Saturday, February 25, 2006
More groups have joined the 2006 Great American Cleanup™.
They are:
Fairmont-Emoriland Neighborhood
The Castaways
Nature's Way Montessori School
Halls High School
Old Sevier Community Group
Mindy Cliburn/Ogg Road
- posted by KKB Staff at 1:55 PM
Thursday, February 23, 2006
Tom, Jack and our AmeriCorps member Seth Hopper
set up the KKB booth at the Dogwood House and Garden Show.
We will have information about the Great American Cleanup™, the
Youth Advisory Board, I Spy on Litter and plenty of
Don't Thrown Down on K-TOWN stickers. We will be there through
Sunday. One of our first visitors was Cat Wilt from UT.

- posted by KKB Staff at 10:15 PM
Tuesday, February 22, 2006
A right of passage. Today, Jack Dennis, KKB
program coordinator joined the ranks of some of KKB's top performing
program coordinators (Terrin Kanoa, Mike Schoenberger,
Abby Blackburn, Natalie Pratt, Annie Morton and
Emily Ditty) when he donned the Talking Tree suit for a
presentation to the pre-school classes at the Jewish Community Center.
It was a lot of fun and he did a great job.

The most recent additions to the 2006 Great American Cleanup™
include:
St. Joseph Catholic School
North Knoxville Rotary Club
Rudder Lane Homeowners
Tennessee Men's Soccer
Friends of the Fort/S.P.E.A.K.
Brookfield Acres Neighborhood Association
Carter School Beta Club
The board of directors are continuing to vote by email on language
for a public position on the proposed Tennessee Bottle Bill.
The Youth Advisory Board had their third meeting at the Fulton
High School Library. They reported on their progress in
recruiting help for the Great American Cleanup™ and they recorded
some test video for their "podcasting" project. More on that
later.

- posted by KKB Staff at 8:30 PM
Sunday, February 19, 2006
The News Sentinel ran the op-ed pieces from Food City
President Steve Smith and Tennessee Bottle Bill Coordinator Marge
Davis. Mr. Smith hit on issues involving litter, redemption
fraud, reasons why grocers don't want to operate redemption centers,
cross-border sales and the present value of the current comprehensive
Litter Grant Program (disclosure note: every county in Tennessee
receives a Litter Grant and Knox County passes along some of
their grant to Keep Knoxville Beautiful). Ms. Davis took the
position that the bottle bill will force the beverage industry to engage
in waste reduction and that revenue from the bill will double the funds
for the Litter Grant Program. She talked about litter control a
little, but did not dwell on it at all. Bottle bill critics
are likely to take issue with the argument that the legislation is
targeted at the beverage industry. The bill is without question a
consumer recycling incentive program funded by consumers. Ms.
Davis emphasizes the big impact of recycling bottles and cans but
neglects to mention that according to the Environmental Protection Agency,
beverage containers only make up about 5% of the waste produced in our
nation and the bottle bill doesn't do anything to promote the recycling
of the types of material that make up the other 95% of our waste.
- posted by KKB Staff at 10:30 AM
Saturday, February 18, 2006
What is that???
It sort of looks like snow. I heard Phil Williams say
yesterday he'd believe it when he sees it - after the forecasts we've
had for the last to weekends. Looks nice!

- posted by KKB Staff at 5:15 PM
Friday, February 17, 2006
As of today the following groups have committed to participating in
the 2006 Great American Cleanup™ in Knoxville:
The Edgewood Community
Powell High School SGA
Ijams Nature Center with the Greater
Island Home Community Partnership
Lonas Drive Community Association
Fourth and Gill Neighborhood Association
Northwest Middle School Linkup Leadership
POSSE
Phi Sigma Kappa
Colonial Village Neighborhood Association
Corryton Elementary School
Knoxville Green Party
Western Heights Resident's Association
The board of directors began voting by email today on a formal
public statement on the proposed Tennessee Bottle Bill. We
should have results by Monday.
- posted by KKB Staff at 5:15 PM
Thursday, February 16, 2006
KKB board president-elect Harold Byrd and executive director
Tom Salter walked the whole grounds of Mabry Hazen House
today to make plans for the March 7th Great American Cleanup™
kickoff press conference and celebrity cleanup. The event has
evolved into a half workday. We are now seeking volunteers to help
out between 2:00 p.m. and 6:00 p.m. with leaf removal (raking, blowing,
vacuuming), picking up sticks and branches, taking down two small dead
trees and one small tree stump, spreading mulch and picking up litter.
There really isn't that much litter which is encouraging. However
there are enough sticks and fallen limbs to keep several people busy for
quite a while. If you or your group would like to help out, call the
office or drop us an email. We will have a lot of tools and
equipment, work gloves and drinks. Here are some "before" shots of
the grounds:


- posted by KKB Staff at 1:30 PM
Thursday, February 9, 2006
Tom presented a PowerPoint slide show and speech to the Colonial
Village Neighborhood Association tonight at the South Knoxville
Church of God on 5623 Magazine Road. The topic was the
Great American Cleanup™ and the Tennessee Bottle Bill.
There were about 20 people there including Sharon Webb from the
old Nine Counties, One Vision Beautification Committee and
City Councilman Joe Hultquist. There were a lot of good
questions and comments. Nobody threw tomatoes at Tom. He was
very relieved.
Click
here to view the presentation.

- posted by KKB Staff at 9:20 PM
Tuesday, February 7, 2006
Tom was interviewed by
Frank Murphy for Star 102.1's Sunday morning program
East Tennessee Report. The topic were the Great American
Cleanup™ and the Tennessee Bottle Bill. The interview
is set to be broadcast
Sunday morning at 6:00 a.m. on
93 Point
1 and at 6:30 a.m. on
Star
102.1 and
Hot 104.5.
- posted by KKB Staff at 12:45 PM
Friday, February 3, 2006
Bob Santore had a little appreciation event for the West Knox
Sertoma Club which has donated $5,000 toward landscaping at
Dogwood Elementary School. Some of the kids sang a really cute
flower song. Keep Knoxville Beautiful will manage the grant
for the South Knox Beautification Committee at no charge.

- posted by KKB Staff at 1:15 PM
Thursday, February 2, 2006
Today we had our first board meeting of 2006 and the first after the
board retreat. We also started the new year by moving our regular
meeting place from the Candy Factory at World's Fair Park
to the Mabry Hazen House at 1711 Dandridge Avenue in East
Knoxville. Here is a nice picture of the Mabry Hazen mansion
from their website. Our
meetings are actually in a smaller house a little west of the mansion.

The KKB board is considering whether or not to take an official
position on the proposed Tennessee Bottle Bill. If you
follow this blog you know that our director, Tom Salter, has been
commenting on the impact of the bill on litter control and recycling and
has been quoted in the news and asked to make formal presentations to
groups on this topic. Tom has also come under fire from bill
supporters for speaking publicly about the impact of the bill on litter
and recycling. The KKB executive committee felt the board should
discuss the issues and decide whether or not to make a definitive public
statement on the proposed bill. During the meeting the following
issues were discussed:
- Litter research from local, state and national
sources,
- Recycling data from EPA, the National Recycling
Coalition and other sources,
- The financial picture of the bill including the
costs to consumers,
- Why some prominent grocers strongly oppose the
bill,
- The concept of cross border sales and redemption
fraud,
- The special interest groups that support bottle
bills,
- Special benefits of the legislation promised by
bill supporters such as increased Litter Grant funding,
- Reverse vending machines and damaged or soiled
containers,
- Recent bottle bill news from Iowa and Hawaii,
- Data comparing roadside litter in bottle bill
states with comprehensive approach states,
- The differences in markets for recycled material
in urban areas versus more remote, rural areas.
- Concerns by proponents of small government and
low taxes that the program makes government bigger and is just a
tax,
- and the concerns related to KKB's public
education efforts that there is a no "magic bullet" that will fix
the litter problem.
There was a good discussion and there was a consensus
that the board will issue a public statement on the proposed bill.
The board asked Tom to draft some sample language on a position
statement and circulate it among board members for comment prior to
voting on a statement by email.
- posted by KKB Staff at 2:45 PM