District decides paper over plastic
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Michael Miller
Last February, Newport Harbor High School’s surf and environmental
class gathered at the Santa Ana river jetties for its annual beach
cleanup. The 20-odd students had two missions that winter morning: to
remove as much trash as possible from the shore, and to figure out
which substance was causing the most pollution.
The first task was difficult. The second was easy. By the time
half an hour was over, the students had filled 10 trash bags with
discarded plastic foam.
“You could come out here every day with 100 people and it would
take 20 years to pick it all up,” said sophomore Christian Winkler,
16, who was among those maneuvering the tide pools to pick out tiny
fragments of cups and plates made of the stuff.
Four months later, Newport Harbor High has done a
small-but-significant part in the battle for cleaner beaches. On
Tuesday, the surf and environmental students held a press conference
at the Santa Ana river jetties to announce their school has become
the first in the Newport-Mesa Unified School District to discontinue
the use of plastic foam cups and plates on campus.
“When I was a kid, there was no Styrofoam,” said teacher Scott
Morlan, who advises the class. “Everything was cardboard plates,
cardboard cups. Styrofoam didn’t come into play until about the late
60s.”
Over the years, polystyrene or plastic foam, of which Styrofoam is
the most well-known brand, has become a staple in school cafeterias
and restaurants. Although attractive to many because of its low cost,
the material is also difficult to recycle and a constant
environmental hazard -- particularly in the ocean, where fish often
choke on its fragments.
During the beach cleanup in February, the students filled out data
cards which indicated the amounts of different kinds of trash in the
area. After polystyrene finished on top, the cleanup’s sponsor, Earth
Resource Foundation, advised the students to write letters to
district officials asking them to stop using the substance.
The students responded by writing to Dick Greene, Newport-Mesa’s
director of nutrition services, who attended surf and environmental
class meetings over the next few weeks. Finally, last month, Greene
ordered Newport Harbor cafeteria director Sue Lindsey to discontinue
the school’s supply of polystyrene plates and cups, and begin buying
paper ones instead.
Now Newport Harbor is down to its last batch of plastic foam, as
fiber pulp and wax paper have begun to clutter the cafeteria tables.
And while the new policy hasn’t put an end to littering on campus,
Morlan’s students are pleased to be rid of the old material.
“The big issue was Styrofoam plates, because everyone buys pizza
on them,” said junior Chris Burns, 17. “They stack up in trash cans,
or people just leave them on tables and they wind up around campus.”
Winkler said the problem is at its worst during Santa Ana winds,
which carry cups and plates into the gutter and into the Santa Ana
river. Stephanie Barger, executive director of the Earth Resource
Foundation in Costa Mesa, estimated the plastic foam the Newport
Harbor students gathered in February flowed downstream from as far
north as Big Bear.
The polystyrene campaign marked the second time Newport Harbor
students have lobbied for a local environmental cause.
Last year, the school’s Earth Resource Club was among those
campaigning for a smoking ban on Newport Beach’s shores. Barger said
when the students did their annual cleanup at Blackie’s beach in
2004, they picked up around 12,000 cigarette butts. The Newport Beach
City Council eventually passed the smoking ban in September.
So far, the only apparent difficulty with Newport Harbor’s
anti-polystyrene policy has been the cost. Part of the reason so many
schools have adopted plastic foam products is because the material
costs considerably less than paper. According to Lindsey, the bill
for 1,000 paper cups is more than three times that for the same
number of polystyrene cups. Still, she was happy to support the new
system.
“They’ve opened our eyes to a lot of things because we’re
naturally running a business here,” she said. “We’ve always gone for
the cheaper thing, which is Styrofoam.”
To help offset the cost of paper, Lindsey said, members of the
surf and environmental class have begun ordering more food and
bringing friends to the cafeteria with them. In addition, some
students have made their menu choices more eclectic than in the past,
opting for vegetarian pizzas and sandwiches -- and the paper plates
that come beneath them.
Greene said the district was still weighing the economic
consequences of using paper products. If costs prove manageable,
Newport-Mesa may pull the plug on polystyrene at other secondary
campuses next year.
“We want to help the kids set an example and help them in their
efforts to spread public awareness on this issue,” Greene noted.
Regardless of whether it can support paper or plastic foam,
Newport Harbor has taken another step toward a cleaner campus in
September.
After instituting the pilot program, Greene sent the surf and
environmental class six new trash cans to set around the school’s
parking lot and entrance. To make the cans more eye-catching, the
students have enlisted local artists to paint them. Brett Walker, a
member of an artists’ collective in Costa Mesa, designed one with
trees and a recycling logo.
“We’re fired up by this campaign because it was conceptualized by
the kids,” Walker said. “I think it’s great that kids are being
proactive about making positive change.”
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