Eco-Act 019: All about e-waste

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As we continue our coverage around waste, there’s no way we could go on without breaking down electronic waste (e-waste). Of course alternatives to recycling e-waste include reduced consumption, repair, and reuse, however, we felt electronics are more and more a part of our lives and deserve thoughtful consideration for end of life disposal.

E-waste is created when items with a battery or plug (computers, phones, refrigerators, printers, TVs, etc) become obsolete. Often, e-waste has been collected and exported to overseas countries for disassembly and “recycling” of plastic, metal, and glass components. This work is done in formal or informal markets where regulations can be lacking for workers’ safety and health, as well as the earth’s. Such exposure to heavy metals and other chemicals can disrupt cognition and organ function, as well as leach into water and food systems, impacting already impoverished communities.

Some e-waste facts:

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e-waste

learning more & reducing our impact

We encourage you this week to read up and act on the state of e-waste today globally:

  • You can check out The Global E-waste Monitor 2020 which provides up-to-date data on global e-waste, and how international progress fits into the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals.

  • You might also watch “Manufactured Landscapes” as “photographer Edward Burtynsky travels the world observing changes in landscapes due to industrial work and manufacturing” (IMDb).

And locally:

  • WA State Department of Ecology is doing a great job of providing free and accessible e-waste collection and recycling services. Click here for more info on what is accepted by the E-Cycle Washington program.

  • Recyclers must meet performance standard guidelines and most recycling is done in the state, reducing the risk of exporting e-waste to less regulated countries.

  • Only ~2% of e-waste in WA goes to the landfill (“mostly particle board from cabinet TVs”) according to their FAQ section.

  • So far, WA has recycled 419,962,778 lbs of e-waste.

In being good local/global neighbors and living as people of the Way, we hope these resources are helpful for future education and action. Happy e-waste recycling!

Eco-Act 018: plans to give us hope and a future

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Here’s some hopeful news: King County rolled out its 2020 Strategic Climate Action Plan (SCAP) in August. This ambitious and extensive (329 pages) document sets out a broad range of urgent work to be completed, acknowledging the inevitability of some amount of climate change but identifying ways to work for a sustainable future for all of us. To be clear, the plan’s goals and performance measures apply countywide: reaching them requires countywide participation. We are interconnected, all of us.

SCAP Section I concentrates on six specific areas: 1) greenhouse gas emissions—targeting reductions of 50% by 2025 and 80% by 2050; 2) transportation and land use; 3) building and facilities energy—reducing energy use 25% and fossil fuel use 20% by 2030; 4) green building; 5) consumption of goods and materials; and 6) forests and agriculture. This week we’ll look at specific aspects of item 5.

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Waste

& the county’s plan to reduce it

To address countywide consumption of goods and materials, the Strategic Climate Action Plan calls for a circular economy, discussed in our post 016. The specific goal: “Achieve a circular economy, whereby waste is minimized through prevention, reuse, and recycling, and materials stay in use longer through improved product design and shared responsibilities for end-of-use material management” [emphasis added to highlight the points where we can play a role].

SCAP writers identify food waste as a significant contributor to climate change. They estimate King County food waste from all sources at 136,000 tons in 2019 (a 20% reduction from 2015). They also note that when food is wasted, all the energy and water used to produce, package and transport it is also wasted. The net result? Only personal transportation accounts for more greenhouse gas emissions than the total attributable to food waste. Thus, plan writers see food waste as a key target and the SCAP pledges increased education, outreach, and other efforts across the county to reduce it.

Specific SCAP goals include zero edible food waste by 2030, to be achieved through food waste reduction strategies such as:

  • Increased food donation—individual donations and collaborations with local food banks

  • More mindful food shopping and meal planning

  • Increased composting efforts—both at-home and municipal

So how might we react to King County’s Strategic Climate Action Plan? We could choose to be skeptical, observing that the County will fall short of 2020 goals stated in its 2015 plan…. We could note that achieving the goals in this plan will require buy-in from businesses and private individuals—players beyond the County’s direct control….

Or we could choose to be positive, noting that the consequences of failure are more clearly recognized today, that the tools required for success are continually improving, that perhaps we are in a moment when our need to cooperate and collaborate to get something important done is appreciated—and that we all can play a role. Who can know, until we try, if SCAP will work?

“For I know the plans I have for you,” declares the LORD, “plans to prosper you and not to harm you, plans to give you hope and a future.”

— Jeremiah 29:11

Let’s choose to be hopeful and get to work.

Matthew 11 Meditation

Here is a meditation I find helpful based on Matthew 11:30, the Message’s translations of Jesus’ words:

“Walk with me and work with me—watch how I do it. Learn the unforced rhythms of grace. I won’t lay anything heavy or ill-fitting on you. Keep company with me and you’ll learn to live freely and lightly.”

  • Take a deep breath and allow yourself to embrace the gift of this moment and space as you “keep company with Jesus.”

  • Say these words slowly: The Spirit of God has made me, and the breath of the Almighty gives me life. In God we live and move and have our being.” (Job 33:4, Acts 17:28)

  • Ask this question: What would you have me focus on today, Jesus? Imagine Jesus is sitting or walking beside you.

  • Take time to write a letter to Jesus, either physically or mentally: “This is all or some that is on my heart and mind today, Jesus…”

  • Take a deep breath and sit for a moment in silence, imagining Jesus is keeping company with you.

Eco-Act 017: Food Waste to Security

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This week, it’s no surprise that we circle back to food waste in our wider coverage of waste. Food is so much a part of our everyday, tangible existence — which for many of us in quarantine, has looked like equal cycles of delight and dread as we cook homemade sourdough everythings, and/or really nothing at all (ordering take-out does help our local food industry & workers!).

Food is literally the foundation of our bodies, the building blocks of our cells. In terms of our faith, Jesus uses such mundane, everyday items (bread and wine, fish and loaves) to help us re-member and heal the fractures in ourselves, our communities, and the world, and make evident the miraculous abundance of the Kingdom (more on our food ministry here)

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Food waste

to food security

This week, we invite you to learn about food insecurity by chewing on the Truth & Justice reflection written by Alysun Deckert, Studio 3 Elder and registered UW Medical Center dietician. As Alysun highlights the very real statistics behind food security, especially in a pandemic and especially among Black and Brown folks, there are ways we can continue to redirect food away from waste and towards security (while also lowering carbon emissions!) In addition to resources shared on her post, here are some more ideas:

  • Increase food access through the University Food Bank by rescuing excess food and funneling it to folks who could use it. Union goes weekly and sends food directly to LUV & Compass House, along with using produce rescued in our 300+ weekly burrito roll.

    You as an individual or family can also rescue food there; rescuing food has low barriers and it can go far for yourself or if you’re cooking for others (Compass House & LUV included!). Email Adrienne to get in touch with a Food Bank staff member.

  • Check out Civil Eats for great reads, inspiring stories, and news updates on what is happening across the country in the ways of food and politics.

  • See the FAO (UN Food & Agricultural Organization) for the global perspective on food security, with special attention to their food loss indicators, and affirmation on shifting excess food to those who are hungry.

  • Shift your household’s food waste. Before food is wasted, cook some homemade meals for Compass House, LUV, or other neighbors in need. More info here, otherwise email Adrienne if you have any questions! And consider buying Imperfect produce for “ugly” food that has already been reclaimed.

  • As Kitchen Table Conversations talked about this week after listening to the 2nd episode of the Chief Seattle podcast, consider some of the health conditions of folks you are cooking for. Providing balanced meals low in sugar and high in protein, full of veggies, and with attention to common sensitivities (gluten, soy, nuts, dairy) can make a huge difference for folks who are diabetic or who have other food requirements.

As Christ affirms with his incarnation, bodies are good and the tangible, accessible food that nourishes our bodies is also good. Because of this, we cannot ignore the food injustices present in our communities, especially among communities of color as related to environmental injustices, systemic racism, histories of colonization, capitalism, and immigration rights — the powers and principalities that be.

Let us continue tending to the work of justice in our neighborhoods by leveling our food systems. We leave you with such images from Scripture as Mary sings in the Magnificat,

“My soul magnifies the Lord, and my spirit rejoices in God my Savior…[God] has brought down the powerful from their thrones, and lifted up the lowly; [God] has filled the hungry with good things and sent the rich away empty.”

Luke 18:46-47, 52-53

And as Isaiah 40 proclaims:

A voice cries out:

“In the wilderness prepare the way of the Lord,
    make straight in the desert a highway for our God.
4 Every valley shall be lifted up,
    and every mountain and hill be made low
;
the uneven ground shall become level,
    and the rough places a plain.
Then the glory of the Lord shall be revealed,
    and all people shall see it together,
    for the mouth of the Lord has spoken.”

Union Church Seattle offerings this fourth weekend of August

Dear Beloved Friends,

Thanks to all who’ve already filled out our Union Summer Survey. We would still love to hear from you, if you’ve not yet filled it out. Please know that James B and I are reading each one with care and are discovering this communication a powerful way to be more connected to our lovely community as well as finding inspiration on how we can creatively connect, grow and risk together as God’s people of faith, hope and love. Some of your responses already are shaping the focus of this weekend!

Here are four ways to engage in the life of our Union Church Community this fourth weekend of August.

Saturday, August 22:

Union in Prayer Together for Racial Justice. 10 am – 11:30 am | Zoom link: here

Guided by people in our Union Church community, this will be a time to reflect & to pray, in silence or out loud, in the company of one another, as we each seek to confess, to listen, to learn, to change & to act in all that is happening in ourselves, our city, our country, and our world.

Please join us, as you are -- wherever you are, in this time of prayer as we seek God’s healing power. You can participate as you are able – video on or off. You can pray along out loud or in silence. If you are not able to join us right at 10 am or need to leave before 11:30 am, you are welcome to join for the time you can be with us.

Sunday, August 23 (three offerings):

1) Morning Worship 2) Ice Cream Social 3) New Evening Worship

Morning Worship Online
10 am |
Zoom link here or go to unionchurchseattle.org

Fourth Sundays with Union have always been shaped by the desire to strengthen our living as “sent ones”—people whose lives are evidence of a gracious God who calls us to love mercy, do justice and walk humbly with our God (Micah 6:8). This Sunday we will talk with a few folks from the Union family as to what that looks like as an educator in a pandemic and we will also take time to tend to our souls with a different approach to encountering scripture and time in prayer. Of course, much of the strengthening is enhanced by your very presence. We are looking forward to being together with you!

Ice Cream Social Covid Style:

2:00-5:00 pm (free) | Notkin Yard: 4041 NE 105th St, Seattle 98125

Looking for A Not-So-Close Physically Distanced Encounter of in the Third Kind Dimension? See others off the screen, outside, in living color and enjoy some ice cream in Renée and James B’s yard. We are keeping things safe with the following strategies:

  • Masks will be worn except while eating ice cream

  • Groups will be limited to five people (you can circulate to different groups)

  • Everyone will maintain a distance of at least six feet

  • Ice Cream will be served in individual containers with a spoon in lid

  • Only 25 people will be the yard at a time (40-minute rotation if needed)

Drop in anytime between 2:00 pm and 5:00 pm and reconnect with your Union community!

Union Evening Worship, 8:30 pm

Guided by our Union Worship Band, we are excited to provide this contemplative time of worship, every Fourth Sunday evening!

These days it is more important than ever to take time to rest and center in the presence of God, but it can be difficult to know where to start on the contemplative journey. We are here to help. Please join us at 8:30pm this Sunday evening for a meditative time of prayer, music, and scripture. Here is the Zoom link, go to unionchurchseattle.org for link or catch the livestream on the Union Facebook page.


And, now a word of encouragement for your wanderings and ponderings this weekend from writer Frederick Buechner:

Listen to your life. See it for the fathomless mystery that it is. In the boredom and pain of it no less than in the excitement and gladness: touch, taste, smell your way to the holy and hidden heart of it because in the last analysis all moments are key moments, and life itself is grace.

With you,

Renée and James B

T&J Edition 8: Nutritional Health & Justice

“Food, in the end, in our own tradition, is something holy. It’s not about nutrients and calories. It’s about sharing. It’s about honesty. It’s about identity.”  Louise Fresco

As a registered dietitian, I’ve always been concerned about food insecurity. I’ll always champion preparing meals for shelters, the homeless, and the elderly, and I’ll always support SNAP, subsidized lunches, improved nutrition standards for schools, and Meals on Wheels. However, in my role working primarily with hospitalized patients, I haven’t spent much time considering what it actually means to be food insecure. If I had concerns about a patient’s access to food, I’d recommend a referral to social work and outpatient nutrition follow up. 

Since stepping into my role as an elder with Studio 3, I’ve become more familiar with the 4th Sunday and community work that Union does—much of it revolving around the provision of food:  burrito rolling, brunches at SCCA, and meal deliveries to Compass House and LUV. I’ve been forwarding links to articles about and information on Food Insecurity to our Truth & Justice team, and I think it’s created the impression that I’m more knowledgeable than I really am. While the graduate program in Nutrition Sciences at UW now offers a thriving Masters in Public Health option, this was not the case back when I got my Master’s degree!

When Nichelle asked me to write about food insecurity for the Truth & Justice newsletter, it was just the motivation I needed to do some research.

One of the first things I discovered is that there are definitions for Food Security and Food Insecurity:

  • Food Security exists when all people, at all times, have physical and economic access to sufficient, safe, and nutritious food that meets their dietary needs and food preferences for an active and healthy life.”  

  • Food Insecurity is defined as the disruption of food intake or eating patterns because of lack of money and other resources."

This was a good find…but it still didn’t give me a real tangible sense of what it means to be food insecure so I did more digging. Here’s a summary of what I found:

  • Who is most likely to be food insecure? Black, non-Hispanic households (21.2%) and Hispanic households (16.2%) and single-parent households (27.8% headed by women; 15.9% headed by men)

  • How many people are food insecure? 1 in 9 people and 1 in 7 children in the state of Washington

  • What is this based on? The average cost of a meal in Washington is $3.22 or $9.66 for 3 meals/day—11-14% of people in our state are unable to spend $10.00 a day on food.

  • What does SNAP (Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program) provide? $1.32 per person per meal or $119 per household member

  • Who uses SNAP? More than 56% of SNAP users included families with children; 39% included an elderly or disabled family member; and more than 37% come from working households.   

  • What about the schools? 35-40% of students in the Seattle school system qualify for free meals. This is income-based—a family of 2 with an annual household income of no more than $23,606 qualifies; a family of 8 with an income of no greater than $81,622 qualifies.

  • Who is most likely to use the lunch program? Children who are African American (82-84%), Hispanic (60-65%), Native American (60-70%), or Pacific Islander (75-80%).

  • What are the paradoxes of Food Insecurity?

    • People who are food insecure are 32% more likely to be obese. A reflection of the quality of food available when you have less than $10/day to spend.

    • Adults in food insecure households are 15 percentage points more likely to suffer from a chronic illness, and it is likely they will not have healthcare benefits to see a Registered Dietitian.(Medicaid and Medicare offer minimal coverage for nutrition care)

    • It’s estimated that we waste 30-40% of our food supply in this country. Our schools waste about 36.5 pounds of food per student per year. 

    • Food Service Workers and restaurant workers are among the most likely to experience food insecurity. One in 6 restaurant workers lives in poverty—This is double the number of any other profession.

As my husband, Mike, and I left work today, we discussed our dinner plans. After some deliberation, we decided to go with takeout, opting for Bongos, a highly recommended restaurant we had yet to try.  Now usually I’m all for the idea of takeout and trying new places. It’s a relief to not have to worry about making dinner. Tonight, however, I felt a twinge of discomfort. I had spent the day researching food insecurity. I recognized the privilege we had to be able to make this choice.

As we neared the restaurant, I asked Mike how much our meals would cost. With great pleasure, he told me, “$36…By far the least we’ve spent on a take-out meal in a long time!”  Thirty-six dollars. That’’s $18.00 per person for one meal. That’s more than twice the amount some people have to spend on 3 meals for one day…and we were excited to be getting a deal. The discomfort started to swell…I tried to rationalize spending this much (though much less than our usual) on dinner, and then I realized I was stuck.  

By making a conscious effort to order take-out meals several days a week, we have been trying to do our part to support the industry, the food service and restaurant workers who are already at risk for food insecurity; to support the creativity of our local chefs and restaurateurs and to help them sustain the communities they’ve built based on the celebration and sharing of food. Not ordering take out was not the answer. It wasn’t going to help anybody.

While I now have a better understanding of what food insecurity is, I’m not sure I have any answers. Food insecurity is complicated. It’s systemic. It mirrors all of the inequities in our culture, and it clearly does not reflect the vision of creation that our God, whose intention is to ensure our every need is met, had in mind.  But while it’s overwhelming, becoming overwhelmed is not the answer. Actions that seem like they have a small impact on a global scale, can still have a huge impact on the local and individual level. Over the past few months, I’ve learned about many exciting programs in our city, and I feel fortunate to say, through our church, that we are helping to bring healthy food to people in need.  It is through these efforts that we’ll be able to make a difference.

Reflection by Alysun Deckert, Registered Dietitian at the University of Washington Medical Center & Elder at Union Church.

For additional resources for learning, advocating, and taking action around nutritional health, read below.

LEARN

ADVOCATE

  • Contact your representative and show support for the Medical Nutrition Therapy Act of 2020 which would expand Medicare Part B coverage for outpatient medical nutrition therapy services for people with diabetes and renal disease. These diseases place an individual at higher risk for COVID-19 and also disproportionately impact people of color. Attached to this email is an information sheet about the Medical Nutrition Therapy Act of 2020, and a copy of a letter you can modify to send to your representative. More info here.

ACT

  • Join the dedicated volunteers and make lunches for SYM & ICS, roll hundreds of burritos on Saturdays, and deliver meals to Compass House. Contact Adrienne or Renee for safe distance service opportunities.

  • Donate! Make a contribution to your local food bank as their shelves are decimated by the ongoing needs related to the pandemic.  

  • Do you or someone you know need nutritional support? This map is updated weekly to show Emergency Food Resources in Seattle.

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Truth & Justice Studio MISSION STATEMENT :: Truth & Justice creates space to educate and mobilize people by lifting up marginalized voices as catalyst for social change. We are a community within Union Church in Seattle, WA. 

Eco-Act 016: Joining the Circular Economy

In past weeks, we’ve focused attention on recycling as a way we all can help protect and restore our environment. This week, we look at how recycling actually fits into a much larger picture.

Our existing economic model is often referred to as linear, characterized in this CNBC article as “take—make—dispose.” We all know this model can cause environmental damage in all three phases: destructive raw material acquisition methods … manufacturing processes that create air, land and water pollution … and the mountains of waste that we as consumers create when we dispose of our purchases as they wear out, break or no longer meet our needs. Our recycling efforts help moderate this third phase of the linear economy …. But what can we do about the “take” and “make” phases?

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enjoy it

& pass it on (or not!)

We can migrate toward a different kind of economy—a circular economy—that addresses all three phases.

In a circular economy, producers of goods TAKE less: they use recycled/reclaimed/repurposed materials to the greatest extent possible. This behavior can reduce raw materials mined, milled, extracted, harvested, etc. And it can reduce deforestation, ruined landscapes and global resource depletion.

Manufacturers in a circular economy MAKE increased use of recycled materials. They make things that last longer. And—very important— they take back their products when we’re done with them (think of your smartphone). And note that returned products become raw materials in the next “make” cycle.

All of our efforts to properly recycle help in the DISPOSE component of the circular economy. But we can do more if we’re up to it. For example:

  • Instead of buying a product, we can intentionally rent, lease or borrow it—and avoid the disposal problem altogether. For inspiration, check out what’s on the horizon at Philips.

  • We can consciously buy from companies like Patagonia or Girlfriend Collective that use recycled/reclaimed/repurposed materials and repair their products for us when we damage them.

  • We can choose companies like H&M that take their products back when they’ve served their purpose or no longer work—in other words, companies that follow a make/use/return model.

  • We can buy used items, and share, sell, or donate things we no longer need.

How close are we to converting the old linear economy to a more earth-friendly circular economy? Judging from the wealth of articles and videos available online, we can be sure that the concept is wellestablished. And the links above demonstrate that the world is actually moving from theory into practice. In fact, real progress is being made in countries such as Sweden. But here’s where we come in: companies will behave the way we motivate them to through our actions. If we want less “take— make—dispose” and more earth-friendly circularity, we can be intentional, eco-conscious consumers. We have the power to move this migration along!