FALLS CHURCH, Va., Oct. 24, 2019 /PRNewswire-PRWeb/ -- Today Kent County became the first Michigan community and sixth nationally to receive an education grant from the Foodservice Packaging Institute to increase awareness of recycling clean and empty cups and takeout food containers.
Kent County will use its FPI Community Partnership education grant to raise resident awareness about what can and cannot be recycled. In addition to paper, cardboard, metals, glass and cartons, Kent County residents can recycle clean and empty plastic cups and containers, and pizza boxes.
"Kent County is committed to reducing landfill waste by 90 percent by 2030," said Kristen Wieland, communications and marketing manager for Kent County Department of Public Works. "FPI's grant helps us educate our community to participate in recycling at home, including clean pizza boxes and plastic cups and containers."
In a recent survey of more than 2,100 Kent County residents, 38 percent of respondents said their motivation to recycle is because it is good for the planet and to keep plastics and other materials out of oceans. About a quarter of the respondents said keeping material out of landfills was their motivation to recycle.
"We've learned that most residents across Michigan and the entire nation want to recycle the takeout items they use frequently," said Natha Dempsey, vice president of FPI. "FPI is pleased to partner with Kent County so its 309,500 households may now recycle these items."
FPI's grant to Kent County was announced at a joint press conference with Michigan's Department of Environment, Great Lakes and Energy. The department has devoted about $450,000 to assist recycling and recovery in West Michigan. "We were excited and humbled to present our grant alongside EGLE's," said Dempsey. "FPI members employ nearly 4,000 Michiganders with a total payroll of more than $250 million."
In addition to Kent County, FPI Community Partners include Washington, D.C., Chattanooga, Tennessee, Louisville, Kentucky, Denver, Colorado, and Millennium Recycling in Sioux Falls, South Dakota. These communities received education grant assistance, communications resources and / or technical assistance from FPI as they expanded their recycling programs to include foodservice packaging. In each of the communities, the outreach campaigns reminded residents not only what to recycle, but that only clean and empty items should be recycled. As a result, community partners have seen quality recyclables increase and contamination decrease. More information about FPI's Community Partner program may be found at http://www.recyclefsp.org/community-partnership-program.
ABOUT FPI: Founded in 1933, the Foodservice Packaging Institute is the trade association for the foodservice packaging industry in North America. FPI promotes the value and benefits of foodservice packaging and serves as the industry's leading authority to educate and influence stakeholders. Members include raw material and machinery suppliers, manufacturers, distributors and purchasers of foodservice packaging. For more information or to follow us on social media, visit http://www.FPI.org.
SOURCE Foodservice Packaging Institute
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