Archive for 2010

School fundraiser – Litterless Lunch

Thursday, June 17th, 2010

Every Little Bit has an easy fundraiser for local schools.  Just have your school PAC sign up to be part of the litterless lunch promotion.  Students at participating schools that purchase any litterless lunch products between now and July 31st, 2010 will get 10% of their purchase donated back to their school PAC.

As well, if you purchase a “starter kit” between now and the earlybird deadline of  June 28th, (via mail or phone), the kits are 10% lower in price.

Check out our blog for tips on how to go more litterless.

You can order a number of ways:

  1. Complete the Order Form and send it with payment, via mail to – Every Little Bit,  340-255 Newport Drive, Port Moody BC, V3H 5H1.
  2. Contact us by phone at 604-936-7249 to coordinate your order.
  3. Create an online profile at www.everylittlebitgreen.com and shop away!  Just mention your school’s PAC in the comments field of the order. (Starter kits are only available by phone or order form)

***  Early Bird prices on the starter kits are available until June 28th.  Mail orders need to be post marked by June 28th.

In early July, your order will be delivered to the TriCities mailing address you provide on the order form.  You’ll have the use of these litterless lunch products all summer long – beaches, picnics and those long car rides.

Check out the Order Form here, or shop online.

Litterless Lunch

Monday, June 7th, 2010

Did you know that the average school-age child in Canada produces over 66lbs of garbage at lunch each year?  In a school with 380 students, that’s over 25,000 lbs of garbage in a school year.  And that’s just 1 school!

With some planning, the right supplies and a commitment to producing less garbage, it’s easy to implement a “litterless” lunch.

Tips

  • Stop buying single serving containers, snack pouches, water bottles and juice boxes.  Instead buy a large tub of yogurt, juice or bulk granola bars and snacks and put portions into lunch/snack size reusable containers. We know it takes a bit more time (and more than 1 reminder to bring the containers home), but it’s worth it.  Even if the single-serving containers are recyclable, most still end up in the landfill, or it takes significant energy consumption to actually recycle them.  They may be convenient, but they cost significantly more and increase your garbage output.
  • Get everyone involved.  Young kids tend to like helping in the kitchen…encourage lunch “self sufficiency” at a young age, even if it does take longer in the short term to get those lunches packed.   If your kids are slightly older, try implementing 1 day per week where they pack everyone’s lunch.
  • Model the behaviour.  If your kids see you throw a Starbucks cup in the garbage repeatedly, why would they change their behaviour?  Look at your own lunch/coffee practices and see where you can cut the garbage.
  • We know it’s hard to completely eliminate snack packaging, but if necessary, keep the packaging at home, where you can control how it is disposed of and send the food to school in a reusable container.  Yes, some wraps do go straight into the garbage, must there are some innovative recycling companies out there.  Check out www.pacificmobiledepots.com for one example.
  • Many cities have implemented kitchen-waste pickup, immensely helpful for those of us who aren’t composters.  If the school doesn’t have food waste pickup, ensure your kid brings the “leftovers” home for composting or proper disposal.

What do you need?

Lunch Bag

There are a lot of available styles to meet different needs.  Key factors to consider:

  • Size & weight of the bag when packed
  • Washability
  • Ease of opening
  • Insulated or not?
  • Upright orientation or lift-up style lid?
  • Multiple compartments or just 1?
  • Materials & components- ensure it’s not made of polyvinyl chloride (PVC or vinyl), and that it doesn’t contain lead, cadmium or phthalates (you would be surprised how prevalent these harmful materials are in everyday products!)

Reusable Containers & Sandwich wrappers

  • Size – You’ll need a variety of sizes, a larger one for the sandwich or salad or dinner leftovers.  Medium containers are great for snacks and yoghurt.  Small ones are for dip and things like raisins.  Consider the weight of the containers.
  • Materials – Containers can be stainless steel, silicone, glass, cloth replacements for baggies, or plastic (With plastic, its critical to ensure that they are BPA & phthalate free.  Avoid #3, #6 & #7 plastics.  If you must use plastic, ensure it’s got a polypropylene #5 triangle on the bottom, which is certified food safe.  And despite manufacturers’ claims, don’t put hot food in the plastic or put the plastic in a microwave.)
  • Leak-proof & air tight containers are needed for those who carry liquids.
  • If your kids like food hot, use a thermos or glass or silicone container that can be used in a microwave.

Reusable Bottles

It’s not that practical to pack glass unless it’s encased in neoprene or silicone.  There’s a huge variety of affordable water bottles on the market – stainless steel, plastic, and aluminum.  The same cautions with plastic apply, and if you have an aluminum bottle, once you’ve dropped it or banged it, there is the possibility that the epoxy coating may leach chemicals into the water.

Our favourite option is stainless steel.  Most bottles either come with a loop top or “sports lid”.  (Sports lids are easier to drink from, but may leak if placed on their side.)  Think about how much fluid your kid drinks.  Can they refill from the water fountain if they carry a smaller bottle?  And yes, we’ve haven’t met a stainless steel bottle that doesn’t dent or lose some of its external paint.  But like a favourite teddy, those “dings of love” just add character and don’t in anyway diminish performance.

Cutlery

Visit the local Value Village and spend a few bucks on stainless steel forks and spoons.  Yes, your kid will probably lose one or two, but chances are they’ll also discover some of their friends as well, so it all works out.  Cutlery sets in containers are also available, helping to prevent the lunch bag from getting “gunky”.

Napkins

Avoid sending paper napkins if possible; just send some cloth ones from home, and wash them at the end of the week.  Or biodegradable options exist as well.

It is indeed a mindshift to make your lunches away from home “litterless”.  But, not only are you helping reduce waste, you may even find that once you make the commitment, your kids are suddenly eating less packaged foods and more “whole” and homemade foods – a sure added benefit to their overall health.

Going Green – Can the happiest place on earth become the greenest place?

Tuesday, May 18th, 2010

I went to Disneyland last year with my family, and I’m not sure if my shock was due to the fact that I’m from British Columbia and we seem so much more “into” reusing, recycling, and reducing our waste or if there truly was a lack of environmental awareness at the Magic Kingdom.  Don’t get me wrong…I LOVE Disneyland, but even a mainstream gal like me was a little put off by the eco-unfriendliness.

Even my 4 year old asked “Where’s the recycling bin, mom?” when she went to get rid of a juice box we had smuggled in.  It took me 4 hours into Day 1 to find a disposal bin where cans could be separated from other garbage.  And then ½ way through our rest break, a worker (super chipper, of course), emptied both the cans and the garbage into the same larger container…sigh…

Of course this led to me day dreaming of things that the Big Mouse could do to “go green” – some pragmatic, and some pie-in-the-sky:

  • Install more water fountains so people don’t need to buy water in plastic bottles that go straight to the landfill when disposed of.  Set up a stainless steel bottle kiosk right next to the fountain, so customers will not only be hydrated, they’ll buy another Disney souvenir.
  • Create a Wall-E themed attraction where people can see what happens when they don’t make conservation efforts and then plant a tree when they leave the attraction.  They get to plant 2 trees if they happen to be named EVA.
  • How about some Eco-Ears?  They’ve got those mouse ears for everything from princesses to pirates.  Surely the plastic could be changed at the very least to recycled plastic, or corn or hemp based.
  • Offer discounts for those who arrive at the park via foot, bike or public transit.
  • Switch those Autotopia cars from gas-based to solar powered (and just don’t let Big Oil know.)
  • Provide an opportunity to purchase carbon offsets after riding Dumbo the Flying Elephant.
  • Just like in Monsters Inc, when they harnessed the scream power of kids, surely Mickey and the gang could tap into the reservoir of wails from over-tired kids at 3pm who need to go back to their hotel for a nap, but instead are being hauled around by mom & dad telling them to behave.
  • At the 2010 Winter Olympics, BC Hydro had a sustainable dance floor that was lit up by the power of people’s movement.  Surely, just installing one section of that type of flooring on Main Street (probably in front of that delicious ice cream parlour) would generate enough traffic to power a ride.
  • Ensure the Main Street Electric Light parade is fully powered by LED’s.
  • Have the characters ride bikes around the park
  • Emphasize the eco-messaging in “It’s a Small World”…”There is just one moon and one golden sun, and a smile means friendship for everyone, it’s a small, small world after all…”
  • Dinner at Ariel’s Grotto could be complete with a mini-lecture on what happens to fish-life if we don’t stop using plastic bags.

Surely, with some common sense planning, as well as some leading edge innovation, the happiest place on earth can work on becoming a greener place as well.

Klean Kanteen Sport Cap 2.0 Safety Notice

Wednesday, May 12th, 2010

We received an important safety notice from Kleen Kanteen today advising the following:

“For safety reasons and in cooperation with US Consumer Product Safety Commission, Klean Kanteen is recalling the Sport cap 2.0.  Klean Kanteen has received 6 consumer reports relating to the spout tip of sport cap 2.0 breaking or cracking after being dropped, which could pose a potential chocking or ingestion hazard.  There have been no incidents of actual choking or ingestion reported.  Klean Kanteen has developed a higher impact version of the spouse that remedies the potential hazard.”

For questions, please call Klean Kanteen: 1-877-546-9063

Return Procedure

  1. Inspect the spout on your Sport Cap 2.0 to determine if it is the version being recalled (see Identification instructions and photos below). Affected Sport Cap 2.0s can be identified by the polished finish on the top of the spout. Replacement caps feature a dull top surface. The new version can also be identified by a round silver sticker on the backside of the packaging.
  2. If the spout on your cap is the version being recalled discontinue use.
  3. Complete the appropriate Registration form

For more information and further details on how to return your lids for the new versions, visit http://www.kleankanteen.com/safetynotice/

Bellies, bellies, bellies…

Thursday, April 22nd, 2010

We participated in the Bellies to Babies Celebration this past Sunday at the Croatian Cultural Center – a one day event geared for the mom-to-be.  I have to say it’s a wonderful place to be once you get over the shock of seeing so many bellies all in one location (and the fear that one of them may go into labour in your booth.)

Bellies, bellies, bellies.  All shapes and all sizes.  And belonging to all types of moms-in-training.  There were those who you’re not quite sure about until they smile shyly at you and gently rubs their tummy…those that now have so much belly there is no way we could fit two of them in our booth space…  those whose only sign of pregnancy is that perfect little cantaloupe peaking out of their Citizens of Humanity maternity jeans, and those rather like myself – whose ankles were so swollen in those latter months that my then CEO backed away in horror “LOOK at those puppies!”  High, low, tiny, wide…no matter the shape or size, the bellies were just so fabulous.

We had 1 woman in the booth with a toddler in tow, and she got that sudden look on her face – the one where she knew that she had to make a mad dash for the bathroom, but her toddler was not going to be able to keep pace with her in the crowd.  The look of consternation on her face as she contemplated leaving her big boy with a complete stranger who is flogging sandwich wraps.   The call of the bladder won out, and we happily entertained junior as he explained his mommy had to “pee lots.”  The great pee lady returned to much cheers and knowing smiles.  (And she paid for the Wrap n Mat that she had inadvertently clutched in her hand for the great run.) (more…)

Best Baby Shower & Children’s Gifts – Wrap N Mat

Monday, April 19th, 2010

Checking out the many vendors at the “Bellies to Babies” celebration this past Sunday I came across some real gems.  If you are looking for a special gift to give a mom to be or a birthday gift for a little cutie pie here is a list of the “Best of the Best” from the tradeshow:

Under $10

Wrap-N-Mat Reusable Sandwich Wrap $9.95
These are genius!  Availabe from Every Little Bit these are a perfect gift for a Mom or Mom to be who will be taking her little one out to the park and will need something to wrap those yummy peanut butter sandwiches in.  I want one.  Or maybe even two.  They are awesome!

Read the rest of the article at Pretty Up Parties

Join Every Little Bit at the Bellies to Babies Celebration

Thursday, March 25th, 2010

Sunday, April 18th, 2010
11am to 4pm

Croatian Cultural Center – 3250 Commercial Drive, Vancouver BC

Admission is by donation to Basics for Babies.

This is a great event for new, expectant and experienced moms.  Pop by the “mommy” marketplace to see whats hip, happening and healthy for families trying to go “green”.  See a variety of educational speakers, win great prizes and check out alot of neat vendors with kid-friendly products.

Making every little bit count

Monday, March 22nd, 2010

I know I cannot save the world.  Not alone anyway.  I fall short of living the perfect green life.  I still drive instead of taking the bus, I have not yet brought myself to fully commit to the navy shower, and I just cannot afford to go solar even though I desperately want to.  I renovated my house before bamboo floors existed, so I’ve got laminate.  I love new stuff, so I don’t yet shop at thrift stores and I sometimes buy strawberries out of season because my daughter loves them so much.  There are just some green steps I am not ready or able to make.  Hopefully one day I will be stronger, but until then I have learned the importance of making every little bit count.

I participate in all the usual “easy” green behaviours.  I bring my own bag whenever I shop.  I use a stainless steel water bottle and never purchase bottled water.  I recycle and compost in my home.  I use natural cleaners and personal care products.  These are the basics – the first little bits that count.eco-footprint-image_sm

Yet, I often wonder what else can I do to make a bigger difference for the planet?  At first glance, it may not seem like much, but it all adds up. (more…)

Made In China – An ongoing dilemma

Sunday, February 28th, 2010

When my partner and I first started business planning for Every Little Bit, we debated the idea of avoiding products made in China.  It was around the time of the whole lead paint, toxic toys, child-labour stories being covered by major media outlets everywhere.  Were we part of the anti-China frenzy, or were we justified in our potential boycott?  madeInChinaWe knew we wanted environmentally-friendly product offerings for our customers and we wanted them to meet a potential number of criteria:

  •    –  Sustainability of the ingredients or components
  •    – Manufacturing location
  •    – Potential life span of the product
  •    – Disposal method of the products
  •    – Sustainability of manufacturing practices
  •    – Labour practices

Obviously, China as a country doesn’t have a clean record with respect to human rights practices.  Yet, do we ignore  the “responsibly made” products by well run companies with fair management practices and avoid China in its entirety?  Or do we hope that by doing business with the reputable companies that manufacture products in China that eventual business practices will change?

Pragmatically, its virtually impossible to source certain products that aren’t made in China, but pragmatism must also be balanced by ethics.  Increasingly (and pleasantly), we’ve found a number of suppliers with some of the best environmentally-friendly products for our customers that were responsibly made in China.  For example, one of our suppliers – Klean Kanteen manufactures their bottles in China:

From the get go, we shared some of the concerns our customers have expressed about manufacturing in China. However, after much time and research into manufacturing options, we found that by making Klean Kanteens in China we could provide a handcrafted product of exceptional quality at a reasonable price. So, before a single Kanteen was ever crafted, we set about placing prudent checks and balances in place to ensure that our products are produced safely and sustainably, and that the people making Klean Kanteens are treated well and paid fairly.

Representatives of Klean Kanteen visit China several times a year to meet with management and many of the workers at production sites. Upon request, we have allowed major retailers to inspect our factories themselves. In addition, Klean Kanteens are laboratory tested on a regular basis to monitor product content and quality.

Ultimately, we’ve decided that by supporting companies that manufacture responsibly in China, we are not only helping the environment by encouraging the use of the sustainable products being made, but we are also telling the manufacturers of China that we only support those companies that take human rights and safety issues seriously.   We do as much research as possible and take great care to only select companies with products “responsibly made in China” and who adhere to ethical manufacturing and labour practices. 

If we want practices to change in China, then as consumers it will take more than just boycotting products made in China; we need to prove that we support good manufacturing and labour practices wherever they take place.

Chocolate – a not so sweet treat

Friday, February 5th, 2010

How many of us list chocolate in our top 5 favourite things?  Those velvet hearts filled with delicacies on Valentine’s Day, the annual Easter Egg Hunt, chocolate balls at the bottom of my Christmas stocking, the Halloween loot bag filled with treats galore…and those are just the “occasions” for chocolate. Chocolate I’ve also got to include my daily trips to the vending machine for the 3pm craving at coffee break, the mad dashes for a double mocha, smuggling my chocolate treats into the movie theatres and then the chocolate chip cookies that have become staples in my home.

Yep…I’ve gotten a bit chubbier over the years as my passion for chocolate continues unabated.  Imagine my horror when I started trying to incorporate “greener” practices into my everyday life, and learned about the dirty little secrets of my favourite vice.

The Ivory Coast, which produces 40-70% (depending upon the source) of the world’s chocolate supply has a long documented history of child labour.   Save the Children reports that there are approximately 600,000 children working in the cocoa farms in the Ivory Coast, with an estimated 15,000 children who have been kidnapped or sold into slavery. The children are treated brutally and life expectancy among child slave workers is low.  And while some of the farms are family farms, the children and adults are working with toxic industrial chemicals (many of which have been banned for agricultural use in Canada.)  Child and adult workers work under horrific conditions, receive little or no pay, no health benefits and no prospect of education.

In addition to the exploitative labour practices are the environmental implications.  Forty years ago, cocoa bean plants grew naturally in the shade of rainforests, but with the surge in demand for chocolate, farming practices changed to increase the yield.  Rainforests were burned to make way for massive fields for planting, all in the direct sun.  While the yield increased, the trees were much more prone to disease.  To kill the bugs, pesticides and fertilizer use became widespread, ultimately resulting in contaminated ground water and soil erosion.   Some chemicals “such as lindane, a persistent organic pollutant banned in many countries, turned up in EVERY sample of chocolate tested in the late nineties by the UK’s Pesticide Action Network”  (Ecoholic).The cocoa bean.

So what to do?

Purchase Fair Trade Certified labelled chocolates, which are the only ones that are certified to be free from exploited child labour.  To avoid chemicals in your chocolate, ensure you buy organic chocolate.  Some great brands of fair trade and organic chocolate include Camino Cocoa,  Cloud Nine, Endangered Species, and Vital Choice.  For a lengthier list, check out Stop Chocolate Slavery.

In June 2008, the International Labour Rights Forum produced a report assessing 2001’s Cocoa Protocol; some of the findings remain dismal, but there are glimmers of improvement by some of the West African governments and some corporations, primarily in Europe.  For example in 2008, Nestle in the UK guaranteed that its Kit Kat bar (1/4 of Nestle’s total chocolate sales) would be fair trade.  Last March, Cadbury committed to sourcing Fairtrade cocoa for Dairy Milk chocolate bars and drinking chocolate in the UK markets (approximately $335million CDN). Nestlé is investing over $100M to address key economic, social and environmental issues faced by their farming communities.

The report – a REALLY informative read – provides recommendations for companies, West African governments, European & North American governments, multilateral agencies and consumers.  For us consumers, we need to do the following:

  • Reward companies with ethical integrity in supply chains- companies that can tell you how the farmers and workers that produced your chocolate were treated.
  • Continue to demand that world’s largest chocolate manufacturer’s answer to the question as to how you can be assured no exploited or trafficked child labour was used in the making of their products. (Campbell, Athreya)

I still have those 3pm cravings, but if it’s going to be chocolate, I do my best to ensure it is produced in an ethically responsible manner.  Fair trade and organic chocolate is pricier than regular chocolate, but it’s worth it knowing that I’m not supporting child labour.  I also tend to buy less chocolate, so that’s a bonus for the waistline.

Useful Resources:
The Cocoa Protocol: Success or Failure – Brian Campbell, Bama Athreya
Global Exchange
Save the Children
Bitter Chocolate – Carol Off
Ecoholic – Adria Vasil
Green For Life – Gil Deacon

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