Congratulations Innerwick Primary School!

Big IdeaFANTASTIC NEWS! Innerwick Primary has WON the CRNS (Community Resources Network Scotland) competition called The Next Big Idea which called for schools to think of the next initiative that Scotland could adopt to reduce waste. They have won £500 for their school and will be presenting their winning idea when they collect their prize in November at the Scottish Parliament.

All of the schools in the Dunbar and district area have been working with The Zero Waste Town Project to look at the issue of waste and how to reduce it and have all been enthusiastically taking things forward and making a real difference in their schools and wider community.

We are so pleased with the progress we are seeing and think the younger generation are really showing us all the way.

It is BRILLIANT that Innerwick has won this competition for their excellent idea. WELL DONE to everyone in the school who worked so hard on your entry.

I can trace back why I am in the job I am today …

Hello, I am an Education Officer for the Zero Waste Town Project.

earth 2I can trace back why I am in the job I am today to a teacher and an astronaut and sadly I do not remember either of their names but their impact has inspired the course of my life.

When I was 12/13 I had a Maths teacher. In lessons, when he thought we had done enough Maths, he would tell us to put away our books and then he would talk about the world. He spoke about things like endangered species, deforestation and pollution, back when these things were not often discussed, especially with people my age. He gave real examples of where those things were happening then and spoke about people and organisations that were doing things to make a difference. He also began a conservation club at the school to involve those that attended in practical hands on things to make a difference locally.

EarthAt a similar time to this I had been flicking through the TV channels and I came across an astronaut talking about his experiences. As he spoke they showed pictures of Earth from space. I had never seen something like this before and so I stayed on that channel to watch what was left of the interview. He spoke about the impact of seeing the Earth as a sphere in the vastness of space for the first time. He talked about the profound understanding he came to have. He realised how deeply we are all connected because we live on a globe and how there are no real boundaries. He then went on to talk about the effect of understanding how vulnerable and insignificant we were in the vastness he saw and how he truly now comprehended how reliant we were upon each other and on the planets continued health for our survival.

earth 3However, as he spoke the pictures of Earth were being shown and as I saw them I began to be deeply affected by them and their impact changed me forever. From then on pictures of pop artists were replaced on my wall by posters of the Earth either as a whole spherical globe or of the Earth from the Moon. I also took photos of my local environment and had them blown up into posters. These images surrounded me daily and this coupled with my Maths teacher’s unusual lessons, inspired me to find out about issues I was interested in from around the world and then to think about whether I wanted to get personally involved in them either on a local or a global scale.

susan at 16I went on to gain an Environmental Science Degree and I have been a teacher for 13 years, specialising in environmental education for the last 6. The Zero Waste Town project is so inspiring to me and I have loved being a part of it so far. I get to help young people to really engage with their locality and to realise they can make positive changes now and for the future. I love being part of enabling a new generation to realise their waste is also a resource who are increasingly becoming motivated and inspired as I was to think about their place in the world and their local environment. I often think of the impact these two people had on my life and I wonder how many others have been affected by what they said and did. It’s amazing the effect people can have.

Anyway, that’s why I do the job I do and I am so happy to have been given the opportunity to do it in the area that I love.

Susan Carleton,  Education and Community Officer for Zero Waste Dunbar and District.

A Family Project

Zero waste family project

Are you up for taking the Zero Waste Challenge?

We are looking for families living in the Dunbar District who are keen to give it a go and to write a regular blog about your experience.

Let us know here or by private message or by email: susancarleton@sustainingdunbar.org

Calling all Upcyclers

Reuse MarkThe Zero Waste Town Project would like to organise a series of workshops which will help the community reuse, recycle and refurbish/up-cycle or mend items which would go otherwise to landfill and would like to put a call out to members of the community locally or local businesses who feel they could lead a workshop that does something like this.

Please could you share this status to others and let anyone know who may be interested in this so we can begin work on this programme.

They will be paid for doing the workshop and we will help organise and advertise it. People interested can contact the Zero Waste Project on 01368 866920 or via Zero Waste Dunbar facebook page.

This Summer the Zero Waste Town Project team has been out and about with our portable recycle bins to events and places in our Ward area. Whilst diverting rubbish to landfill by recycling we have also worked with all ages to raise awareness about recycling and started to ask the community to map where they think permanent recycle bins should be placed.

Before the holidays began we started working with the local schools in the Dunbar and East Linton Ward and carried out waste audits to give them a base line measurement of how much rubbish they produce so they can then work to find ways to reduce the weight over this next year. We also helped to fund Innerwick Primary School’s Scrap Pay Pod.

Through ‘recycling on the go’ and the waste audits carried out over the last two months the Zero Waste Dunbar and District team has spread the word about the aims of the project (with hundreds of people of all ages) while diverting 29.350 KG of waste from landfill to be recycled.

Recycling Week 2015

ZWD Recyling on the Go!It’s recycle week this week and are out with our ‘Recycling on the Go’ bins to local schools to help them to sort, and if possible recycle, their waste in the playground.

 

 

Rec on go.jpegHere we are at West Barns Primary at their assembly letting the children know all about recycle week to help support the great work the school is already doing to recycle.

Recycling on the Go

We are good to go! See you at most local events through the next few months 🙂
ZWD Recyling on the Go!

We are working with local event organisers to get an understanding of what sorts of waste their events generate and together find solutions to reduce, reuse and recycle this waste.

If you have an event coming up let us know.