Where hard to recycle materials get a second life

Where hard to recycle materials get a second life

Global Recycling Day: Importance and Initiatives

Introduction to Live Thrive and Charm

  • Peggy Whitlo Ratcliffe introduces herself as the founder and executive director of Live Thrive, a nonprofit organization focused on recycling.
  • The premier program of Live Thrive is Charm, which stands for the Center for Hard to Recycle Materials.

Community Engagement in Recycling

  • Charm attracts 300 to 400 visitors daily who bring various recyclable materials, ensuring proper recycling practices.
  • The organization emphasizes the importance of reusing items, especially during their preparations for an overseas move.

Understanding Hard-to-Recycle Materials

  • "Hard to recycle" refers to items that cannot be placed in curbside bins and require specialized recycling processes.
  • Styrofoam is highlighted as a problematic material that should not end up in landfills due to its long-lasting environmental impact.

Recycling Process at Charm

  • The facility processes hard-to-recycle materials by shredding them and transforming them into new products, such as insulation ceiling tiles.
  • This process helps divert waste from landfills while creating useful materials from what would otherwise be discarded.

Importance of Plastic Recycling

  • Each plastic item has a resin code indicated by a triangle on its bottom, which identifies the type of plastic for proper recycling.
  • Emphasizing the need for recycling plastics instead of relying on oil resources, Peggy notes that petroleum is costly and finite.
Video description

On World Recycling Day, we take a look inside Atlanta’s CHaRM— the Center for Hard to Recycle Materials— where everyday items that don’t belong in your curbside bin get a second life. From old electronics to household chemicals, this facility is helping keep thousands of pounds of materials out of landfills and showing how small actions can make a big environmental impact.