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Indiana Governor's Awards for Excellence in Recycling

Last Year's Awards

April 29, 1998 

Governor Frank O'Bannon today honored 22 businesses, hospitals, local governments, schools and individuals for their extraordinary efforts to reduce, reuse and recycle. 

O'Bannon Executive Assistant Joyce Martin, Indiana Department of Environmental Management Commissioner John M. Hamilton and Julie Rhodes, the Indiana Department of Commerce recycling market development coordinator, presented the awards at the Indiana Recycling Coalition's Ninth Annual Conference at the Indianapolis Marriott. 

Prior to the ceremony, Hamilton and Department of Commerce Executive Director Tom McKenna toured the award winner Navistar-International Casting Corp. foundry at 5565 Brookville Rd., Indianapolis. 

"These businesses, organizations and individuals have proven to be outstanding examples of what each of us can do to make a difference for the environment," O'Bannon said. 

A review committee evaluated and selected each applicant based on program comprehensiveness, innovation, education and outreach efforts, measurable results and environmental benefit. Together, the 1997 recipients diverted approximately 110,000 tons of waste from landfills. The awards have been given annually since 1990. This year a new category, Mountain Movers, recognizes individuals and organizations who went to extraordinary lengths to accomplish their goals. 
 

Category Award Winner
Business Source Reduction and Recycling 
Arvin Exhaust North America Gladstone Plant Waste Management Team 
(Columbus)
Gasification Services, Inc. 
(Terre Haute)
Therapeutic Innovations 
(Brookston)
Local Government City of Crown Point
50 percent Achievement Award Dubois County SWMD 
(Jasper)
City of Marion
City of Rensselaer
City of West Lafayette
City of Bloomington
Solid Waste Management Districts Fountain County Solid Waste Management District 
(Veedersburg)
Mountain Movers Michigan City Refuse Department
Mary Campbell 
(Paragon)
Hospitals St. Joseph Medical Center 
(Fort Wayne)
Individual Achievements Hartley O. Holte 
(Bloomington)
Jeffrey Langbehn 
(Merrillville)
Group Achievements Jefferson County Environmental Roundtable 
(Madison)
Noblesville Senior Citizens Organization 
(Noblesville)
Schools Most Precious Blood Catholic School 
(Fort Wayne)
Switzerland County Schools 
(Vevay)
Media and Journalism Melanie McCullough 
Decatur Daily Democrat
Priority Waste Stream CIDONE Industries, LLC 
(Indianapolis)
Navistar-Indianapolis Casting Corp. 
(Indianapolis)

Business Source Reduction and Recycling

Arvin Exhaust North America Gladstone Plant Waste Management Team
Columbus

Contact: Vicki East
812-348-4461

The plant manufactured 3.2 million automotive exhaust assemblies in 1997. Eighty-five percent of 834 employees participate in the company's aggressive recycling initiatives. In 1997, Arvin Gladstone diverted approximately 220 tons of waste from landfills. Accomplishments of the 10-member Waste Management Team include: a plant-wide recycling program for cardboard, office paper, newspaper and magazines; working with their chemical suppliers to use returnable drums; working with suppliers to use reusable packaging; and reusing lumber for packaging and shipping or selling.

Gasification Services, Inc.
West Terre Haute

Contact : Roy Dowd
812-535-6057

Recycling is built into the design of Gasification Services, which, in conjunction with Cinergy Corp., is the world's largest coal gasification facility. Gasification Services built its plant with assistance from the Department of Energy's Clean Coal program as an example of "clean" electricity generation from sulfur-containing coal. The gasification process removes sulfur from locally mined coal, eliminating sulfur dioxide emissions. The sulfur is recycled into a salable material. This "clean" process is one of the first of its kind in the country. Since 1995, the company has eliminated more than 51 million pounds of sulfur dioxide, recovering more than 25 million pounds of pure, chemical-grade sulfur.

Therapeutic Innovations
Brookston

Contact: Lenard Miller
765-563-6868.

Therapeutic Innovations is the only small business to win a Governor's Award this year. With nine employees, Therapeutic Innovations is a private clinic that serves nine rural counties with occupational and physical therapy for children with disabilities. The clinic's innovative approach to therapy also applies to its source reduction and recycling efforts. Co-owner Lenard Miller continuously investigates opportunities for the clinic, recycling pediatric wheelchairs by reclaiming used parts and installing them on children's wheelchairs that need replacement parts at much lowers costs. The staff fills only two full cans of trash each month due to their office recycling program. 


Local Government

City of Crown Point

Mayor James Metros was so moved by an 11-year-old girl's letter about trash in a nearby park that together they went to work on planning a community cleanup project. And so was born Angie's Environmental Cleanup Day, named for the letter's author. The first Angie's Day was a great success, with incredible community supportû200 volunteers collected 13 tons of garbage. City workers and volunteers from school, church and community groups cleared litter and refuse from the city parks, vacant lots and the downtown square. Residents also tidied up their neighborhoods. Waste Management of Northwest Indiana donated four large dumpsters, and the Crown Point Community School Corp. offered vans to transport volunteers. In conjunction with the community-wide cleanup, the city, the Crown Point Garden Club and Northern Indiana Public Service Company planted trees and perennial flower beds throughout the city. The city's ongoing recycling program includes curbside recycling of newspapers, boxes, cardboard, food and beverage containers and glass. Crown Point residents diverted 2,000 tons from landfills in 1997. Contact Mayor James Metros, 219-662-3240.

50 percent Achievement Award

Dubois County Solid Waste Management District
53 percent landfill diversion
Jasper

Contact: Kent Messick
812-481-7040

The district received more recyclables than trash in 1997 from its 39,000 residents. The district has developed a cooperative program between Dubois County; five communities; area waste haulers and three area recyclers. The district's comprehensive efforts include collection of 16 individual commodities for recycling; a pay-as-you-throw trash program; a curbside recycling program for six items; a biannual household hazardous waste and bulky item program; and a magazine collection and processing system for Midwest paper mills.

City of Marion
51percent landfill diversion

Contact : Darren Reese
765-668-4428

Marion instituted a comprehensive, voluntary curbside recycling program in 1994. In 1997 the city disposed of 3,654 tons of trash, but diverted 4,710 tons through yard waste, drop-off and curbside initiatives. Marion's Clean City organization helped develop 18 neighborhood associations that promote source reduction and recycling and disseminate information.

City of Rensselaer
52 percent landfill diversion

Contact: Louis Spataro
219-866-7833

Rensselaer has to stimulate local participation in a recycling program. It had to be convenient for residents and cost effective for the community to win people away from paying only $6 per month for pick up. The city launched a pilot pick-up program and promotional campaign in May 1994. Free local media coverage, speaking engagements at schools and civic groups, and articles in the city newsletter educated residents about the pick-up program. Results were so impressive that the city council adopted a full-scale program in October 1994. Four months later, the city instituted both a volume-based rate charge of $.85 per week per trash bag and curbside collection of recyclables every other week at no extra charge. Despite the expenses of the municipal recycling for the city, during the past year, the recycling program has created a profit of nearly $13,000.

City of West Lafayette
52 percent landfill diversion

Contact: David Downey
765-775-5242

The West Lafayette recycling drop-off center, curbside recycling program and yard waste programs have improved continuously since 1989. The city has expanded the type and amount of materials accepted and has invited residents of West Lafayette, Tippecanoe County and Purdue University to participate. Education and outreach efforts include a flyer and brochure on environmentally conscious lawn care that are mailed to each West Lafayette household. The city has justified the flyer mailings by demonstrating the results: the mailing cost $1,500 a year to print and mail, but the impact of residents leaving their grass clippings on their lawns and composting in their backyards has been saving $73,740 in hauling costs and $36,870 in disposal costs.

City of Bloomington
50 percent landfill diversion

Contact : Julio Alonso
812-349-3410

The city of Bloomington, through the Sanitation Division of the Department of Public Works, offers curbside collection of trash, yard waste and recyclables to approximately 13,500 single-family homes. While the city experienced a 42 percent increase in the number of households serviced, trash collected since 1994 increased only nine percent, while recyclables increased by 67 percent. The city has diverted more than 11,220 tons of recyclables and yard waste from the Monroe County landfill since 1991. Recycling is collected free of charge.  



Solid Waste Management Districts

Fountain County Solid Waste Management District
Veedersburg

Contact: Matthew Frazer
765-294-2260

The district has created a model drop-off program for rural communities without major private recyclers. In 18 months this rural district diverted approximately 900 tons from landfills. The district sponsors several reuse opportunities that are exemplary for a rural community, including a paint exchange program, Refrigerator Round-Up and tire recycling day. In addition, all the promotional and educational supplies the district uses are made with recycled content. Fountain County's collection program has grown from three trailers to seven drop-off sites in four years, including a 7,200 square-foot materials recovery facility where all the district's trailers are taken, unloaded and materials are processed. Residents have 24-hour access to all the drop-off sites. The district also encourages business recycling. 



Mountain Movers

Michigan City Refuse Department

Contact : Jim L. Kintzele Sr.
219-873-1530

The Michigan City Refuse Department has cleaned up approximately 18,000 tires in three sweeps. The city, with assistance from the sanitary district and the LaPorte County Solid Waste Board, paid $1,000 per semi load to transfer the tires to Dillion Tire Recycling, where 40 percent of the tires go toward beneficial reuse, such as playground material and landfill leachate layers. The Prisoners and Community Together program provided help loading the tires. In the last two years Michigan City also has recycled 25 tons of paper, salvaged and recycled approximately 60 tons of white goods, 20 tons of wheels, 100 tons of tires and 6,000 tons of yard compost, trees, leaves and concrete.
 

Mary Campbell
Paragon

Contact : KenRohrer
Principal of Paragon Elementary
765-537-2276

Campbell is a housewife and mother of six who organized Paragon Elementary's Environmental Club, which maintains the county's recycling bins at the school parking lot. When political disagreement lead to the removal of the bins, Campbell waged a campaign to get the bins returned to the community, advocating the cause to county commissioners, city council members and newspapers. In March, the West Central Solid Waste Management District returned the bins to the school parking lot. They are the only permanent recycling bins located in Morgan County. 



Hospitals

 

St. Joseph Medical Center
Fort Wayne

Contact: Sister Mary Ruth Krack
219-425-3090

The state rarely issues a facility a second Governor's Award. But today St. Joseph Medical Center is recycling about five times more than when they received their award in 1996. The hospital encourages employees to practice source reduction and buy recycled products. More than 40 "recycling captains" educate and help their colleagues recycle and identify new items to be recycled. Examples of their innovative projects include: annual purchases and recycling of 15,000 plastic items; using reusable cloth instead of disposable drapes and gowns; donating clothes to emergency room patients, etc. Because of its outstanding and all-encompassing source reduction and recycling campaign, St. Joseph reached an 80 percent landfill diversion rate( or 84.76 tons) in 1997.


Individual Achievements in Source Reduction and Recycling


 

Hartley O. Holte
Bloomington

Contact: Hartley O. Holte
812-349-2019.

A Navy veteran, Holte is employed part time by the Monroe County Solid Waste Management District. He sits on several local and state environmental committees. He serves as chair of the Local Solid Waste District Advisory Council, where he created a series of solid waste forums that brought together county, city and Indiana University representatives. He serves as membership chairman on the Indiana Recycling Coalition's board of directors and is a member of the annual conference committee. As a participant in the Indiana Institute on Recycling's Solid Waste Prevention Program, he conducted phone and on-site interviews with about 25 Midwest companies to compile information on innovative waste prevention and management techniques employed by industry and business.
 

Jeffrey Langbehn
Merrillville

Contact: Jeffrey Langbehn
219-769-3820

Langbehn is director of the Lake County Solid Waste Management District. Langbehn realized glass recycling could not be sustained without developing a greater market and state infrastructure. Securing a $500,000 grant from the Department of Commerce, rather than from landfill tipping fees, Langbehn rallied community support to bring Futuristic Tile, LLC, to Lake County to build its second plant. The project is a public/private partnership that will reuse the Northwest region's recycled glass for tiles used for bathrooms and counter tops (and the 1998 Governor's Award plaques). Langbehn also facilitated the opening of the Hoosier Saw Mill, which will divert 600 trees from the city of Hammond waste stream per year. His district has won several Governor's Awards for Excellence in Recycling.


Group Achievements in Source Reduction and Recycling


 

Jefferson County Environmental Roundtable
Madison

Contacts: 
Dave Adams, Rotary Lift 
812-265-9580 
Jenny Keeton, Cinergy
812-265-8210.

A group of 60 individuals who believe that responsible use, reuse and recycling should take place at work and at home, the roundtable has been an important catalyst for recycling and waste reduction efforts in Southern Indiana since 1992. Members include citizens, recyclers, the city of Madison and businesses. 
 

Noblesville Senior Citizens Organization
Noblesville

Contact:  Helen Musselman, President
317-773-0623

The Senior Citizens Organization promotes the needs of older persons in Hamilton County. Volunteer members run a recycling center behind their community center. The senior citizens opened the center because they felt that recycling was a must for Hamilton County. The proceeds from the sale of recyclables provide a revenue source for the community center. In November 1997 alone the seniors collected 2,620 pounds of aluminum cans, 4,190 pounds of glass bottles and 44,920 pounds of newspapers. 


Schools

Most Precious Blood Catholic School
Fort Wayne

Contact:  Corinne L. Tessman
219-424-4832

Recycling has become a way of life for faculty, students and the parish of this Ft. Wayne Catholic school for preschool through eighth grade. The school invites the entire parish and neighborhood residents to bring recycled paper, cardboard, plastic bags and aluminum cans to the recycling bins on the school premises. Examples of the school's comprehensive recycling program include: older students help younger grades carry and empty classroom recycling boxes; students flatten cardboard, aluminum and tin to conserve space in the cafeteria; the custodians have scrap metal barrels in their workshop to sort various metals for recycling and reuse two-liter bottle caps as storage containers for their gadgets; when the school renovated its heating system last year, parents separated out recyclable metals from the old hot water heaters and metal water pipes; art classes include projects made totally of recycled products; and teachers relate recycling to various subjects, including economics and stewardship.
 

Switzerland County Schools
Vevay

Contact:  Bonnie Fancher
812-427-2626

Four schools in Switzerland County work with local businesses and the Southeastern Indiana Solid Waste District to recycle paper, cardboard and aluminum cans. The solid waste management district provides paper and cardboard recycling bins at each school and pays for a truck and driver to pick up materials. The local Nine West Group shoe factory provides free collection boxes as needed. Teachers supervise students as they sort materials and empty their classroom supply into collection bins. The school district diverted approximately 20,000 pounds of cardboard in 1997. Proceeds from the sales of recyclables help pay for classroom supplies and field trips for special education classes. 


Media and Journalism

Melanie McCullough, Decatur Daily Democrat

Contact:  Melanie McCullough
219-724-2121

McCullough has reported consistently on the recycling activities of the Adams County Solid Waste Management District for the Decatur Daily Democrat, circulation 6,100. McCullough has covered practically every district meeting, even those in the early days that went well beyond midnight. When the district's waste transfer building was under construction, McCullough reported diligently and accurately on its progress, while keeping the district accountable for its commitments.


Priority Waste Streams

CIDONE Industries, LLC
Indianapolis

Contact : Cy Smith
317-226-9877

CIDONE manufactures agricultural and commercial irrigation products. The company received a Governor's Award for its OSMILEÖ Membrane Pipe, an irrigation hose made completely from recycled tire rubber and recycled polyethylene plastic. At full production potential, CIDONE plans to use 2,772 tons of recycled rubber and 1,400 tons of recycled plastic annually. 
 

Navistar-Indianapolis Casting Corp.
Indianapolis

Contact: Darryl R. Dasher
317-352-4892

An automotive foundry that produces 120,000 tons of engine head and block castings each year for medium-duty diesel engines has reused nearly 70 percent û or 70,000 tons annually û of excess foundry sand produced during manufacturing. Instead of going to landfills, the sand is used as feed stock for a kiln that produces Portland cement. The foundry worked with the state through the Indiana Cast Metals Association to develop guidance documents for alternative uses for foundry sand.


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