Thursday, December 15, 2005
Keep Knoxville Beautiful
had its annual Holiday Party at the Women's Basketball Hall of
Fame. Here are some pictures:

- posted by KKB staff at
10:15 PM
Wednesday, December 14, 2005
The Knox County Solid Waste Advisory Board had a meeting
today during which they discussed the concept of unit-based pricing for
waste disposal, better known as pay-as-you-throw. This concept has
been discussed before in our region. The Nine Counties, One
Vision Solid Waste Group looked at all the waste disposal challenges
facing our region and recommended in their final report that communities
should look at pay-as-you-throw (PAYT) to solve the
inevitable problem of increased government cost for waste management and
to dramatically increase recycling of all types of material.
According to the
Environmental Protection Agency website, versions of PAYT are in
use in more than 4,000 communities across the country.
In the City of Knoxville, the cost of curbside (and in a few
neighborhoods backdoor) garbage pickup is included in your city property
taxes. In Knox County, the operation of the County
Convenience Centers is included in your county property taxes.
Also, many Knox County homeowners (those outside the City limits)
subscribe to a garbage pickup service provided by several companies.
In all three systems, there is virtually no incentive to recycle - with
a few exceptions - the City picks up yard waste separately from garbage
and the County Convenience Centers require citizens dropping off garbage
to separate corrugated cardboard. Another noteworthy feature of
all the systems is that everybody pays the same amount (a percentage of
your property tax) no matter how much trash they produce. This is
also true for the private subscription services.
Under the current system if you throw away one bag of trash per week and
voluntarily take two more bags of recycling to a drop off center, you
pay the same as your neighbor who generates 5 bags of trash per week and
recycles nothing. While this system has the appearance of fairness
because everyone pays the same, it is inherently unfair based on
utilization. City residents who reduce the amount of waste they
produce and voluntarily recycle are "doing the right thing" but are
essentially being "over-taxed" for their garbage disposal. County
residents who subscribe to a private service but produce small amounts
of garbage and voluntarily recycle are also being "over-taxed" for their
garbage disposal. City and County residents who throw away huge
amounts of garbage and never recycle are being subsidized by their
fellow taxpayers who take affirmative steps to reduce the amount of
waste they produce. PAYT changes the system.
There are many ways to implement PAYT but the main feature is this:
instead of everyone paying the same amount in their taxes or by
subscription, you are charged for your garbage pickup by the amount you
throw away and recycle material is taken away for free. In some
communities citizens are given the choice of 3 different sized
containers for garbage - 30, 60 or 90 gallons. The 90 gallon costs
3 times as much as the 30. You cannot "overflow" the containers.
Recycling is set out in bins or clear bags so the hauler can make sure
at-a-glance it is all recycling material - there is no charge to empty
the bags or bins. The cost of hauling the recycling is built in to
the cost of the different sized containers. People with extra
trash can purchase special bags or stickers to set out. There are
lots of different ways to implement this system but they all result in
dramatic reductions in what goes to the landfill and corresponding
dramatic increases in recycling of ALL (get it?) types of material.
Check out the link to the
EPA website
referenced above to look at all the ways to implement PAYT.
If there is a public discussion of PAYT in 2006, please take some time
to let our community leaders know how you feel about adopting a more
equitable garbage disposal system that provides a very strong incentive
to recycle all types of material.
- posted by KKB staff at 3:30 PM
Monday, December 12, 2005
Dateline: Knoxville. Obviously nuance does not sell newspapers.
The
News Sentinel article (registration required) on the proposed
Tennessee Bottle Bill has Keep Knoxville Beautiful director
Tom Salter quoted as a "critic" of the methodology used in the
latest litter survey by bottle bill sponsors. That is accurate.
Based on dozens of state and national surveys of the percentage of
bottles and cans in litter, Tom believes that the proposed bottle bill
will have a "minimal" impact on reducing roadside litter. That
fact is the extent of our "opposition" to the bill. Actually,
KKB is not for or against the bill. We just think it won't fix
the state's litter problem - and in order to sell papers that position
gets translated into "opposed to". This is precisely a case of "if
you're not with us, you're against us". Some people are stunned
that we don't actively support the bill - even if it will only have a
minimal impact on litter. We have been criticized in public for
accepting state Litter Grant money that is contributed
voluntarily to a state fund by the bottling industry. At the same
time we have been promised "double the levels of our current funding" by
bill sponsors if we would support the bill - or maybe just stop talking
about it in public. If we are hopelessly "tainted" by accepting
Litter Grant funds to do litter programs or hope to get increased
funding under a bottle bill, we are put in a position of not saying
anything publicly. However we must share that our survey data, as
well as independent national data sources, indicate that a state
mandated bottle and can recycling program will not fix our litter
problem and we stand behind that fact. If our citizens and
legislators want to create a state program to recycle bottles and cans
that won't have a big impact on roadside litter, fine - pass the bill.
If you want to learn more about the proposed Tennessee Bottle Bill visit
www.tnbottlebill.com.
For the record we have received a total of two emails complaining about
our "opposition to" or failure to support the proposed bottle bill.
One of the emails, from a UT professor whose professional work involves
planning and implementing complex community change suggested that Tom's
public comments are "complicating the issue" and implied that the
concept of an "imperfect" bottle bill remain simplified as much as
possible and public discussion limited to help its passage. Stay
tuned - this is an emotional topic that will generate a lot more public
discussion.
- posted by KKB staff at 4:15 PM
Friday, December 9, 2005
Today we had the big award ceremony and Tennessee programs did very
well. Keep Blount Beautiful and Keep Kingsport Beautiful
both won 1st place affiliate awards in their city size. Memphis
City Beautiful won several awards including a Rogers for
advertising and an Innovation Award. TDOT won a major award
as did Keep Tennessee Beautiful. Koyo of Tennessee also
took home a corporate partner award. Everyone did really well.
Pictured below are Meredith Liemohn and Kristi Falco of
Keep Blount Beautiful (Kristi, do you think your plaque is big
enough?), Edith Heller of Keep Tennessee Beautiful,
Eldra White of Memphis City Beautiful and Adrian Ridley
of Koyo Tennessee.:

- posted by KKB staff at 5:30 PM
Thursday, December 8, 2005
Reporting from the Sea World Renaissance Hotel in Orlando,
Florida. Tom is attending the Keep America
Beautiful annual conference in Orlando, Florida. Speakers
included Virginia Busch, President of SeaWorld and
Busch Gardens, Philippe Cousteau, President of Earth Echo
International, Dr. Duane Freese of Florida Research -
Hubbs SeaWorld, Chad Pregracke of Living Lands & Waters,
Wesley Schultz of Cal State San Marcos, Steven R. Stein
of Gershman, Brickner & Bratton and several other presenters from
inside the KAB system.
Philippe Cousteau and Duane Freese gave great overviews of the
environmental problems facing our oceans and connected the work of Keep
America Beautiful affiliates with larger water-related environmental
issues. Chad Pregracke gave an energetic presentation of his work
cleaning up the Mississippi River. Wesley Schultz talked about
Community-Based Social Marketing, a presentation that several of us saw
in Nashville earlier this year about what is required to change human
behavior (especially behavior that will impact the environment) when
there is no perceived crisis. Steven Stein is the author of the
article "Sweating the Litter Things" in the waste industry
journal Resource Recycling. Steven summarized the
results of 61 litter studies conducted over the past 30 years.
At lunch Tom was presented with a Professional Leadership Award
from Keep America Beautiful for "exemplary contributions to the Keep
America Beautiful affiliate network".

Pictured below (l-r) in the first picture are Kristi Falco and
Meredith Liemohn of Keep Blount Beautiful, Pam Cox of
Keep Kingsport Beautiful, Jennifer Reynolds of Keep
Greene Beautiful and Edith Heller of Keep Tennessee
Beautiful. In the second picture (l-r) is Deborah Stevenson
of Morristown Hamblen KAB, Eldra White of Memphis City
Beautiful, Teresa Culbreath of TDOT, Jennifer
Reynolds of Keep Greene Beautiful, Claude Lee and
Roxanna Pierce, both of TDOT.

- posted by KKB staff at 5:30 PM
Friday, December 2, 2005
Jack Dennis and Tom met Max Alvarez of the
Fountain City Lions Club at Fountain City Park to plant a
memorial tree in memory of Robert Nelson. Mr. Nelson was a
long time member of the club.

- posted by KKB staff at 1:45 PM
Thursday, December 1, 2005
We all went over to the Louise Mandrel Theatre in Pigeon Forge
to hear Roger Brooks, national speaker on tourism issues - also
known as the Dr. Phil of tourism. We met Roger at the Keep
America Beautiful mid-year affiliate forum in Albuquerque.
It appeared as if more than 200 people attended. It was sponsored
by Keep Sevier Beautiful and many Sevier County
businesses. Brooks covered a number of topics but really hit on
the issues of making a good first impression. This is a topic that
the KAB affiliates are very concerned about. KAB directors from Lincoln
County, Hamblen County, Bradley County, Blount County, Roane County
and Knox County were represented. Laura Marzhal of
Keep Tennessee Beautiful came all the way from Memphis to
help with the event. KKB was represented by Edythe Nelle
McNabb, Terry Faulkner, Sam Maynard, Gary Drinnen, Page Pratt and
Cassandra McGee. Congratulations to Allison Teeters
and her board for a super event.

- posted by KKB staff at 10:30 AM