Wednesday, June 24, 2020

recycling


Today, Coffee Klatch participants discussed recycling and other green initiatives in Mountain Brook and the greater Birmingham area.  Here are a few of the organizations and resources available to area residents.

Next week, the Coffee Klatch conversation topic is art & culture.  Register here if you’d like to join the discussion:



MOUNTAIN BROOK RECYCLING INFORMATION

The City of Mountain Brook contracts with Waste Management for residential waste services. These services include garbage, trash/yard waste, loose leaf collection, and recycling. Recycling is serviced once per week curbside, same day as garbage. The following items may be recycled:

Newspaper, mixed paper,junk mail, copy paper, aluminum, steel, and other metal cans. No. 1 and No. 2 plastics (HDPE-clear plastic milk jugs and PET plastic soft drink containers), magazines, cardboard (with no food on it), moving boxes and other corrugated or cardboard like cereal boxes.

PLEASE NO CONTAMINATION SUCH AS: plastic bags with recyclables in them (DO NOT BAG RECYCLABLES), glass, bulky plastic items (coolers/toys), garden hoses, wire hangers, foam products, electronics, rubber balls. Contamination will cause loads to be turned down and rerouted to MSW landfills.WET recyclables are contaminated, so if it is raining, please either cover the bin or delay until the following week.

One recycle bin is provided by Waste Management. Additional bins can be purchased from Waste Management for $20.00 each.

The city recycles the loose leaves collected each year in the Fall and Winter. The leaves are picked up at the curb by Waste Management as a service to the citizens. NOTE: (Please do not use your recycle bin for your loose leaves). The leaves are then dropped off at the Public Works facility at 3579 East Street, Mountain Brook Alabama, near Rathmell Soccer complex. The leaves are pushed into piles, turned, and as a result of decomposing, become compost, a useful gardening by-product of the leaves.Compost is available Monday through Thursday at the Public Works facility for $20.00 per pickup load.

Not necessarily recycling but please allow me to mention that any tree cutting and trimming work done by a contractor MUST be removed by the contractor.

The City of Mountain Brook has a little more than a 70 percent participation rate which is one of the highest in the state. If you are not currently recycling we would like to encourage you to consider doing so. If you are participating in recycling, thank you and please continue to recycle.

BIRMINGHAM RECYCLING INFORMATION


Citywide curbside recycling in Birmingham is returning after service was suspended in early April due to the COVID-19 crisis.
The program resumes Wednesday July 1st, with pickup being the FIRST Wednesday of EVERY MONTH.
One local Birmingham company that is excited to see curbside recycling return to the Magic City is Birmingham Recycling and Recovery, the Avondale facility that separates and processes the region’s recyclables.
“Birmingham Recycling and Recovery is glad to hear that Birmingham is planning to resume residential services for recycling, said Leigh Shaffer, the company’s sales manager.  “I’m sure residents will be thrilled as well.  We have been receiving a lot more residential dropoff during the hiatus. This should help cut down the traffic at our plant, which is good.”
We asked Shaffer to provide Bham Now readers/Birmingham residents  a quick “refresher” course on what you can and cannot be recycled at the curbside.
Accepts:
Paper: Includes – cardboard, corrugated or cereal box, mixed paper, office paper and junk mail
Plastics: #1- Soft drink and water bottles microwavable trays etc.. and #2  – Milk jugs, yogurt tubs, shampoo bottles, household cleaners
The program also takes aluminum cans and steel cans. 
Does NOT Accept:
Glass and plastic bags.  
In fact, when you put out your curbside recyclables and you don’t have a recycling bin,  DO NOT put them in plastic bags. It messes up the sorter machines.  Use paper bags or boxes.
“We do prefer the materials to be empty, clean and dry, but we don’t expect people to put their recycling through a dishwasher,” added Shaffer.  “Contamination that we are most concerned about is twine, electronics, glass, textiles –  things that can damage their equipment or present hazards to their staff.”

The restart of the Birmingham residential curbside recycling program will not change the current 6 month City Haul  pilot curbside recycling program that was launched on April 1 in the Roebuck, Forest Park, Crestwood South, East Avondale  and Woodland Park neighborhoods. About 2800 96-gallon refuse bins were distributed to those communities. They also have a different pickup schedule. If City Haul succeeds, expect additional Birmingham residential communities to be added.
A friendly reminder, the Birmingham curbside recycling program resumes on Wednesday, July 1st. The first Wednesday of every month will be “recycling day”. Do your part, save resources and protect the environment.
UAB RECYCLING

https://www.uab.edu/facilities/fm/sservices/rec

UAB Recycling Drop-Off Center

The UAB Recycling Drop-Off Center is located at 620 11th St. South, and is open to UAB faculty, staff, students and the general public.
The service hours are 7-9 a.m. and 4-5:30 p.m. Monday and Thursday. 
The Drop-Off Center is conveniently located at 620 11th St. S.  Please bring recyclable material already separated in any bag, box or carrying bin. All containers may be kept for re-use. 
·         Cans
o    Aluminum (soda, beer) - place in the green compactor.
o    Steel (soup, tuna, veggies, etc.) place in the gray labeled tote in front of the green compactor.
·         Paper Products
o    Clean recyclable paper products.
o    Shredded paper must be bagged.
o    Boxes should be flattened.
·         Plastic Bottles
o    Empty and rinsed #1 bottles and cups only
·         Used Cooking Oil/Grease
o    Place in the white shed at the drop off entrance.
o    Empty jugs on top, full jugs on bottom.
·         Glass
·         Automotive Products
·         Hazardous Waste
·         Ammunition
·         Stickers or labels by themselves
·         Greasy/food contaminated paper (Pizza boxes, etc.)
·         Plastic bags, plates or utensils
·         6-pack rings
·         Plastic that shatters
·         Styrofoam

Birmingham Artcycle Facebook page
This group was created by Naked Art Gallery. Post here if you have potential art supplies that you prefer to give to an artist to be recycled into art rather than adding to landfills. This group is for FREE (potential) art supplies only. Posts about selling anything or about anything unrelated to free art supplies will be deleted.
RECYCLING ELECTRONICS

Electronics

UAB Recycling has partnered with Protec Recycling to provide electronics recycling. Electronics will be accepted by appointment only by calling 934-WORK (9675). Some items may not be accepted at the recycling center but can be taken directly to Protec Recycling. 
·         PCs including laptops & tablets
·         Servers
·         Cell phones and telephones
·         Satellite/Cable Boxes
·         Gaming systems & components
·         Stereos
·         Copiers
·         Printers
·         VCRs & DVD Players
·         Remote Controls
·         MP3 Players
·         A/C adapters
·         LCD Monitors
·         Disk Drives
·         Rechargeable batteries
·         Speakers
·         Cameras
·         Modems/Routers
·         CD Players
·         Fax Machines
·         Switches/Firewalls
·         UPS’s/Battery backups
·         Keyboards/Mice Cables/Wires
·         ...and other similar items
·         Broken, leaking or corroded batteries.
·         Mercury Containing thermostats, thermometers, etc
·         Lightbulbs
·         Paint, adhesives, caulk, solvents or thinners
·         Items too large to safely handle. Anything that would break a pallet or cannot be loaded onto a truck and moved around a warehouse
·         Flammable or combustible materials
·         Liquids of any kind
·         Pressurized containers
·         Household refuse
These items must be taken directly to Protec
·         CRT Computer Monitors *
·         TVs (CRT*, Plasma, LCD, LED)
·         Hard drives including external*
·         Large items too big to fit through the shed door.
·         Items too heavy to move safely by hand.
*These items have a disposal fee associated with them.

Recycle USA in Pinson also recycles electronics.  Visit their website at https://recycleusainc.com/materials/electronic-recycling-services/
Alabama Environmental Council
GREEN INITIATIVES
Citizen Science: Local & National

What's your water level?
This application collects and displays photos of water levels. Documenting water levels helps us to better visualize and understand changing water levels and its effects on roads, homes, and businesses. Examples of contributions include high tides (such as king tides) and flooding events from storms. Seeing elevated water levels will help us get a glimpse of our future with higher sea levels and will help planners and researchers protect homes, lives, and businesses.

The Secchi Dip-In

The Secchi Dip-In began in 1994 by eminent limnologist Dr. Robert Carlson and colleagues to enable volunteers to submit water clarity measurements to an online database and see how their data compare on a variety of scales- local to national. The program has also been utilized for volunteers to begin monitoring efforts and to increase monitoring efforts within their communities. In the midst of underfunded state volunteer monitoring programs, the Secchi Dip-In has served as a place for volunteers to continue submitting their data. In 2015, Dr. Robert Carlson transferred the operation of the Secchi Dip-In to the North American Lake Management Society and over the past 20 years, the database accumulated more than 41,000 records on more than 7,000 individual waterbodies.

Lost Ladybug Project

Over the past twenty years native ladybugs that were once very common have become extremely rare. Help ongoing research and map where all the ladybug species still exist by uploading photos of any and all ladybugs to the Lost Ladybug Project online public ladybug database. Opportunities to participate in rearing and reintroducing native ladybug species.

Notes From Nature

There are an estimated two billion specimens housed in natural history museums around the world. These biological collections document where species and populations exist now and where they existed decades and centuries before, so they hold irreplaceable information necessary for uncovering important patterns. This project enables anyone on the internet to contribute to this effort and we hope that they gain knowledge of biodiversity during the process.

Neighborhood Nestwatch

Neighborhood Nestwatch is a citizen science program that uses face-to-face interaction on an annual basis to teach citizens about the wild birds and the process of science in their own backyards. Participants are mentored to collect data which examine the impact of urbanization on wildlife. What makes Neighborhood Nestwatch so effective and scientifically robust is the face-to-face interaction between many participants and Smithsonian scientists when we visit their backyards to band birds and find nests every spring. Neighborhood Nestwatch provides both a powerful educational experience and a unique platform for important scientific research.

Nature's Notebook

Nature's Notebook gathers information on plant and animal phenology across the U.S. to be used for decision-making on local, national and global scales to ensure the continued vitality of our environment. Scientists alone cannot collect enough data: They need your help. Join more than 6,000 other amateur naturalists across the nation in taking the pulse of our planet. Volunteers use scientifically-vetted observation guidelines, developed for over 1,000 species, to ensure data are useful to researchers and decision-makers.

Environmental Groups in Birmingham, Alabama


Sierra Club – Alabama Chapter-Cahaba Group
202-547-1141
Mission: Explore, enjoy and protect the wild places of the earth Practice and promote the responsible use of the earth’s ecosystems and resources Educate and enlist humanity to protect and restore the quality of the natural and human environment Use all lawful means to carry out these objectives.

The Nature Conservancy in Alabama
205-251-1155
Mission: From rare and endangered plants and animals to prairies, forests and the Gulf coast, The Nature Conservancy is working to protect Alabama for people and nature. When you donate today, you’ll help ensure a future in which people and nature can thrive.

Black Warrior Riverkeeper
205-458-0095
Mission: Black Warrior Riverkeeper’s mission is to protect and restore the Black Warrior River and its tributaries. The organization uses a watershed approach to ensure clean water, a healthy aquatic environment, and the recreational and aesthetic values of the river.

Cahaba Riverkeeper
205-967-2600
Mission: The mission of the Cahaba Riverkeeper is to defend the ecological integrity of the Cahaba, its tributaries and watershed and to ensure clean water, a healthy aquatic environment, and the recreational and aesthetic values of the river. The Cahaba watershed is monitored to identify violations of clean water legislation. If notification to the violator and appropriate authorities fails to produce action, remedial and legal action is pursued to protect this unique natural resource and drinking water supply.

Longwood Gardens Online Learning
At Longwood Gardens (PA), we work with experts in the fields of horticulture, floral and landscape design, botanical arts, garden photography, and professional courses to ensure a dynamic online learning experience no matter where you are. Online learning allows us to bring our expertise into classrooms and living rooms throughout the world. Through a variety of different mediums, including Virtual Field TripsProfessional Development for teachers, and Continuing Education for everyone, we’re expanding our reach and connecting to students, wherever they may be. 
Develop professional skills, enrich your world, and watch yourself grow.https://longwoodgardens.org/education/online-learning?fbclid=IwAR2bFMRRbIs5nVOraGfrSoba8vqeZxfJgSAqEigKaOlYQVRVd5eQ71HNlcI
Merlin app, from the Cornell Lab

Identify every bird you see: Free, instant bird ID help for 6,000+ birds for North and South America, Europe, Asia, and Australia.

Cornell Labs eBird image and sound database






Thursday, June 18, 2020

magazines


The next Genre Reading Group will be (on Zoom) Tuesday, June 30th at 6:30pm.  This meeting is one of our biannual Salon Discussions, which means no assigned topic!  Share anything you've enjoyed listening to, watching, or reading lately! 

The July meeting of the Genre Reading Group will be on Tuesday, July 28th at 6:30pm to discuss magazines.  Which do you like? Which do you hate? Is reading magazines even a thing anymore?  Let’s talk about it! Register here: http://emmetoneal.libnet.info/event/3501675

Flipster

Emmet O’Neal Library offers residents of the city of Mountain Brook free online access to a popular selection of magazines using the Flipster digital newsstand service. Simply click on the Flipster tile on the Library's homepage to read on your computer/laptop or download the Flipster app (avail for Android and Apple) on your mobile device for on-the-go convenience! 

Flipster Carousel | EBSCO Apps & Cloud Services

Residents of Homewood and the city of Birmingham also have access to the Flipster digital newsstand.  Residents of Hoover have access to rbDigital magazines.

Not interested in digital magazines and would rather have the print version?  No problem! The magazine collection at Emmet O’Neal Library is available for curbside pickup. Here’s all the info you need:
  • The Library keeps one calendar year of the magazines it carries.
  • Some issues may be checked out, damaged, etc and not available for checkout.
  • Current issues, when available, are eligible for checkout.
  • Reserves/holds are not available for magazines.
  • Allow 24 hours from the time of your request to it being available for curbside pickup scheduling.

Call 205-445-1121 to request magazines for curbside pickup.

Wednesday, June 17, 2020

Volunteering


A Few Volunteer Opportunities in and around Birmingham

Be A Blessing Birmingham
Be a Blessing Birmingham is a registered 501(c)3 nonprofit in Alabama. For more than four years, under the leadership of Executive Director Erica “Star” Robbins, volunteers have collected donations of hygiene items and clothing and distributed them to homeless citizens in downtown Birmingham.
The group has focused on distributing items that are necessary to maintain sanitation and cleanliness, as this need is not always met through other channels. People who are living on the street while trying to find and keep a job or just stay basically clean and healthy have a constant need for hygiene products and other small necessities. The monthly distributions help meet this need.

Levite Jewish Community Center
Have a passion for helping others? Become a volunteer at the Levite Jewish Community Center! Your volunteer time will have a deep impact on you and the community. Become a volunteer at The J for a chance to make new friends, learn new skills, and have fun doing it. 

We have a variety of volunteer opportunities to fit your schedule and interests. Whether it’s coaching a team, working with theater, or helping with one of our many events, volunteers are a fundamental part of the LJCC’s mission. 

Simply fill out our Volunteer Application and you will be contacted by someone to get you started. The LJCC requires all volunteers to be 16 or older. Anyone volunteering with children will have a background screening.


Collat Jewish Family Services
CJFS enhances quality of life and strengthens independence for individuals and families, with a primary focus on older adults, by providing exceptional support services in accordance with Jewish values.

First incorporated as a non-profit agency in 1989, Jewish Family Services Birmingham became Collat Jewish Family Services in 2001 in recognition of a flagship gift from the Charles & Patsy Collat family. Today, CJFS has a special focus on supporting independence and enriched quality of life for older adults, while continuing to provide professional counseling and social services for individuals and families of all ages.

In keeping with Jewish values, CJFS serves people of all races, religions, and socio-economic levels, providing comprehensive assessments, care management, transportation, financial assistance, mental health services, in-home personal care, respite care, and supplemental volunteer support. As the aging population continues its rapid growth, CJFS will continue to adapt to the changing needs of this vulnerable cohort.  

CJFS is a partner agency of United Way of Central Alabama and a member of the Alabama Association of Non-Profits and the Network of Jewish Human Service Agencies.


First Light Shelter
First Light is a Center for Homeless Women and Children located in the heart of downtown Birmingham. It offers the only emergency shelter accepting homeless women and families 24 hours a day in the area. In addition to meeting the basic needs of our guests, we offer:
  • Individualized case management
  • Group sessions, Life Skills, Movie and Art therapies
  • A variety of activites, both fun and informational
  • Four permanent + one transitional housing programs
  • Most of all, a place of acceptance where guests can begin to regain dignity, hope, and independence


Girls Rock Birmingham
Girls Rock Birmingham presents a life-changing week-long program serving girls ages 9-16 in the Birmingham area. Through the course of the week, campers learn an instrument, form a band and write a song which they perform at the Friday evening showcase. In addition, the girls participate in workshops centered around empowerment and creativity such as songwriting, image and identity, zine-making, screen printing, design, and more, all designed to cultivate self-esteem and healthy expression. We aim to offer the optimal environment for originality and self-expression while allowing the girls to showcase their own individuality and creativity. We strive to create a safe space wherein campers can power up their voices!


Birmingham Botanical Gardens
Volunteers lead by example, committing themselves to a cause with unbridled enthusiasm, loyalty and skill. Our volunteers help us fulfill our mission and are absolutely vital to our success. We strive to offer rich, rewarding experiences to each of these talented community leaders. By donating your time, you are giving something back to your community and joining us in enhancing lives with plants. Contact our volunteer coordinator, Alice Moore, at amoore@bbgardens.org or 205-533-7659. Ext 104.

I was able to get in contact Ms. Moore for more information about volunteer opportunities at the Gardens, and this was her reply:

Our volunteers fall into four catagories:
  • Gardens and Greenhouses
  • Special Events and Plant Sales
  • Education (this includes the Library).
  • Administration

We have a volunteer website: https://bbgardens.volunteerhub.com/

  • Gardens and Greenhouses includes:

Kaul Wildflower Garden Volunteers
Japanese Garden Volunteers
The General Garden Group (this group works in multiple gardens)
Southern Living Garden Volunteers
The Fern Glade group led by the Birmingham Fern Society
Greenhouse Assistants
Plant Propagation Groups
Bruno Vegetable Garden Volunteers
The Little One's Memory Garden Group
 The Native Bog Garden volunteers
  • Education includes

Education Docents
Garden Tour Guides
Outreach Ambassadors
Summer Camp Counselors
Library and Archives volunteers.



NONSPECIFIED SEARCHES:

United Way of Central Alabama INVOLVE volunteer portal

American Red Cross of Alabama and Mississippi

Volunteer Match

Redemptive Cycle: Birmingham’s Nonprofit Bicycle Shop

Positive Maturity

Jimmie Hale Mission

Kikstart: Free Food for Kids Age 3-18

Greater Birmingham Humane Society (programs still suspended due to COVID-19)

Vulcan Park & Museum

Cahaba River Society

YWCA of Central Alabama

McWane Science Center (closed until further notice)

Catholic Volunteer Network

GENERAL DISCUSSION:

Offer your support to the political party of your preference.

Interested in helping preserve historic sites in and around Birmingham? Consider joining the Birmingham Historical Society (https://birminghamhistoricalsociety.com/please-join-us/) or the Alabama Historical Commission (https://ahc.alabama.gov/volunteer_intern.aspx).

American Village in Montevallo, AL has a volunteer program: http://www.americanvillage.org/site/PageServer?pagename=gen_people_volunteer

It’s quite common to come across a Little Free Library as you walk around towns and neighborhoods across the US.  Find them, and plans for building your own, here: https://littlefreelibrary.org/

Lots of discussion of live music broadcasts, some with digital tip jars for these performers and some without, and drive-in movies:

Find streaming live music on many services including: Eventbrite, Bands in Town, Stage It, Instagram, Twitch, Youtube, Facebook, Stream Lab, and more.


Alabama Symphony Orchestra’s Tuneful Tuesday

Hoover Public Library’s Live From My Livingroom music series, Thursdays at 7 on Youtube

Mary Chapin Carpenter’s Songs From Home series (youtube)

Black Jacket Symphony: Live at the Hoover Met Complex

Sidewalk Cinema Starlite Pop-Up Drive-In