make a collector of topic say no to plasti
Answers
Answer:
Explanation:
Get educated! Reduce plastics in your school, business, or community.
Reduce plastic in your school or business
Get educated and educate others about single-use plastics
Lend a hand with cleanups of your local beach or watershed
Get involved in efforts to reduce plastic waste in local schools and businesses. Check out Kokua Hawaii Foundation’s Plastic Free Resources for schools, or the Surfrider Foundation Ocean Friendly Restaurants program. Get connected with the Plastic Pollution Coalition’s Plastic Free Schools, a global community of school and university campuses working to reduce their plastic footprint. The Community Environmental Council’s Rethink the Drink program is reducing the use of plastic water bottles by installing water refill stations at schools in California and Cafeteria Culture is reducing styrofoam and waste in New York lunchrooms with their SORT 2 SAVE Toolkit.
Watch the Story of Bottled Water to learn why buying bottled water isn’t always the best choice. Host a screening of the movie Bag It and learn how to encourage your school or community to reduce the use of single-use plastic bags. Teachers can download lesson plans and attend an Ocean Plastic Pollution Teacher Summit at the Monterey Bay Aquarium. Students can check out the Algalita Marine Research Institute and their Plastic Ocean Pollution Solutions Youth Summit focusing on research and solutions. Get connected with Plastic Free July and take the pledge to reduce your plastic waste.
Participate in a watershed cleanup near you and help to remove trash and document plastic debris impacting the world’s beaches and waterways. Join your local chapter of Surfrider Foundation or Waterkeeper Alliance, or form your own group of friends to clean up beaches and watersheds in your area. Register to volunteer for the annual Ocean Conservancy’s International Coastal Clean-Up Day which takes place each September, or participate in World Oceans Day events and celebrations on June 8th. Learn how the Bahamas Plastic Movement, Tangaroa Blue and Sustainable Coastlines are engaging volunteers and young people in the Bahamas, Australia, New Zealand, and Hawaii to collect data and remove plastic marine debris from the coastlines. Join the community identifying, geotagging and collecting the world’s litter by using the Litterati app when you clean your local watershed.