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Although
solid waste is not the most glamorous aspect of local
government, nor is recycling as in vogue as it once
was, many communities are noticing that a public relations
program, if done properly and creatively, can boost
the image of solid waste services while educating citizens
and promoting use of recycling programs.
By
Susan Bush
Sarah Dowers,
public affairs coordinator with the Hamilton County
Department of Environmental Services in Ohio, notes
that often the best public relations campaigns are those
that, in some way, relate to a topic that has been in
the public eye. Then, she says, the television stations
are "all over it," and the department is able to convey
its message to the public through the mass media.
One example
Dowers provides is a recent tire cleanup. Lunken Airport,
a small airport in Cincinnati, OH, is also the site
of a recreational trail where citizens enjoy walking,
running, and biking. In early July, it came to the attention
of the press that waste tires were disposed of alongside
the trails - posing a health risk as well as being an
eyesore.
The county's
Department of Environmental Services decided it had
the resources to remove the tires and had them recycled.
It put its public relations forces to work, calling
all media outlets to give them a heads-up about the
story and provide them with the exact location of the
site. Before the department could even get the "before"
pictures developed, the press had swarmed the area.
The media covered the story, including an interview
with Jeff Aluotto, program manager for the Hamilton
County Solid Waste Management District.
When the
department removed the tires, not only did it leave
a positive public image, it also left the public with
full knowledge of the dangers of waste tires, particularly
with recent rains and the threat of the West Nile Virus.
It also let the public know the Department of Environmental
Services could serve as an informational resource for
this issue.
Hamilton
County received a slew of phone calls the day the story
aired, as well as during the following days, from residents
reporting piles of waste tires and asking what they
could do with their own waste tires.
Another example
of a public relations campaign gaining momentum due
to the mass media is Hamilton County's electronics recycling
event.
Last year,
the county collected 19 truckloads of materials. This
year, the public relations efforts were enhanced. The
events were well advertised, and the public and businesses
were well informed of how to register for these free
events.
Unlike previous
years, however, area television stations introduced
the story to the public. They not only covered the actual
event but informed the public about the potential dangers
of landfilled electronics and the fact that it is illegal
for businesses to dispose of cathode-ray tubes in landfills.
The main
media focus, however, was how the department was picking
up the tab for the service - saving local businesses
a significant amount of money and keeping them from
disposing of electronics illegally. In 2003, the county
hauled away 34 truckloads of discarded electronics.
Dowers says,
"[For the most part] public relations is what gets the
people to the event. After they're there, or after they
register for it - as in the case of the electronics
drop-off program - we can provide them with education
about why the issue is so important. They first have
to know where and when to show up."
Taking
Aim With Amnesty
For residents
and business owners in the Florida Panhandle town of
Fort Walton Beach who wonder what to do with their old
computers, TVs, and other electronics, the area county
governments banded together to co-host recycling events
and provide educational materials.
Escambia,
Okaloosa, and Santa Rosa Counties found that by combining
resources to form the Panhandle Regional Electronics
Recycling Program, they could develop a stronger, more
successful campaign than if they each attempted their
own program.
First, they
publicize and coordinate semiannual events promoted
as Electronics Amnesty Days, much like the one in Hamilton
County. These typically last from 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. on
a Saturday at the county fairgrounds or some other centralized,
easy-to-find site.
A week or
two before the event, the date and time are sent, via
a news release, to the community newspapers in the area.
In addition, the newspapers and broadcast media are
invited to the event. The immediate nature of broadcast
media, especially stations looking for a lighthearted,
good-for-the-environment Saturday feature, helps increase
participation and improve public perception of services.
To help compel
residents to do the responsible thing - dispose of most
computer components at the amnesty event - the Panhandle
Regional Electronics Recycling Program promotes the
fact that the Florida Department of Environmental Protection
has declared such items, when disposed of, to be a hazardous
waste. Never assume the public is aware of the risk
to the environment that electronics scrap poses to local
landfills.
Additionally,
these Florida counties promote a financial incentive
to inspire people to bring their electronic items to
the event. In many cases, participants can qualify for
a tax deduction - saving money is a powerful motivator.
The goal
of the project, according to Jim Reece, Okaloosa County
recycling coordinator, is to make people aware of the
increasing amount of space electronic items take up
in landfills and to give residents a disposal choice.
"We want
Okaloosa County residents and business owners to have
access to an easy way to recycle their electronics and
show a little amnesty toward the environment - thus
the name Electronics Amnesty Day," he says.
Items collected
include computer components, such as central processing
units, monitors, keyboards, mice, and terminals; business
equipment, such as copiers and fax machines; and household
items, such as TVs, VCRs, stereos, and telephones.
Types of
items accepted are listed in the news releases and brochures.
Make sure, however, that any paper marketing materials
are printed on recycled paper - with that fact noted
somewhere in the layout. Nothing looks worse to the
public than publicity for a recycling event not printed
on recycled paper.
One of the
most powerful tools the group employs doesn't require
any paper at all and makes use of computers, which are
one of the recycling items targeted. This tool is a
Web site (www.rwbeck.com/rerp/index.htm)
that posts all of the community events as well as tips
for recycling, contact numbers, and so on. Web sites
can be powerful information resources if continually
updated and promoted to residents.
Lunch
at the Landfill
Never underestimate
the power of good ol' innovation.
Here's how
one organization actually got reporters excited for
a media lunch - an event most reporters hate. A media
lunch is a lunch combined with a news conference. Reporters
usually dread covering them because, in addition to
ho-hum food, they're usually fed the same story that
everybody else gets. Not only that, but many organizations
waste the media's time with lunches to announce news
that isn't very newsworthy.
"Lunch at
the Landfill" was staged by Keep Tennessee Beautiful,
a grassroots organization that wanted to attract media
attention to its efforts to fight litter and encourage
trucks to cover their loads when coming into and out
of landfills. Lunch was held at a local landfill in
Kingsport.
"We invited
all the local media and gave them a nice sandwich, chips
in a zipper-lock bag, and cookies in a zipper-lock bag,
all tied up in a brightly colored fabric square that
doubled as a napkin and put into a plastic container
with a lid," says Edith Golson of Keep Tennessee Beautiful.
"When lunch was over, we gathered up the napkins, attached
them with a safety pin, called the reporters' names,
and gave them the napkins as door prizes."
Reporters
usually show righteous indignation when they are given
anything for free. But this event was so much fun that
the reporters didn't dare complain.
Another Keep
Tennessee Beautiful affiliate sponsored a Solid Waste
Breakfast for the media on April Fool's Day. The media
event got so much attention that Jay Leno featured one
of the press clippings on The Tonight Show.
Additionally,
these two Tennessee tips made it into a national e-zine,
The Publicity Hound's Tips of the Week, a free
electronic newsletter published by public relations
expert Joan Stewart that features tips, tricks, and
tools for free publicity. Subscribe at www.PublicityHound.com
and receive for free the handy checklist "89 Reasons
to Send a News Release."
There are
all kinds of free tools of the trade available on the
Web, so make sure to sign up for them. The most important
part of making your solid waste public relations efforts
superior is to make them stand out from the crowd.
Susan
Bush is an analyst with R.W. Beck in Rhode Island.
MSW
- November/December 2003
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