he helped to expand the city's recycling efforts. Mazza, 52, is excited about upcoming events such as a collection of hard-to-recycle items on Saturday at Steel City Harley Davidson in Washington.
The star who would play me in the movie version of my life and why:
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In terms of paper recycling, we're doing a pretty good job," says Chris Berdnik, the district's acting chief operations officer. But when K comes to recycling plastics and aluminum, "I think I would be the first to admit that we need to do a much better job. ... There's a lot more to do
"That's certainly something that we'll consider," says Shawn Wkjle, the city's recycling supervisor. "We'll have to figure out the logistics of everything."
"I'm confident that if there is pressure from the student body and parents that [comprehensive recycling] will happen," he says. "I'm not extremely confident that it will happen on Its own."
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Cranberry recycles nearly 40 percent of the waste collected from the homes and businesses there.
In Mt. Lebanon, recycling has increased 60 percent during the past year -- largely the result of a curbside recycling program. And the city of Pittsburgh earns about a half million dollars annually from its recycling program.
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To: STATE EDITORS
Contact: Tom Rathbun of Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection, +1-717-787-1323; or Gary Tuma of Pennsylvania Office of the Governor, +1-717-783-1116
...City of Pittsburgh - Curbside Recycling & Drop-off Prog...
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The Great Race organizers have teamed with Pennsylvania Resources Council and the City of Pittsburgh Recycling Division to "go green" this year.
The PRC Green Team will be on site to collect bottles, cans, runners' bibs, banana peels and orange peels at the finish line for recycling. Organizers transported about 4,000 people last year on the bus service, and this year, in addition to the service, they are encouraging all participants to carpool.
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Allegheny County received more than $1.8 million in state grants, which were announced Friday, to support recycling.
More than a dozen Allegheny County municipalities received grants, with the City of Pittsburgh receiving the largest at almost $500,000. That money will be used to expand recycling Downtown.
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The city of Pittsburgh's garbage collection and recycling schedule for this year is a four-page, color newsletter peppered with photos of Mayor Luke Ravenstahl.
Although the newsletter says a state Department of Environmental Protection grant paid for its production, Public Works Director Guy Costa said the DEP is picking up only roughly half the cost.
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A lot of people think it's garbage, but you look at it, it's money," says [Frank Stasik]. "It makes sense. It's good PR," he adds of recycling. "Morally it makes sense also.
"Plastic makes us money," says [Tom Jackson]. The only unprofitable commodity is glass, which Recycle Management pays a local glass recycler to haul away. Glass "takes up a lot of the weight and a lot of the volume and it's not a lot of value when it's processed," says Jackson. "When Anheuser-Busch and Iron City started making aluminum beer bottles, we were jumping for joy."
Chris Hendrickson, a CMU engineering professor who co-authored that study, specializes in life-cycle analyses - the study of a given item's total environmental impact from manufacture to disposal. How does he rank household-waste recycling in ...
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PITTSBURGH, Nov. 7, 2011 /PRNewswire/ -- Pittsburgh-based Liberty Tire Recycling, the premier provider of tire recycling services in North America, will highlight tire collection processes and re-use applications of recycled rubber at the 2011 National League of Cities' (NLC) Congress of Cities and Exposition Conference. The event will be held November 9-12 at the Phoenix Convention Center and provide city officials with the knowledge they need to build better communities, offering a forum to showcase products and services cities require in order to meet their critical needs.
(Logo: http://photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20091210/NE24642LOGO )
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PITTSBURGH, Nov. 28, 2011 /PRNewswire/ -- Liberty Tire Recycling, the premier provider of tire recycling services in North America, will highlight eco-friendly, sustainable civil engineering solutions on December 14, 2011 with an all-day event called Recycle SALT LAKE CITY: 2011. Held at both the Little America Hotel (500 South Main Street) and at Liberty Tire Recycling's Beck Street facility, the dual-session program will gather transportation and environmental professionals, civic leaders and policy-makers together so that they may learn more about new applications for recycled rubber, including rubber modified asphalt.
(Photo: http://photos.prnewswire.com/prnh/20091210/NE24642LOGO )