Over 76.6 million children look forward to lunch and recess. It's when they get to chat with friends, refuel with lunch, and get some fresh air and exercise. These children consume homemade lunches and cafeteria food, and when they are done, they produce an astounding amount of lunch related trash. On average, school-aged children eating disposable lunches generate about 67 pounds of waste per year. For an average sized elemenatary school that translates to about 18,000 pounds or 9 tons of lunch waste that ends up in the landfill.
So what ends up in the 9 tons of trash at an average school? Just think about what you send you children in their lunch, or what they eat in the school lunch they buy, and then consider what they don't eat and what goes in the trash...
Paperbags, plastic ziplocks, packaging from chip bags, cookies, cheese sticks, and yogurts, juice boxes, milk cartons, banana peels, apple cores, peach pits, and lots and lots of uneaten food is thrown out. If you saw the amount of food that goes into the trash your stomach would turn. I've seen the food wasted at snack time and at lunch time...and I can hear my parent's voices in my head, "that food could feed many starving people, don't waste food!" I'm also saddened by the amount of trash that could be recycled but is not.
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To transport our lunches, we've never used paper lunch bags (except on field trips when we can't stow the reusable items). Instead we have a variety of lunch "boxes". We have pretty, stylish Vera Bradley lunchbags for my fashionistas http://www.verabradley.com/product/Lets-Do-Lunch/154875/defaultColor/Blue%20Rhapsody/p/154875.uts, LLBean lunch boxes http://www.llbean.com/llb/search?storeId=1&catalogId=1&langId=-1&init=1&freeText=lunch&Go=, and Built BYO lunch bags available at Target, Kohls, etc.
So it really couldn't be easier to bring a waste-free lunch...with sturdy lunch bags from LL Bean, or pretty choices from Vera Bradley, taking your lunch can even be a fashion statement! There are many waste-free, accessories such as reusable stainless steel or aluminum water bottles that can be used to keep hydrated throughout the day http://peaceloveplanet.blogspot.com/2010/08/k-is-for-kleankanteen-or-similar.html, reusable, non-plastic snack and sandwich bags, and cloth napkins. Instead of plastic utensils, encourage your family to take regular silverware and return it. With all the various reusable items, there are so many options for decreasing our waste, and the costs associated with it.
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sources:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Education_in_the_United_States
http://www.epa.gov/epawaste/education/toolkit.htm
http://www.epa.gov/epawaste/education/pdfs/toolkit/tools-m.pdf
http://www.wastefreelunches.org/
http://www.snacktaxi.com/
http://www.wrap-n-mat.com/Overview-of-Linings-i-16.html
The new 50 Simple Things Kids Can do to save the Earth, Earthworks Group, Andrews McMeel Publishing, LLC, Kansas City, 2009
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