Recycling program drops anchor.The U.S. Navy base in Philadelphia, consisting of Naval Support Activity Philadelphia and the Philadelphia Naval Business Center (PNBC PNBC Progressive National Baptist Convention, Inc ) has launched a new desk-side recycling recycling, the process of recovering and reusing waste products—from household use, manufacturing, agriculture, and business—and thereby reducing their burden on the environment. program. Beginning in early October, the Qualified Recycling Program (QRP QRP Qualified Retirement Plan QRP Quality Replacement Parts (auto repair industry) QRP Low Power Transmitter (ham radio; 5 watts or less output) QRP Qualified Recycling Program QRP Questionable Refund Program ) has been collecting all recyclable re·cy·cle tr.v. re·cy·cled, re·cy·cling, re·cy·cles 1. To put or pass through a cycle again, as for further treatment. 2. To start a different cycle in. 3. a. office materials using a single blue desk-side container. Office paper, colored paper, magazines, newspapers, phone books and empty beverage containers (both aluminum and plastic) can all be recycled in the same container. The commingled system has the potential to significantly reduce the number of collection containers the Navy has placed throughout the region, as well as the number of trucks and people on the road collecting materials, according to according to prep. 1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians. 2. In keeping with: according to instructions. 3. Mike Randazzo, the base's communications director. This system, coupled with automated collection vehicles, has resulted in considerable savings to the Navy in other areas of the Mid-Atlantic region, as well as increasing the number and volume of commodities recycled, Randazzo says. Materials collected are sold to a recycling firm that sorts the materials by commodity and reports weights and volumes back to the base QRP. Randazzo estimates that the system uses 75 percent fewer resources (fuel, labor and collection containers) while also increasing the number of materials the Navy can recycle re·cy·cle tr.v. re·cy·cled, re·cy·cling, re·cy·cles 1. To put or pass through a cycle again, as for further treatment. 2. To start a different cycle in. 3. a. . In the previous system, white paper was recycled in the blue containers and employees took their other recyclables to a designated collection point. In the new system, employees are still responsible for taking their commingled recycling bins to a central collection point inside the building. (At PNBC, though, recycled materials will be collected by janitorial contractors at the desk.) |
|
||||||||||||||||

Printer friendly
Cite/link
Email
Feedback
Reader Opinion