Thursday, January 9, 2025

December UV-EAT Post, with January Reminders

 



Beautiful Eugene, river, land, and sky.  

Greetings Friends!

We met on December 8 to collect and sort plastics that would otherwise end up in the landfill. Our haul was fairly large for our second attempt at this. We resume the recycling this coming Sunday, January 12. Be sure to bring your clean and dry plastics to the Garden Room between 11:45-12:15.  We will begin our meeting at 12:15 on January 12.

At our December meeting we agreed to the following:

1)      We will strive to make an announcement each month thanking the congregation for dropping off plastics for recycling. Denice or Donna agreed to make those announcements, pending approval by ministerial team. 

2)      Reviewed and approved the recycling instructions, which are below.

3)      We discussed sample land Acknowledgement statements and agreed to the one that is now listed on our blog site and listed at the bottom of this email. We aspire to share this with Unity leadership, asking to consider the possibility of including it in the bulletin, website, or as an announcement. Next steps?

4)      We agreed to identify a date for the next local environmental clean-up: the Willamette Riverkeepers have the following options for us to consider.

a.      Register Now for a floating clean up on Tuesday January 14. https://willamette-riverkeeper.org/event-list

b.      If you cannot make it, they will have another clean-up on February 11 and March 11.

5)      When we have speakers, aspire to announce them to the congregation on the day they are scheduled to visit UV EAT.  We also want to thank speakers and visitors after their visits.

Next actions: We discussed the possibility of a kitchen use survey for Unity to identify areas where small changes could be considered. We discussed the possibility of asking the Board to issue a statement for all services at Unity to consider the most ecologically friendly options.

We are planning a visit with Fossil Free Eugene to hear about their work in the community. Michael is waiting for confirmation on their availability for our February meeting. 

Plastics Recycling at Unity:

We can now recycle plastics that our local waste haulers (eg. Sanipac & others) won’t pick up. A volunteer will be available in the Garden Room after the service on the 2nd Sunday of each month, from 11:45 to 12:15 to collect your cleaned and sorted-by-number plastics. The EAT team meets after that if you would like to join in! 

Instructions:

• Remove all lids. Lids may be recycled but the number on them may differ from the container.

• Check any plastics to see if it has a triangle with a #2, #4, or #5 inside the triangle. We can only accept those numbers.

• CLEAN and DRY all plastics to be recycled, (We can’t accept them if not)

• First separate all items by number (see below)

• Sorting #2 Plastics:

• Any #2 bottles or jugs that are larger than a tennis ball (=more than 2” wide x 2” tall) can go to local carrier. Do Not Bring here.

• #2 bottles smaller than a tennis ball (eg, vitamin/prescription bottles.) For prescription bottles, remove label or black out names. Put these into their own bag.

• Other #2s, such as tubs, bins, lids, PakTech beverage carriers/handles that have a #2 — all can go in another bag.

• Sorting #4 and #5. Put each into their own bag.

• Remove lids and check lids for their number to sort as well.

• They can take clean #5 plant pots smaller than 2 gallons.

• NOTE: We do NOT take any #1s, no plastic bags, or #5 plant pots larger than 2 gallons (which CAN go to BRING for resale/reuse).

Thank you for taking this small step with the Unity Environmental Action Team!

 

Unity of the Valley Environmental Action Team’s Territorial Acknowledgement:

Unity of the Valley is located on Kalapuya Ilihi, the traditional indigenous homeland of the Kalapuya people. Following treaties between 1851 and 1855, Kalapuya people were dispossessed of their indigenous homeland by the United States government and forcibly removed to the Coast Reservation in Western Oregon. Today, descendants are citizens of the Confederated Tribes of Grand Ronde Community of Oregon and the Confederated Tribes of the Siletz Indians of Oregon, and continue to make important contributions in their communities, at UO, and across the land we now refer to as Oregon.*

*We thank the Native Strategies Group and the Department of Sociology at the University of Oregon for the language in this statement which we adapted to our group.


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