Battery recycling gets charge from Moraga group
MORAGA: County will use environmentalists’ model when phasing in program to keep illegal items out of landfills

By Katherine Tam
August 28, 2006
There will be more drop-off sites around the county for those used household batteries, thanks to 11 environmentally minded Moraga residents.
Following the Moraga group’s example, the Central Contra Costa Solid Waste Authority plans to open 18 sites in seven cities around the county where batteries can be dropped off for recycling this fall, said Lois Courchaine, program manager. The agency set aside $167,000 to launch the program.
Dumping batteries, fluorescent light bulbs and cell phones in the trash became illegal in February, punishable by thousands of dollars in fines because they release corrosive chemicals and toxic metals.
In Moraga, members of the 11-member environmental group Sustainable Moraga waited for collection bins to surface around town. None did.
So the group grabbed five-gallon paint buckets, attached homemade signs that read “Recycle All Household Batteries Here” and asked Longs Drug stores, Safeway, Moraga Hardware and Orchard Supply Hardware for permission to post them by the door. They distributed flyers and posted notices on local marquees to spread the word.
The response was enormous, and buckets soon overflowed. Rather than throw them away, people began placing batteries on the ground next to the buckets when the containers were full.
Batteries ranged from square ones the size of a fist to tiny button batteries, commonly used in hearing aids.
Volunteers thought they’d empty the buckets once or twice a month, said Marie Kahn, a member of Sustainable Moraga. Instead, they found themselves emptying them every day at some sites, or every two to three days at others.
“We have been collecting, on average, 1,000 pounds a month from this little community,” Kahn said. “We’ve discovered that people will recycle if recycling is easy for them.”
By spring, and with no sign of an agency launching a battery drop-off, Kahn and her colleagues contacted the Central Contra Costa Solid Waste Authority. The agency agreed to take over the program.
The waste authority will partner with retailers to have recycling containers placed at their stores in the fall, Courchaine said. The agency is calling various retailers and does not yet have the stores finalized yet.
Battery recycling has increased since the state law went into effect in February. Central Contra Costa Sanitary District has been fielding 4,000 to 5,000 pounds of batteries a month since February, more than double what they handled before, said Harriette Heibel, a district spokeswoman.
The Moraga volunteers will collect batteries until the solid waste authority takes over. Then they’ll move onto their next venture: biodegradable cloth shopping bags. Volunteers want to sell these locally to promote reuse of resources.
“We hope it’ll get more people to reduce and reuse other things because they become more acutely aware of it,” Kahn said.
Reach Katherine Tam at ktam@cctimes.com.