Around 50 billion disposable drink cups are used every year in the US, but in the city of Petaluma, we will see if Americans have the discipline to reduce this footprint.

The city numbers around 60,000 people, and will participate in the Reuseable Cup Project. The aim is to furnish 30 local restaurants, from Starbucks to Taco Bell, with identical, durable, plastic drink cups, which customers and diners can use and then either leave on the table, or deposit in a network of dropoff bins around the city.

closes the cupboard where he keeps all his stolen A&W mugs

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20 points

Should make it so you can just throw it in any no-sort recycling bin… Then collect them from the recycling center. No need for a whole new bin system.

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17 points

Those bins are just gonna be filled with trash and there’s still gonna be these cups and other litter in the gutter.

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6 points

Still. I think it’s a step in the right direction. Maybe it would really incentivize people if there was a small deposit

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5 points

Is it? It creates more plastic cups + new bins to replace, what I’d assume is, paper cups in most cases.

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3 points

80/20 rule. If it is successful 80% of the time, it is actually a success. The 20 is how to hone the program, not how to point out how it will only fail.

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2 points

I had to stop and check if this was an Onion article lmao.

Like, has any one of the dozen people that approved this actually met an American?

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12 points

Imagine if those smartasses hear about glass cups

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11 points

Too breakable. Collection like this, they want uh pourable in a different sense.

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4 points

What about that Superfest Glass. That would probably work.

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5 points

But the forever chemicals in those cups give the soda-pop it’s fizzzzzzzzzzz

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11 points

…Petaluma’s residents will not be charged a penny more for their drinks…

YET.

There is no way this program can so much as break even without someone paying the bills.

Even if all the employees are volunteers, trucks that empty the bins and deliver the cups, plus washing equipment for said cups, rent for the space to house the trucks and washing equipment, maintenance, utilities, etc., aren’t free.

Don’t get me wrong. I’d like to see this program succeed and expand. Without knowing more about how they’re funded, though, I’m skeptical.

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zerowaste

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Discussing ways to reduce waste and build community!

Celebrate thrift as a virtue, talk about creative ways to make do, or show off how you reused something!

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