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The Paladin is Furman University's only independent student news network. Established in 1916 as a print newspaper, it provides the student body's perspective on news and issues affecting the Furman community.

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The Flusher

Upcoming events

Learning to Love Your LinkedIn Profile

Monday at 5:30 PM – Trone Hill Atrium

Project Dawn CLP (all week)

Wednesday at 12:30 AM – Theater Playhouse Main Theater

No-Yes: Katie Koestner's Personal Story CLP

Thursday at 1:00 AM – Trone Student Center, Watkins Room

Sex, Secrecy and the Queer Lives CLP

Thursday at 10:00 PM – Furman Hall 214

CLP Film Series CLP

Thursday at 11:30 PM – Trone Student Center, Burgiss Theater

Purposeful Pathways Series: Grad School Info Session

Friday at 5:30 PM – Johns Hall 208

Women's Tennis vs Florida Atlantic

Friday at 8:00 PM – Greenville

Stargazing Trip (overnight trip)

Friday at 8:00 PM – Tignall campsite. 1864 Graball Rd, Tignall, GA

Theatre of the Oppressed CLP

Friday at 9:00 PM – Trone Student Center, Watkins Room

Softball vs Sacred Heart

Saturday at 12:00 AM – Greenville

The Pirates of Penzance CLP

Saturday at 12:30 AM – McAlister Auditorium

TedxFurmanU: Written in the Stars (register online)

Saturday at 3:00 PM – Younts Conference Center

Caving at Worley's Cave (RSVP with FUOC)

Saturday at 6:00 PM – Worley's Cave, Bluff City, TN

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Recycling Challenges

Full article at thepaladin.news/flusher

In the beginning of 2023, Greenville County announced that they will be ending their curbside recycling program on March 30th for county land beyond the city limits. This change is the result of increasing collection costs incurred through the ever-rising prices of equipment maintenance, fuel, and human resources. This is a big step backwards since the county launched their “roll into recycling program” in 2013 to implement the use of larger rolling recycling bins. It is also news that upends the commitment made in their  2016 by-laws to “provide for the collection and transportation of […] recyclables […] within and outside the geographical district [...] for the benefit of Greenville County citizens.” 

Since the decision has been made public, many citizens have asked for clarification which can be found on the Greater Greenville Sanitation site. This site informed concerned parties that the money saved by ending the recycling program will be used to automate garbage and yard waste collection. Residents who choose to continue recycling can find various drop-off locations around the county. 

These changes, however, make recycling less of a norm and more of an inconvenient task that many residents will choose not to go out of their way to complete. When asked if the decision will affect the greater Greenville Community, Laura Bain, Associate Director of Sustainability Assessment at the Shi Institute for Sustainable Communities, said that 

“It certainly will. Those that are committed can/will continue to recycle by taking their recyclables to collection stations, but they will need to be sorted, which is a challenge for some in the way of space. Most will just add to their trash.”

Beyond the struggle to sort and transport your own recycling, Ms. Bain also recommends trying to address the problem at the source by purchasing items from reduced packaging markets such as Amend Market, which recently opened in the Greenville area. 

Bain also addressed the need to tackle the problem of waste and waste management at the source by confronting the producers of the problematic items. Many sustainability advocates believe that if companies were held responsible for the unnecessary packaging they produce, a large part of the problem would be solved. For example, if we focused on the 20 companies who produce the majority of sinuse plastics, we would cut worldwide plastic waste creation by 55%. If we stopped the top 100 plastic producing companies, 90% of plastic production would end. Yet the problems these companies make taxpayers and city officials solve force us to spend our resources phasing out recycling and producing more ways to pile their waste in landfills.

Here within the Furman bubble, our recycling system will remain unchanged as the university hires the independent company Ever Green Environmental to pick up and dispose of our recycling. As of the writing of this article, you can recycle everything in the infographic at the top of this article - most notably plastics 1 and 2, cans and several paper products. 

Despite the privilege we have to not have to worry about our waste, it is important that we remain mindful of what we can and cannot recycle. “Contamination and confusion of what can/can’t be recycled is a huge problem, even for those that are trying to do the right thing, and contamination reduces profit for recyclable materials,” Bain noted. If we want to take our best step forward in reducing our waste footprint through recycling, we must be diligent in sorting our items.

More from The Paladin

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  2. Dins Crush Chattanooga a Second Time, 79-58

  3. The Top 10 Best Movies of 2022 That You Should Absolutely Check Out!

  4. Furman Breaks Samford's Win Streak with a 91-84 Win

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