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Kansas Green Teams: Resolve to use less

Kansas Department of Health and Environment

It’s the time of year when we start thinking of how we’ll change ourselves in the upcoming New Year.

We look for ways to make a change in our lives, making efforts for better health or less stress. Some resolutions are small; others are big life-changing challenges. Going green is a great way to start off the New Year, but instead of making a broad generalization, choose a few specific ways to green your life in 2014.

kansas green teams

Below are some suggestions to get you started:

Make it a goal to decrease the amount of disposable shopping bags you take in 2014. It’s a simple step that helps reduce the millions of bags that are filling up our landfills. Remember to always put the bags back in your car after you unload. If you take disposable bags, you can repurpose them for trashcan liners or dog pick up bags.

Switch your monthly bills to electronic billing. Even if you print them out at home, you’ll eliminate the postage and reduce paper waste from envelopes or additional inserts.

Before you throw anything away, ask yourself if you can use it in a new way or if someone else could use it. Use environmentally-friendly cleaners. If you have old cleaning supplies that contain harmful chemicals, which can contaminate the air quality in your home, you can take them to your local Household Hazardous Waste facility. It is now easy to find eco-friendly cleaning supplies or you can make your own.

Recycle anything and everything you can. If you have to take your recycling somewhere, it helps to combine it with a trip you are making for other reasons.

Start composting. It’s simple and you get free fertilizer. If you’re replacing appliances in 2014, you can pay a little more for more efficient devices like the available Energy Star  models — they’ll save you money in the long run.

Buy and eat local food. Support local, organic agriculture in your community and shop at your local farmers markets. Supporting the folks who grow and sell food in your area will help your health and the health of your area’s economy.

Try to avoid buying one time use plastic water bottles; instead opt for a refillable water bottle. Last year, in the United States alone, consumers used over 50 billion plastic water bottles. That is a lot of plastic, a percentage of which ends up in our landfills. Walk more, particularly if your destination is less than 30 minutes on foot. It’s good for your health and the environment.

Check for leaks in your toilet.  A leaking toilet can waste anywhere between 30 and 500 gallons of water every day, so any leak should be repaired. To see if your toilet is leaking, put a few drops of food coloring in the toilet tank. If the dye shows up in the toilet bowl after 15 minutes or so, the toilet has a leak.

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