Recycling at an Annual Festival
For the past 25 years the city of Frederick, Maryland, has
hosted a street festival in the fall. This event draws 75,000
people who flock the streets to hear live music, enjoy
children's activities and purchase items made by local
artisans. The event is lacking in only one area: the area of
recycling. For all of its years in existence the festival has
never had the means to take on the task of recycling its cans,
bottles and paper.
Last year a senior at the local high school decided it was
time for a change and she and her friends organized a booth and
volunteered to go around the festival collecting glass, plastic
and aluminum waste off to be recycled. Can you imagine that?
High school students, volunteering to spend precious weekend
time, collecting trash without personal motivation or gain, I
was impressed when I heard that. How many people do you know
that would put themselves out like that? I don't know too many
adults, let alone any teenagers who would take that challenge
on.
This year, their 25th anniversary year, things will be a
little different, due in part to the efforts of last year's
senior and her group of friends and volunteers. This year the
Coca-Cola Company, who has a bottling location on North Market
Street, nearby the festival site, will donate 20 recycle bins
to be set up throughout the festival area. Plastic and glass
items to be recycled will be taken to the county's recycling
location and the aluminum collected will be resold for a small
fund-raising profit.
What was really impressive about this story was the
self-less-ness in which these students acted. They didn't do
this because it would win them an award or a grant or money in
some other form; they did this because it was the right thing
to do. How many counties, cities and towns could be forever
changed if the same example were set for them? This story is
one of those great examples of what kind of change one person
can make. It should be a testament to us all that if we just
put the effort out there, step out of our comfort zones, and
did something we know is right, the great changes that can be
made are infinite.
In just this example, you have to figure the impact the
recycling will have if even just a few of the participants take
a moment to notice the recycle bins and instead of carelessly
tossing their waste to where it will not be separated and
recycled, they did the right thing and put their waste in the
designated bins. Any efforts to change have to start somewhere
and it is commendable that after 25 years, it was a teen who
took on the challenge to start the change at this event.
One extra gratitude extended to this amazing student is that
this year she has designed a logo that will be throughout the
event that will symbolize the idea that the residents of
Frederick, Maryland Recycle; she calls it, "Frederecycle."
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