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Having
the components is one thing. Getting them to work together
is the trick.
By
Kelly Anne Schmandt
Since 1991
the United States Department of Defense (DoD) mandates
its military bases to recycle and conserve its waste.
Marine Corps Base Camp Pendleton, located 36 mi. north
of San Diego, CA, has done much more than that, diverting
65% of its waste, in part a result of its strong recycling
programs that give back to the community. Camp Pendleton
instituted its "Camp Pendleton Recycles for a Better
Tomorrow" program on Memorial Day 2001 and has
since seen a dramatic increase in cooperation in its
recycling efforts.
Camp Pendleton
is the home to the corps' West Coast amphibious
assault-training center. It rests on 125,000 ac. on
the southern California coast and boasts a daytime population
in excess of 100,000. Its land and population present
unusual predicaments and attributes. The more than 17.5
mi. of prime coastland offers its residents one of the
most beautiful beaches and the largest undeveloped coast
in southern California. The large population offers
a unique challenge to its two landfills. Charles Bradshaw,
Camp Pendleton's recycling program manager, recognizes
the highs and lows that accompany an effort such as
this in a military base, pointing out, "On the
upside, it is easier to direct a person, but on the
downside, military recycling programs do not change
the collection costs for activities or families that
reside abroad the base. We try to remain self-supporting."
It is this desire to be self-supporting that distinguishes
Camp Pendleton from other military bases and civilian
society as an innovator in recycling and waste diversion.
Despite the DoD's Measurements of Merits, which
requires military bases to divert 40% of its disposable
waste by 2004, the Marine base has recognized the growing
problem of plastics and other beverage containers in
the wastestream and has taken upon itself to be a leader
in waste management and diversion.
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The innovation
takes form through the comprehensive wastestream analysis
process that identifies waste for recycling. Of the
two Camp Pendleton landfills, one is dedicated solely
to asphalt and concrete. The base is responsible for
recycling and diverting more than 5 million lb. of cardboard
and 55,000 tons of asphalt/concrete and saving up to
94,875 yd.3 of landfill. The plastic recycling
effort alone has diverted 266 yd.3 of landfill
area. Other recycling efforts include the diversion
of fibers (old corrugated cardboard; old newsprint;
and paper of various grades, including mixed), broken
and used wooden pallets, ferrous and nonferrous metals,
and glass and metal food containers. This, combined
with programs such as Camp Pendleton Recycles for a
Better Tomorrow, has helped push the Marine base to
the forefront of recycling and waste diversion efforts,
diverting up to 65% of its waste.
Wheelchairs
for Waste
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| The
all-terrain wheelchair's extra-wide rubber tires
allow for travel on any ground. |
Even
before the program started, Camp Pendleton already had
a successful recycling program, but the base recognized
the growing stream of recyclable materials and the stress
they put on the landfills.
Former Base
Commanding General Lt. Gen. Edward Halon first recognized
the need for the all-terrain wheelchairs when Colonels
MaryAnn Krusa-Dossin and David John approached Bradshaw
with a proposition, and he realized that the proposal
presented the opportunity to further increase the success
of the recycling program. Bradshaw continued to develop
the program to use money obtained from the sale of scrap
beverage containers for the purchase of all-terrain
wheelchairs.
One goal
behind the Camp Pendleton Recycles for a Better Tomorrow
program was to bring a human side to recycling. Camp
Pendleton acknowledged the limited amount of space in
its landfills and wanted to create a program that would
bolster acceptance and increase involvement in the program.
The money made from the recycling of the plastics, PET,
HDPE (clear and color), shrink-wrap, and plastic grocery
bags, was used to purchase four Landeez All-Terrain
wheelchairs produced by Natural Access of Santa Monica,
CA. These go-anywhere wheelchairs provided just the
community aspect the base was looking for. The Camp
Pendleton Recycles for a Better Tomorrow program allows
those who are wheelchair-bound to go anywhere and not
be limited to ramps and the traditional paved sidewalks
and roads normal wheelchairs can travel. Instead, the
all-terrain wheelchairs are equipped with extra-wide
rubber tires that allow the user to travel on any ground.
Normal wheelchairs sink into the sand, but the all-terrain
wheelchairs permit its users access to miles of beach
along the camp's coastline. The Landeez chairs have
been widely successful and have given those who have
used them a chance to go to the beach.
The success
of the program was due in part to the ingenuity of its
creators but was also helped by advertisements. Advertisements,
such as flyers and posters, posted in base fitness centers
and around base activities, spread the word about the
program. The local base newspaper, The Scout,
also fostered support behind the program by running
an article as well as weekly briefs in the community
section.
Winners
and Winners
For one woman,
the wheelchairs gave her father a last chance to visit
the beach. The woman approached Ernest Espinosa, the
man in charge of community/base relations,
and recalled her father's experience with the all-terrain
wheelchairs. The father was not a resident of the base
but was gravely ill and came to visit his daughter at
the base in his final days. The posters around the base
alerted the daughter to the advantage of the wheelchairs
and took her father to the beach. "He apparently
loved it very much and didn't want to leave, but
there is a time limit on how long one can use the chairs.
He later returned when there was no one waiting and
went to the beach again," recalls Espinosa. Those
days on the beach were some of the man's last days,
but the daughter stated that those times on the beach
made his last days very pleasant and memorable. The
all-terrain wheelchairs provided by the recycling funds
have achieved the goal of reaching out to the community
in a very special way.
The program
has been very successful in both aspects of the program's
design. The response to the wheelchairs has been very
good, as has the cooperation in the recycling efforts.
Since the program started, Camp Pendleton achieved a
20% increase in plastics diversion in the first four
weeks and a 30% increase by the end of the year. Over
the next eight months the program was responsible for
diverting 300,000 lb. of plastic, aluminum, and glass
beverage containers. While currently there are no plans
to create similar programs that reach out to the community
with other recyclables, Camp Pendleton continues to
look to capitalize on its success, andas Bradshaw
explains"recycling and reducing disposed
waste remain the focus of Camp Pendleton's recycling
program."
It is this
dedication to creating new and better ways of recycling
that allow Camp Pendleton to emerge at the forefront
of waste management. "The community of Camp Pendleton
takes pride in being innovative and in being a good
student in the field waste management," Bradshaw
maintains. "We developed a comprehensive program
that incorporates the methods of other military and
civilian communities, tailoring it to fit our needs."
The base has been recognized as a leader in this field
by the military, receiving the Secretary of Navy Recycling
Award in 1995 and 1997. Camp Pendleton continues to
set an example for other military bases as well as civilian
society.
A public
policy major at Vanderbilt University in Nashville,
TN, Kelly Anne Schmandt is an intern with MSW Management.
MSW
- July/August 2002
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