Glass Recycling Event

Posted on: December 3rd, 2017 by rjohnson

On a chilly November 11th morning another glass recycling event was held in East Peoria. The East Peoria Green Team, in conjunction with the City of East Peoria and Waste Management provided an opportunity for citizens to recycle used glass containers. We had a very good turnout with about 85 different families dropping off used glass jars & bottles.

East Peoria Green members Linda Tiller, Lori Wolf, and Bob Jorgensen, were assisted by EPCHS Hope Club members, Abigail and Katelyn, as seen in a picture.

There was a constant stream of cars coming into the FOLEPI Building lot to drop off their glass jars and bottles. We dump the glass into the roll off supplied by Waste Management. Club business cards with our website information, www.eastpeoriagreen.com were given to attendee’s. A donation of $1 per car load was asked for to help pay the cost of the event. Future glass recycling events were discussed with many attendees, though a date was not set. We also discussed the Fondulac Townships Solar Project, to be voted on Thurs. Nov. 16th at 6 p.m at the FOLEPI Bldg. Attendee’s said they would be saving their bottles and jars until the next glass recycling day, hopefully sometime at the end of summer.

HOPE Display Case

Posted on: October 8th, 2017 by rjohnson

This is the recently mounted EPCHS Hope Club display case. In the bottom left corner is an awards plaque with the names of the recipients of the EPCHS Green Team Scholarship. You can see that Hannah and Elena were the first two scholarship winners. Also in the display is a poster offering the wise advise to ‘Think Global, Act Local!’ There is also a flier advertising our next East Peoria Green glass recycling event, on Nov. 11th.

Reiman Gardens

Posted on: August 12th, 2017 by rjohnson

East Peoria Green Team member Shelly Farmer and her husband Rick recently visited Reiman Gardens in Ames, Iowa to look at the sculptures made from trash collected from beaches around Bandon, Oregon.

This exhibit of larger-than-life sea creatures graphically illustrates the issue of the pollution in our oceans and waterways. Their daughter Jennifer Faraci is an artist apprentice for WashedAshore.org.

Try to visit Reiman Gardens to see this exhibit which runs till October 31, 2017.












Local Science Teacher Attends People’s Climate March

Posted on: August 10th, 2017 by rjohnson

By Mike Kramer, 
Time Correspondent

On April 28, Martin Hobbs boarded a bus chartered by the Heart of Illinois chapter of the Sierra Club. After an overnight bus ride, he arrived in Washington D.C. in time for a quick lunch before he marched down Pennsylvania. After two-and-a-half hours of marching, he boarded the chartered bus for another overnight ride, arriving back in Peoria on Sunday morning so he could return to his job as a science teacher at East Peoria High School the next day.

It is fair to assume that most working people in the United States would not consider a long march sandwiched between two overnight bus rides to be their idea of a relaxing break from the workplace. But Hobbs considers his participation in the People’s Climate March to be a weekend well spent.

“A lot of people have asked if I would do it again, and I’d do it tomorrow, if there was another one,” said Hobbs. “It was physically taxing because of those long bus rides and because they had record high temperatures in Washington Saturday. It was an exhausting walk because of the heat and humidity, but it was certainly worth it if we were able to make any difference, and educate people who don’t believe in the science of climate change.”

Hobbs was one of an estimated 200,000 people from dozens of environmental groups, Native American nations, faith communities, community organizations, schools, and labor groups who joined the large-scale activist event designed to advocate global action against climate change. A broad spectrum of American society was represented in the ranks of the marchers.  In addition to the Washington D.C. event, satellite marches took place in cities across the country.

“It was a bipartisan group,” said Hobbs. There were Republicans who favored environmental action, there were Democrats, and I’m sure there were independents. The march was ethnically diverse, and it was religiously diverse. I saw Christians of many different denominations, I saw Muslims, I saw Jews, I saw agnostics, and I saw atheists.”

Prominent marchers included former U.S. vice president Al Gore and actor Leonardo DiCaprio. The People’s Climate Movement was in overall charge of organizing the event, the fourth annual day of activism. This year’s march was the first in which Hobbs has participated.

“I felt this march was especially important because we have the most to lose, and the most steps backward to potentially take regarding climate change. I’m concerned, and a lot of the people around the country are concerned, about the potential removal of a lot of the Environmental Protection Agency’s policies, climate agreements, and clean energy plans. Those changes would have a direct impact on our climate.”

A rally followed the march, during which participants sang, chanted, and listened to guest speakers discuss issues like the importance of reducing greenhouse gas emissions and of reducing energy consumption.

“Human activity is largely responsible for the changes in climate that we’re experiencing,” said Hobbs. “That isn’t a political position, and it’s not a religious position. It’s common sense, with scientific data to back it up. One of the posters I saw on the march that really struck home with me said ‘There is No Planet B.’ This is the only planet we have, and we have to do what we can to protect it.”