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One
person's trash is another's treasure
Businesses
in Rockingham County are parlaying superfluous office
supplies into a money-saving venture for area schools,
taking recycling to a new level.
Thanks to the county's new teacher-supply depot, teachers
are eagerly snapping up supplies - from blank cassette
tapes to kitchen supplies to envelopes - that businesses
otherwise would have thrown away. The depot, a joint
venture between the Rockingham Educational Foundation
and the Harrisonburg-Rockingham Chamber of Commerce,
opened in November at John C. Myers Elementary School.
It's a win-win situation for all parties, says Pat Doss,
executive vice president of the chamber. Businesses
are glad to have some place other than a landfill to
get rid of extra supplies, while resourceful teachers
can turn just about anything into useful learning materials.
Although still in its early stages, the project has
been successful so far, says Janet Wendelken, president
of the educational foundation. "Teachers can make
things out of anything," she says, adding that
art departments aren't the only ones benefiting from
the donations. For instance, biology teachers were thankful
when Coors Brewing Co. discovered it had 1,000 test
tubes that were the wrong size and donated them to the
depot. R.R. Donnelley & Sons, a local printing company,
donated six pallets of paper that had been cut the wrong
size. Resourceful students and teachers could find myriad
uses for the huge rolls of paper.
Donations are not limited to just the obscure. Businesses
left with outdated stationery thanks to a recent merger
or name change can donate those leftover supplies as
well. The depot will accept just about anything, Wendelken
says, as long as it's not junk: "Portfolios, cardboard,
blank cassette tapes, buttons, cotton balls, overhead
transparencies, newsprint, petri dishes, carpet squares
" the list goes on and on.
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Leila Marija Ugincius
Return to Virginia Business - January
2002
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