Archives for : September 2011

Collingswood Patch: Patch Picks: Go Green

5. Pay It Forward

We’ve all heard the mantra “reduce, reuse, recycle,” and all three are great ways to go green, and reduce your carbon footprint. Patch readers can take that idea a step further, though, by considering giving away unwanted items for free, to those need. By giving unused items away, you’re providing others with much-needed goods, while reducing the amount of energy it takes to produce more and more ‘stuff.’ This leads to reduced carbon emissions, a reduced need for natural resources, and an altogether healthier community. A reputable website to assist you in this process is freecycle.com. Who knows, you may find something there that you really need, as well!

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Western Springs Patch: Patch Picks: Local Ways to Reuse and Recycle

2. Karmic collectibles. Freecycle.org has groups in the area. You post the stuff you want to get rid of. Someone who needs the stuff takes the stuff.

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Market Watch:Oodle Launches Freecycling on Facebook to Encourage Zero Waste

SAN MATEO, Calif., Sep 13, 2011 (BUSINESS WIRE) — Oodle announced today an initiative to promote zero waste by bringing “freecycling” to Facebook. Freecycling is a movement to help reduce the flow of waste to landfills by encouraging neighbors to give unwanted but reusable household items to each other instead of throwing them away. Oodle’s Marketplace, available on Facebook (apps.facebook.com/marketplace) and Oodle.com, now enables neighbors to join together in a local online community called a FreeCircle where they can offer items to each other, search among available items, or request something specific.

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Gilroy Patch: Second Chance Week Begins September 10

“Freecycle” Day, Tuesday

Join the Gilroy Freecycle group to list items you’d like to give away or request items you need.

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BuffaloGrove patch: Eighth-Grader Collects 300 Books For Low-Income Children

Buffalo Grove resident Daniel Weiner collected children’s books as part of his bar mitzvah studies this year. His project netted more than 300 books.

Weiner, an eighth-grader at Twin Groves Middle School, organized his project in memory of his grandmother, who was an avid reader. He received the books from friends, relatives and through Freecycle.

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BBC News: Storage mania

Such a mentality explains the success of the website Freecycle, a community of users who give away the objects they no longer need to other people who do need them.

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Enterprise News: Moms shop for back-to-school clothes with a budget of $40

Hall recommended the website www.freecycle.com as a source for free clothes. People post the clothes they need and the ones they want to give away and exchanges are made for free.

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Melbourne Weekly: No Strings Attached

One man’s trash is another man’s treasure. Or so Melbourne mother of two Michelle Power reasoned a couple of years ago, as her husband dumped unwanted stuff into a skip during their home renovation. “There really needs to be a forum where we can give away these goods, instead of throwing them into landfill or waiting until hard rubbish collection,” she thought. Her subsequent research led to the recent launch of ziilch.com.au, a website dedicated to giving away stuff to be re-used by someone else. More than 300 items were listed on the website during its first four weeks, including an ironing board, a wedding dress, even a car (albeit with a seized engine). Turns out Power wasn’t the only one eager to get rid of superfluous stuff, without binning it forever.

While there’s long been a slew of organisations geared towards swapping, selling and bartering unwanted goods, now the virtual and local communities are embracing a more feel-good, sustainable and no-strings approach to decluttering. It doesn’t involve dumping pre-loved goods on the nature strip or in a charity bin, either.

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USA Today: 12 new rules for back-to-school shopping

11. Consider second-hand.

Besides stops at the thrift store and Craigslist.org, some families with one eye on shaving costs and another on the environment are turning to the Freecycle Network (www.freecycle.org). This grass-roots, non-profit group encourages folks to give away stuff they don’t need and get stuff they do. This, in turn, keeps the stuff out of landfills. “It’s perceived to be as good for your pocketbook as it is for the environment,” Zandl says.

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WBXH: Reusing and recycling 101

Going Above and Beyond
While waste reduction starts at home, communities nationwide are forming around the premise that less is more. Freecycle (Freecycle.org) — started in Tucson, Ariz., before spreading throughout the U.S. — helps people be the best possible reusers. Through the Freecycle network, members are able to donate — or pick up — used products, such as appliances, furniture, toys and bikes.

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