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beyondplastics

Beyond Plastics

On a mission to end plastic pollution everywhere. Join us! Learn more and get involved below.

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New York State Nurses Association Supports The Packaging Reduction and Recycling Infrastructure Act (Assembly Bill A1749-A, Senate Bill 1464-A)!

"Research tells us that microplastic and plastic chemical exposure is associated with dementia, heart disease, stroke, infertility, cancers of the breast, endometrium, ovaries, and prostate, early onset puberty and early menopause, autoimmune diseases, and premature death.

According to data published by Endocrine Society, the negative health impacts from plastic is costing Americans $250 billion in healthcare costs each year. New laws, like this one, will protect health and save tax dollars.

The NYS Nurses Association supports the Glick/Harckham bill." - New York State Nurses Association Memorandum of Support: Assembly Bill A1749-A, Senate Bill 1464-A, “The Packaging Reduction and Recycling Infrastructure Act”


19
1 days ago


New York State Nurses Association Supports The Packaging Reduction and Recycling Infrastructure Act (Assembly Bill A1749-A, Senate Bill 1464-A)!

"Research tells us that microplastic and plastic chemical exposure is associated with dementia, heart disease, stroke, infertility, cancers of the breast, endometrium, ovaries, and prostate, early onset puberty and early menopause, autoimmune diseases, and premature death.

According to data published by Endocrine Society, the negative health impacts from plastic is costing Americans $250 billion in healthcare costs each year. New laws, like this one, will protect health and save tax dollars.

The NYS Nurses Association supports the Glick/Harckham bill." - New York State Nurses Association Memorandum of Support: Assembly Bill A1749-A, Senate Bill 1464-A, “The Packaging Reduction and Recycling Infrastructure Act”


19
1 days ago

New York State Nurses Association Supports The Packaging Reduction and Recycling Infrastructure Act (Assembly Bill A1749-A, Senate Bill 1464-A)!

"Research tells us that microplastic and plastic chemical exposure is associated with dementia, heart disease, stroke, infertility, cancers of the breast, endometrium, ovaries, and prostate, early onset puberty and early menopause, autoimmune diseases, and premature death.

According to data published by Endocrine Society, the negative health impacts from plastic is costing Americans $250 billion in healthcare costs each year. New laws, like this one, will protect health and save tax dollars.

The NYS Nurses Association supports the Glick/Harckham bill." - New York State Nurses Association Memorandum of Support: Assembly Bill A1749-A, Senate Bill 1464-A, “The Packaging Reduction and Recycling Infrastructure Act”


19
1 days ago

New York State Nurses Association Supports The Packaging Reduction and Recycling Infrastructure Act (Assembly Bill A1749-A, Senate Bill 1464-A)!

"Research tells us that microplastic and plastic chemical exposure is associated with dementia, heart disease, stroke, infertility, cancers of the breast, endometrium, ovaries, and prostate, early onset puberty and early menopause, autoimmune diseases, and premature death.

According to data published by Endocrine Society, the negative health impacts from plastic is costing Americans $250 billion in healthcare costs each year. New laws, like this one, will protect health and save tax dollars.

The NYS Nurses Association supports the Glick/Harckham bill." - New York State Nurses Association Memorandum of Support: Assembly Bill A1749-A, Senate Bill 1464-A, “The Packaging Reduction and Recycling Infrastructure Act”


19
1 days ago

New York State Nurses Association Supports The Packaging Reduction and Recycling Infrastructure Act (Assembly Bill A1749-A, Senate Bill 1464-A)!

"Research tells us that microplastic and plastic chemical exposure is associated with dementia, heart disease, stroke, infertility, cancers of the breast, endometrium, ovaries, and prostate, early onset puberty and early menopause, autoimmune diseases, and premature death.

According to data published by Endocrine Society, the negative health impacts from plastic is costing Americans $250 billion in healthcare costs each year. New laws, like this one, will protect health and save tax dollars.

The NYS Nurses Association supports the Glick/Harckham bill." - New York State Nurses Association Memorandum of Support: Assembly Bill A1749-A, Senate Bill 1464-A, “The Packaging Reduction and Recycling Infrastructure Act”


19
1 days ago

New York State Nurses Association Supports The Packaging Reduction and Recycling Infrastructure Act (Assembly Bill A1749-A, Senate Bill 1464-A)!

"Research tells us that microplastic and plastic chemical exposure is associated with dementia, heart disease, stroke, infertility, cancers of the breast, endometrium, ovaries, and prostate, early onset puberty and early menopause, autoimmune diseases, and premature death.

According to data published by Endocrine Society, the negative health impacts from plastic is costing Americans $250 billion in healthcare costs each year. New laws, like this one, will protect health and save tax dollars.

The NYS Nurses Association supports the Glick/Harckham bill." - New York State Nurses Association Memorandum of Support: Assembly Bill A1749-A, Senate Bill 1464-A, “The Packaging Reduction and Recycling Infrastructure Act”


19
1 days ago

Honored to perform at @beyondplastics rally last week in Albany with 200+ advocates fighting for the Packaging Reduction & Recycling Infrastructure Act (PRRIA). Petrochemical companies may have deep pockets, but we’ve got people power.

📞 Call (844) 311-4414 to be connected to your Assemblymember and urge them to vote YES on PRRIA (A1749-a). And follow Beyond Plastics to stay up to date and get involved.


23
1
2 days ago

The momentum against plastic pollution is building up! 🌍 We’re excited to announce a new group joining our network. Together, we’re moving closer to a #PlasticFreeFuture


4
2 days ago


We are very close to passing the strongest plastic reduction bill in the US, which means that the lobbyists for the plastics, chemical, and packaging industries are fighting extra hard to prevent the bill from passing.

We need everyone to call their Assemblymember and urge them to put people over plastic.

Call (844) 311-4414 right now to be connected directly to your Assemblymember’s office, and urge them to vote yes on The Packaging Reduction & Recycling Infrastructure Act (A1749-a)!


35
2 days ago

We are very close to passing the strongest plastic reduction bill in the US, which means that the lobbyists for the plastics, chemical, and packaging industries are fighting extra hard to prevent the bill from passing.

We need everyone to call their Assemblymember and urge them to put people over plastic.

Call (844) 311-4414 right now to be connected directly to your Assemblymember’s office, and urge them to vote yes on The Packaging Reduction & Recycling Infrastructure Act (A1749-a)!


35
2 days ago

We are very close to passing the strongest plastic reduction bill in the US, which means that the lobbyists for the plastics, chemical, and packaging industries are fighting extra hard to prevent the bill from passing.

We need everyone to call their Assemblymember and urge them to put people over plastic.

Call (844) 311-4414 right now to be connected directly to your Assemblymember’s office, and urge them to vote yes on The Packaging Reduction & Recycling Infrastructure Act (A1749-a)!


35
2 days ago

We are very close to passing the strongest plastic reduction bill in the US, which means that the lobbyists for the plastics, chemical, and packaging industries are fighting extra hard to prevent the bill from passing.

We need everyone to call their Assemblymember and urge them to put people over plastic.

Call (844) 311-4414 right now to be connected directly to your Assemblymember’s office, and urge them to vote yes on The Packaging Reduction & Recycling Infrastructure Act (A1749-a)!


35
2 days ago

We are very close to passing the strongest plastic reduction bill in the US, which means that the lobbyists for the plastics, chemical, and packaging industries are fighting extra hard to prevent the bill from passing.

We need everyone to call their Assemblymember and urge them to put people over plastic.

Call (844) 311-4414 right now to be connected directly to your Assemblymember’s office, and urge them to vote yes on The Packaging Reduction & Recycling Infrastructure Act (A1749-a)!


35
2 days ago

We are very close to passing the strongest plastic reduction bill in the US, which means that the lobbyists for the plastics, chemical, and packaging industries are fighting extra hard to prevent the bill from passing.

We need everyone to call their Assemblymember and urge them to put people over plastic.

Call (844) 311-4414 right now to be connected directly to your Assemblymember’s office, and urge them to vote yes on The Packaging Reduction & Recycling Infrastructure Act (A1749-a)!


35
2 days ago

We are very close to passing the strongest plastic reduction bill in the US, which means that the lobbyists for the plastics, chemical, and packaging industries are fighting extra hard to prevent the bill from passing.

We need everyone to call their Assemblymember and urge them to put people over plastic.

Call (844) 311-4414 right now to be connected directly to your Assemblymember’s office, and urge them to vote yes on The Packaging Reduction & Recycling Infrastructure Act (A1749-a)!


35
2 days ago


"New York’s solid waste and pollution crisis demands action now. Excess packaging is driving up costs for taxpayers, overwhelming municipalities, and exposing New Yorkers to toxic chemicals. The Packaging Reduction and Recycling Infrastructure Act is a real solution. New Yorkers deserve relief from the burden of paying for toxic packaging they have no control over. PRRIA must pass this year.” - Assemblymember Deborah Glick

Momentum is building! Please keep up the pressure - call (844) 311-4414 right now to be connected directly to your Assemblymember's office, and urge them to vote yes on The Packaging Reduction & Recycling Infrastructure Act (A1749-a)!


20
2 days ago

"New York’s solid waste and pollution crisis demands action now. Excess packaging is driving up costs for taxpayers, overwhelming municipalities, and exposing New Yorkers to toxic chemicals. The Packaging Reduction and Recycling Infrastructure Act is a real solution. New Yorkers deserve relief from the burden of paying for toxic packaging they have no control over. PRRIA must pass this year.” - Assemblymember Deborah Glick

Momentum is building! Please keep up the pressure - call (844) 311-4414 right now to be connected directly to your Assemblymember's office, and urge them to vote yes on The Packaging Reduction & Recycling Infrastructure Act (A1749-a)!


20
2 days ago

"New York’s solid waste and pollution crisis demands action now. Excess packaging is driving up costs for taxpayers, overwhelming municipalities, and exposing New Yorkers to toxic chemicals. The Packaging Reduction and Recycling Infrastructure Act is a real solution. New Yorkers deserve relief from the burden of paying for toxic packaging they have no control over. PRRIA must pass this year.” - Assemblymember Deborah Glick

Momentum is building! Please keep up the pressure - call (844) 311-4414 right now to be connected directly to your Assemblymember's office, and urge them to vote yes on The Packaging Reduction & Recycling Infrastructure Act (A1749-a)!


20
2 days ago

"New York’s solid waste and pollution crisis demands action now. Excess packaging is driving up costs for taxpayers, overwhelming municipalities, and exposing New Yorkers to toxic chemicals. The Packaging Reduction and Recycling Infrastructure Act is a real solution. New Yorkers deserve relief from the burden of paying for toxic packaging they have no control over. PRRIA must pass this year.” - Assemblymember Deborah Glick

Momentum is building! Please keep up the pressure - call (844) 311-4414 right now to be connected directly to your Assemblymember's office, and urge them to vote yes on The Packaging Reduction & Recycling Infrastructure Act (A1749-a)!


20
2 days ago

"New York’s solid waste and pollution crisis demands action now. Excess packaging is driving up costs for taxpayers, overwhelming municipalities, and exposing New Yorkers to toxic chemicals. The Packaging Reduction and Recycling Infrastructure Act is a real solution. New Yorkers deserve relief from the burden of paying for toxic packaging they have no control over. PRRIA must pass this year.” - Assemblymember Deborah Glick

Momentum is building! Please keep up the pressure - call (844) 311-4414 right now to be connected directly to your Assemblymember's office, and urge them to vote yes on The Packaging Reduction & Recycling Infrastructure Act (A1749-a)!


20
2 days ago

Today, at a Beyond Plastics news conference, I revealed the results of an investigation I created and led to expose deceptive recycling claims made by Starbucks, in close collaboration with WM, formally Waste Management.

Why another Starbucks investigation? Because Starbucks and WM made public announcements several months ago stating that plastic cups are now "widely recyclable". However, the American factories actually willing to buy enormous volumes of low-value plastic cups, and then downcycle them into new items, are very rare.

By placing Bluetooth trackers inside Starbucks' own cups and following their journey, it became clear that the market for used plastic cups is extremely small — not a single cup was routed to an actual recycling factory.

Accepting plastic for recycling and actually recycling it are two very different activities. Starbucks and WM know this, yet they continue to promote that low value, highly contaminated plastic cups are "widely recyclable".

The ♻️ claim is not only deceptive, it takes the focus away from implementing real solutions that are needed to the plastic pollution problem — a problem that Starbucks contributes to every, single day with millions of plastic cups discarded.

The real solution is we need less plastic.

https://lnkd.in/g8yBJCFE
https://wapo.st/4dVjDp1
https://lnkd.in/gXz2dQTR


64
5
2 days ago


New York Assemblymember @votejgr aced the Plastectomy game at the NYS Capitol.

Please call (844) 311-4414 right now to be connected directly to your Assemblymember's office, and urge them to vote yes on The Packaging Reduction & Recycling Infrastructure Act (A1749-a)!


10
2
3 days ago

Join us in urging the NY State Assembly to pass the Packaging Reduction and Recycling Infrastructure act (A1749a) to cut toxic, unnecessary, and polluting single-use plastic packaging now!

👉 Dial 844-311-4414 to be connected directly to your Assembly member's office to urge them to vote Yes on A1749a and urge Assembly Speaker @cheastie to bring it to a vote. ☑️🗳️

Time is short as the legislature will adjourn for the year on June 4th so please call today to put #peopleoverplastic in NY ⌛📲


75
2
3 days ago

Thank you to our fantastic speakers at Friday's press conference: Greg Anderson, New York City Department of Sanitation Commissioner; Justin Sanchez, New York City Council Member and Chair of the Sanitation Committee; Harvey Epstein, New York City Council Member; Grace Lee, New York State Assemblymember; Brian Kavanagh, New York State Senator; Chris Alexander, NAACP New York State Conference Executive Director; and Eric Goldstein, Natural Resources Defence Council Senior Attorney and New York City Environment Director.

We stood at South Street Seaport's Pier 17, alongside the East River where barges haul away city trash. Since the closure of the Fresh Kills landfill in Staten Island in 2001, city taxpayers have spent billions of dollars exporting waste outside the city.

Last year, taxpayers spent approximately half a billion dollars trucking New York City waste to landfills in the Finger Lakes; a trash incinerator in an environmental justice community in Newark, New Jersey; and to other states. 30% of this waste is single-use packaging. But by reducing the amount of waste and requiring large companies — rather than taxpayers — to be financially responsible for waste disposal, this one bill will save New York City taxpayers $380 million every year.

Please call (844) 311-4414 right now to be connected directly to your Assemblymember's office, and urge them to vote yes on The Packaging Reduction & Recycling Infrastructure Act (A1749-a)!


56
1
3 days ago

Thank you to our fantastic speakers at Friday's press conference: Greg Anderson, New York City Department of Sanitation Commissioner; Justin Sanchez, New York City Council Member and Chair of the Sanitation Committee; Harvey Epstein, New York City Council Member; Grace Lee, New York State Assemblymember; Brian Kavanagh, New York State Senator; Chris Alexander, NAACP New York State Conference Executive Director; and Eric Goldstein, Natural Resources Defence Council Senior Attorney and New York City Environment Director.

We stood at South Street Seaport's Pier 17, alongside the East River where barges haul away city trash. Since the closure of the Fresh Kills landfill in Staten Island in 2001, city taxpayers have spent billions of dollars exporting waste outside the city.

Last year, taxpayers spent approximately half a billion dollars trucking New York City waste to landfills in the Finger Lakes; a trash incinerator in an environmental justice community in Newark, New Jersey; and to other states. 30% of this waste is single-use packaging. But by reducing the amount of waste and requiring large companies — rather than taxpayers — to be financially responsible for waste disposal, this one bill will save New York City taxpayers $380 million every year.

Please call (844) 311-4414 right now to be connected directly to your Assemblymember's office, and urge them to vote yes on The Packaging Reduction & Recycling Infrastructure Act (A1749-a)!


56
1
3 days ago

Thank you to our fantastic speakers at Friday's press conference: Greg Anderson, New York City Department of Sanitation Commissioner; Justin Sanchez, New York City Council Member and Chair of the Sanitation Committee; Harvey Epstein, New York City Council Member; Grace Lee, New York State Assemblymember; Brian Kavanagh, New York State Senator; Chris Alexander, NAACP New York State Conference Executive Director; and Eric Goldstein, Natural Resources Defence Council Senior Attorney and New York City Environment Director.

We stood at South Street Seaport's Pier 17, alongside the East River where barges haul away city trash. Since the closure of the Fresh Kills landfill in Staten Island in 2001, city taxpayers have spent billions of dollars exporting waste outside the city.

Last year, taxpayers spent approximately half a billion dollars trucking New York City waste to landfills in the Finger Lakes; a trash incinerator in an environmental justice community in Newark, New Jersey; and to other states. 30% of this waste is single-use packaging. But by reducing the amount of waste and requiring large companies — rather than taxpayers — to be financially responsible for waste disposal, this one bill will save New York City taxpayers $380 million every year.

Please call (844) 311-4414 right now to be connected directly to your Assemblymember's office, and urge them to vote yes on The Packaging Reduction & Recycling Infrastructure Act (A1749-a)!


56
1
3 days ago

Thank you to our fantastic speakers at Friday's press conference: Greg Anderson, New York City Department of Sanitation Commissioner; Justin Sanchez, New York City Council Member and Chair of the Sanitation Committee; Harvey Epstein, New York City Council Member; Grace Lee, New York State Assemblymember; Brian Kavanagh, New York State Senator; Chris Alexander, NAACP New York State Conference Executive Director; and Eric Goldstein, Natural Resources Defence Council Senior Attorney and New York City Environment Director.

We stood at South Street Seaport's Pier 17, alongside the East River where barges haul away city trash. Since the closure of the Fresh Kills landfill in Staten Island in 2001, city taxpayers have spent billions of dollars exporting waste outside the city.

Last year, taxpayers spent approximately half a billion dollars trucking New York City waste to landfills in the Finger Lakes; a trash incinerator in an environmental justice community in Newark, New Jersey; and to other states. 30% of this waste is single-use packaging. But by reducing the amount of waste and requiring large companies — rather than taxpayers — to be financially responsible for waste disposal, this one bill will save New York City taxpayers $380 million every year.

Please call (844) 311-4414 right now to be connected directly to your Assemblymember's office, and urge them to vote yes on The Packaging Reduction & Recycling Infrastructure Act (A1749-a)!


56
1
3 days ago

Thank you to our fantastic speakers at Friday's press conference: Greg Anderson, New York City Department of Sanitation Commissioner; Justin Sanchez, New York City Council Member and Chair of the Sanitation Committee; Harvey Epstein, New York City Council Member; Grace Lee, New York State Assemblymember; Brian Kavanagh, New York State Senator; Chris Alexander, NAACP New York State Conference Executive Director; and Eric Goldstein, Natural Resources Defence Council Senior Attorney and New York City Environment Director.

We stood at South Street Seaport's Pier 17, alongside the East River where barges haul away city trash. Since the closure of the Fresh Kills landfill in Staten Island in 2001, city taxpayers have spent billions of dollars exporting waste outside the city.

Last year, taxpayers spent approximately half a billion dollars trucking New York City waste to landfills in the Finger Lakes; a trash incinerator in an environmental justice community in Newark, New Jersey; and to other states. 30% of this waste is single-use packaging. But by reducing the amount of waste and requiring large companies — rather than taxpayers — to be financially responsible for waste disposal, this one bill will save New York City taxpayers $380 million every year.

Please call (844) 311-4414 right now to be connected directly to your Assemblymember's office, and urge them to vote yes on The Packaging Reduction & Recycling Infrastructure Act (A1749-a)!


56
1
3 days ago

Thank you to our fantastic speakers at Friday's press conference: Greg Anderson, New York City Department of Sanitation Commissioner; Justin Sanchez, New York City Council Member and Chair of the Sanitation Committee; Harvey Epstein, New York City Council Member; Grace Lee, New York State Assemblymember; Brian Kavanagh, New York State Senator; Chris Alexander, NAACP New York State Conference Executive Director; and Eric Goldstein, Natural Resources Defence Council Senior Attorney and New York City Environment Director.

We stood at South Street Seaport's Pier 17, alongside the East River where barges haul away city trash. Since the closure of the Fresh Kills landfill in Staten Island in 2001, city taxpayers have spent billions of dollars exporting waste outside the city.

Last year, taxpayers spent approximately half a billion dollars trucking New York City waste to landfills in the Finger Lakes; a trash incinerator in an environmental justice community in Newark, New Jersey; and to other states. 30% of this waste is single-use packaging. But by reducing the amount of waste and requiring large companies — rather than taxpayers — to be financially responsible for waste disposal, this one bill will save New York City taxpayers $380 million every year.

Please call (844) 311-4414 right now to be connected directly to your Assemblymember's office, and urge them to vote yes on The Packaging Reduction & Recycling Infrastructure Act (A1749-a)!


56
1
3 days ago

Thank you to our fantastic speakers at Friday's press conference: Greg Anderson, New York City Department of Sanitation Commissioner; Justin Sanchez, New York City Council Member and Chair of the Sanitation Committee; Harvey Epstein, New York City Council Member; Grace Lee, New York State Assemblymember; Brian Kavanagh, New York State Senator; Chris Alexander, NAACP New York State Conference Executive Director; and Eric Goldstein, Natural Resources Defence Council Senior Attorney and New York City Environment Director.

We stood at South Street Seaport's Pier 17, alongside the East River where barges haul away city trash. Since the closure of the Fresh Kills landfill in Staten Island in 2001, city taxpayers have spent billions of dollars exporting waste outside the city.

Last year, taxpayers spent approximately half a billion dollars trucking New York City waste to landfills in the Finger Lakes; a trash incinerator in an environmental justice community in Newark, New Jersey; and to other states. 30% of this waste is single-use packaging. But by reducing the amount of waste and requiring large companies — rather than taxpayers — to be financially responsible for waste disposal, this one bill will save New York City taxpayers $380 million every year.

Please call (844) 311-4414 right now to be connected directly to your Assemblymember's office, and urge them to vote yes on The Packaging Reduction & Recycling Infrastructure Act (A1749-a)!


56
1
3 days ago

Thank you to our fantastic speakers at Friday's press conference: Greg Anderson, New York City Department of Sanitation Commissioner; Justin Sanchez, New York City Council Member and Chair of the Sanitation Committee; Harvey Epstein, New York City Council Member; Grace Lee, New York State Assemblymember; Brian Kavanagh, New York State Senator; Chris Alexander, NAACP New York State Conference Executive Director; and Eric Goldstein, Natural Resources Defence Council Senior Attorney and New York City Environment Director.

We stood at South Street Seaport's Pier 17, alongside the East River where barges haul away city trash. Since the closure of the Fresh Kills landfill in Staten Island in 2001, city taxpayers have spent billions of dollars exporting waste outside the city.

Last year, taxpayers spent approximately half a billion dollars trucking New York City waste to landfills in the Finger Lakes; a trash incinerator in an environmental justice community in Newark, New Jersey; and to other states. 30% of this waste is single-use packaging. But by reducing the amount of waste and requiring large companies — rather than taxpayers — to be financially responsible for waste disposal, this one bill will save New York City taxpayers $380 million every year.

Please call (844) 311-4414 right now to be connected directly to your Assemblymember's office, and urge them to vote yes on The Packaging Reduction & Recycling Infrastructure Act (A1749-a)!


56
1
3 days ago

Thank you to our fantastic speakers at Friday's press conference: Greg Anderson, New York City Department of Sanitation Commissioner; Justin Sanchez, New York City Council Member and Chair of the Sanitation Committee; Harvey Epstein, New York City Council Member; Grace Lee, New York State Assemblymember; Brian Kavanagh, New York State Senator; Chris Alexander, NAACP New York State Conference Executive Director; and Eric Goldstein, Natural Resources Defence Council Senior Attorney and New York City Environment Director.

We stood at South Street Seaport's Pier 17, alongside the East River where barges haul away city trash. Since the closure of the Fresh Kills landfill in Staten Island in 2001, city taxpayers have spent billions of dollars exporting waste outside the city.

Last year, taxpayers spent approximately half a billion dollars trucking New York City waste to landfills in the Finger Lakes; a trash incinerator in an environmental justice community in Newark, New Jersey; and to other states. 30% of this waste is single-use packaging. But by reducing the amount of waste and requiring large companies — rather than taxpayers — to be financially responsible for waste disposal, this one bill will save New York City taxpayers $380 million every year.

Please call (844) 311-4414 right now to be connected directly to your Assemblymember's office, and urge them to vote yes on The Packaging Reduction & Recycling Infrastructure Act (A1749-a)!


56
1
3 days ago

Thank you to our fantastic speakers at Friday's press conference: Greg Anderson, New York City Department of Sanitation Commissioner; Justin Sanchez, New York City Council Member and Chair of the Sanitation Committee; Harvey Epstein, New York City Council Member; Grace Lee, New York State Assemblymember; Brian Kavanagh, New York State Senator; Chris Alexander, NAACP New York State Conference Executive Director; and Eric Goldstein, Natural Resources Defence Council Senior Attorney and New York City Environment Director.

We stood at South Street Seaport's Pier 17, alongside the East River where barges haul away city trash. Since the closure of the Fresh Kills landfill in Staten Island in 2001, city taxpayers have spent billions of dollars exporting waste outside the city.

Last year, taxpayers spent approximately half a billion dollars trucking New York City waste to landfills in the Finger Lakes; a trash incinerator in an environmental justice community in Newark, New Jersey; and to other states. 30% of this waste is single-use packaging. But by reducing the amount of waste and requiring large companies — rather than taxpayers — to be financially responsible for waste disposal, this one bill will save New York City taxpayers $380 million every year.

Please call (844) 311-4414 right now to be connected directly to your Assemblymember's office, and urge them to vote yes on The Packaging Reduction & Recycling Infrastructure Act (A1749-a)!


56
1
3 days ago

Starbucks claims its single-use plastic cups (made of No. 5 polypropylene plastic) are now "widely recyclable." ♻️🥤 But are they❓

👉Read Beyond Plastics' new report to find out: www.beyondplastics.org/starbucks


31
3
3 days ago

"It’s time for the New York State Legislature to pass the Packaging Reduction and Recycling Infrastructure Act. The party is over, and it's time for single-use plastics to go home." - Justin Sanchez, New York City Council Member and Chair of the Sanitation Committee


74
3
3 days ago

In the words of @assemblymemberkelles, “Passing PRRIA, super important. One hundred percent, we cannot leave this session without it. It is not a replacement for (the CLCPA). We have to do PRRIA, plus.”

Let’s get it over the finish line: please call (844) 311-4414 right now to be connected directly to your Assemblymember’s office, and urge them to vote yes on The Packaging Reduction & Recycling Infrastructure Act (A1749-a).


16
4 days ago

In the words of @assemblymemberkelles, “Passing PRRIA, super important. One hundred percent, we cannot leave this session without it. It is not a replacement for (the CLCPA). We have to do PRRIA, plus.”

Let’s get it over the finish line: please call (844) 311-4414 right now to be connected directly to your Assemblymember’s office, and urge them to vote yes on The Packaging Reduction & Recycling Infrastructure Act (A1749-a).


16
4 days ago

In the words of @assemblymemberkelles, “Passing PRRIA, super important. One hundred percent, we cannot leave this session without it. It is not a replacement for (the CLCPA). We have to do PRRIA, plus.”

Let’s get it over the finish line: please call (844) 311-4414 right now to be connected directly to your Assemblymember’s office, and urge them to vote yes on The Packaging Reduction & Recycling Infrastructure Act (A1749-a).


16
4 days ago

In the words of @assemblymemberkelles, “Passing PRRIA, super important. One hundred percent, we cannot leave this session without it. It is not a replacement for (the CLCPA). We have to do PRRIA, plus.”

Let’s get it over the finish line: please call (844) 311-4414 right now to be connected directly to your Assemblymember’s office, and urge them to vote yes on The Packaging Reduction & Recycling Infrastructure Act (A1749-a).


16
4 days ago

In the words of @assemblymemberkelles, “Passing PRRIA, super important. One hundred percent, we cannot leave this session without it. It is not a replacement for (the CLCPA). We have to do PRRIA, plus.”

Let’s get it over the finish line: please call (844) 311-4414 right now to be connected directly to your Assemblymember’s office, and urge them to vote yes on The Packaging Reduction & Recycling Infrastructure Act (A1749-a).


16
4 days ago

In the words of @assemblymemberkelles, “Passing PRRIA, super important. One hundred percent, we cannot leave this session without it. It is not a replacement for (the CLCPA). We have to do PRRIA, plus.”

Let’s get it over the finish line: please call (844) 311-4414 right now to be connected directly to your Assemblymember’s office, and urge them to vote yes on The Packaging Reduction & Recycling Infrastructure Act (A1749-a).


16
4 days ago

In the words of @assemblymemberkelles, “Passing PRRIA, super important. One hundred percent, we cannot leave this session without it. It is not a replacement for (the CLCPA). We have to do PRRIA, plus.”

Let’s get it over the finish line: please call (844) 311-4414 right now to be connected directly to your Assemblymember’s office, and urge them to vote yes on The Packaging Reduction & Recycling Infrastructure Act (A1749-a).


16
4 days ago

In the words of @assemblymemberkelles, “Passing PRRIA, super important. One hundred percent, we cannot leave this session without it. It is not a replacement for (the CLCPA). We have to do PRRIA, plus.”

Let’s get it over the finish line: please call (844) 311-4414 right now to be connected directly to your Assemblymember’s office, and urge them to vote yes on The Packaging Reduction & Recycling Infrastructure Act (A1749-a).


16
4 days ago

In the words of @assemblymemberkelles, “Passing PRRIA, super important. One hundred percent, we cannot leave this session without it. It is not a replacement for (the CLCPA). We have to do PRRIA, plus.”

Let’s get it over the finish line: please call (844) 311-4414 right now to be connected directly to your Assemblymember’s office, and urge them to vote yes on The Packaging Reduction & Recycling Infrastructure Act (A1749-a).


16
4 days ago

In the words of @assemblymemberkelles, “Passing PRRIA, super important. One hundred percent, we cannot leave this session without it. It is not a replacement for (the CLCPA). We have to do PRRIA, plus.”

Let’s get it over the finish line: please call (844) 311-4414 right now to be connected directly to your Assemblymember’s office, and urge them to vote yes on The Packaging Reduction & Recycling Infrastructure Act (A1749-a).


16
4 days ago

In the words of @assemblymemberkelles, “Passing PRRIA, super important. One hundred percent, we cannot leave this session without it. It is not a replacement for (the CLCPA). We have to do PRRIA, plus.”

Let’s get it over the finish line: please call (844) 311-4414 right now to be connected directly to your Assemblymember’s office, and urge them to vote yes on The Packaging Reduction & Recycling Infrastructure Act (A1749-a).


16
4 days ago

In the words of @assemblymemberkelles, “Passing PRRIA, super important. One hundred percent, we cannot leave this session without it. It is not a replacement for (the CLCPA). We have to do PRRIA, plus.”

Let’s get it over the finish line: please call (844) 311-4414 right now to be connected directly to your Assemblymember’s office, and urge them to vote yes on The Packaging Reduction & Recycling Infrastructure Act (A1749-a).


16
4 days ago

In the words of @assemblymemberkelles, “Passing PRRIA, super important. One hundred percent, we cannot leave this session without it. It is not a replacement for (the CLCPA). We have to do PRRIA, plus.”

Let’s get it over the finish line: please call (844) 311-4414 right now to be connected directly to your Assemblymember’s office, and urge them to vote yes on The Packaging Reduction & Recycling Infrastructure Act (A1749-a).


16
4 days ago


Story Save - Najlepsze darmowe narzędzie do zapisywania historii, rolek, zdjęć, wideo, wyróżnionych, IGTV na telefonie.

Story-save.com to intuicyjne narzędzie online, które umożliwia pobieranie i zapisywanie różnych treści, w tym historii, zdjęć, wideo i materiałów IGTV bezpośrednio z Instagrama. Dzięki Story-Save możesz łatwo pobierać różnorodne treści z Instagrama, a także oglądać je w dogodnym czasie, nawet bez dostępu do internetu. To narzędzie jest idealne na chwile, kiedy znajdziesz coś interesującego na Instagramie i chcesz zapisać to na później. Użyj Story-Save, aby nie przegapić okazji, aby zabrać ulubione momenty z Instagrama ze sobą!

Nasze zalety:

Brak potrzeby rejestracji

Unikaj pobierania aplikacji i rejestracji, przechowuj historie w internecie.

Wysoka jakość

Zakończ z kiepską jakością treści, zachowuj tylko wysokiej rozdzielczości historie.

Dostępność na wszystkich

Urządzenia Pobieraj historie z Instagrama za pomocą każdej przeglądarki, iPhone'a, Androida.

Całkowicie darmowe

Absolutnie bez opłat. Pobierz dowolną historię bez żadnych kosztów.

Najczęściej zadawane pytania

Funkcja pobierania historii na Instagramie została zaprojektowana w celu zapewnienia bezpiecznej i wysokiej jakości metody pobierania historii z Instagrama. Jest łatwa w obsłudze i nie wymaga rejestracji ani logowania. Wystarczy skopiować link, wkleić go i cieszyć się treścią.
Pobieranie historii z Instagrama to prosty proces, który obejmuje trzy kroki:
  • 1. Przejdź do narzędzia do pobierania historii z Instagrama.
  • 2. Następnie wpisz nazwę użytkownika profilu Instagram w podanym polu i kliknij przycisk Pobierz.
  • 3. Zobaczysz wszystkie historie dostępne w bieżącym 24-godzinnym okresie. Wybierz te, które chcesz pobrać, i kliknij Pobierz.
Wybrana historia zostanie szybko zapisana w pamięci lokalnej Twojego urządzenia.
Niestety, nie jest możliwe pobieranie historii z prywatnych kont z powodu ograniczeń prywatności.
Nie ma limitu na liczbę historii, które można pobrać. Usługa pobierania historii jest dostępna do nieograniczonego użytku i jest całkowicie darmowa.
Tak, legalne jest pobieranie i zapisywanie historii z Instagrama innych użytkowników, pod warunkiem, że nie będą one wykorzystywane do celów komercyjnych. Jeśli zamierzasz je wykorzystać komercyjnie, musisz uzyskać zgodę właściciela treści i przypisać mu autorstwo za każdym razem, gdy historia jest używana.
Wszystkie pobrane historie są zazwyczaj zapisywane w folderze Pobrane na Twoim komputerze, niezależnie od tego, czy używasz Windowsa, Maca, czy iOS. Na urządzeniach mobilnych historie są zapisywane w pamięci telefonu i powinny natychmiast pojawić się w aplikacji Galeria po pobraniu.