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Stop debris upstream

Reduce. Reuse. Recycle.

Cleanup work is the last line of defense. The real fight against marine debris starts at home, weeks before a bottle ever blows out of a garbage can.

What You Can Do About Marine Debris Big organized beach cleanups are great, but the ultimate solution to marine debris is for all of us – individuals and organizations alike – to stop the flow of trash into our ocean to begin with. Here are some basic things everyone can do to protect our ocean and beaches:

Reduce, Reuse, Recycle Reduce the amount of waste you produce by using products that have recyclable or reusable containers. Avoid purchasing products with excessive packaging. And of course, use reusable shopping bags. Find out what your town recycles, and make sure you recycle it. Support recycling markets by buying products made from recycled materials. Find opportunities to replace disposable goods with reusable items.

At work, reduce paper consumption by reading documents on-screen and purchase recycled/reusable office supplies. Bring your lunch in a reusable lunchbox or cooler. Pack sandwiches, snacks, and drinks in reusable containers rather than in plastic bags and disposable bottles.

Dispose of Trash Properly Dispose of trash properly, using the appropriate garbage and recycling receptacles. These containers should have lids and be big enough to contain your trash and recycling so nothing sits outside of the container. Recycle as much of your trash as you can, following your neighborhoods guidelines. Don’t litter – anything you throw on the ground can end up in our waterways. Pick-up trash from the sidewalks and streets around your home. Proper disposal and pick up of loose trash will reduce the amount of trash that ends up in your neighborhood’s streets and finds its way into local storm drains, sewers, and waterways. Ensure trash and recyclable receptacles outside the home are appropriately maintained and secured. Proper maintenance helps prevent trash from being blown or carried into storm drains, sewers, and waterways.

Reduce Your Water Footprint Everyone can reduce their water footprint by drinking local. Here are some tips on how to reduce your bottled water footprint:

by Wheels for Wishes

01 · Reduce

Buy less single-use.

The bottle that never gets made can't end up on a beach. Reusable water bottles, bring-your-own-bag, and bar-soap-instead-of-plastic-pump are the cheapest cleanup tools you'll ever buy.

02 · Reuse

Make it last.

Glass jars, takeout containers, sturdy tote bags. The longer something stays in use, the longer before it's even a candidate for the recycling stream.

03 · Recycle

Recycle correctly.

Check the number, rinse the container, keep plastic bags out of curbside recycling. Wishful recycling contaminates batches and sends more to landfill — and then to the coast.