Mailing Address:

Ecology Action of Texas
PO Box 1927
Austin, TX  78767

Phone: 512-322-0000

 

 

 

 

 

420 Kemp Street
Austin, TX, 78741
United States

512-322-0000

At Ecology Action of Texas, our mission is to educate and empower people to create a healthier environment. 

Ecology Action has been at the forefront of waste diversion and conservation efforts since it's founding in 1969, from creating Austin's first recycling program, to our current work of recycling the landfill itself! In 2015 we closed our downtown recycling center to focus our efforts at Circle Acres, where we are transforming a former landfill into a nature preserve to be enjoyed by all. Through tours, events, volunteer days, summer camps, and field trips, we engage our community in landfill diversion and remediation, towards a vision of a zero waste world.

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Recycling in Pictures

Alden Larrick

Thanks to the photographic talents of one our volunteers, this blog entry is dedicated to our 707 E. 9th Street Community Recycling Drop-off Center. This is what recycling looks like at Ecology Action! 

These photos were taken last week and are pretty indicative of the impressive amount of material that Ecology Action was able to recycle during SXSW. Take our word for it, it was a lot. In fact, our amazing recycling center staff, volunteers and visiting AmeriCorps NCCC team are hard at work as we speak (it's been almost 48 hours since the festival officially ended) still sorting recycling from local music venues. 

Fun fact: last month we recycled over 150 tons of material. We can't wait to get the numbers in for March! 

*photos courtesy of Andrew J Gonzales

Reflections from the AmeriCorps Earth 6 Team

Alden Larrick

Ecology Action has already had the privilege of meeting two AmeriCorps teams in 2015! Earth 6 left last Thursday and Earth 4 arrived on Friday. Due to the unpredictable winter weather, Earth 6 spent the first few weeks of their stay here in Austin at Camp Mabry, finally moving into their campsite at the Circle Acres in their last week. During their stay, they have been able to experience all that EA has to offer from daily operations at the Recycling Center to workdays at Circle Acres.

To get a better feel for what it's like to be an AmeriCorps team member working at EA, we asked a couple of them to write a reflection piece encompassing the whole experience. Funny, informative, and wholly inspiring, here's what they had to say:

Chloe:

This project has been a wonderful experience, much more than I expected. Coming into it I was a bit upset we weren't camping but as soon as we started work all my worries went away. The work was incredibly diverse and fulfilling, and I feel like I've learned so much over the past six weeks. From the weeks spent at the Recycling Center and Circle Acres learning the true importance of landfill diversion; to the week spent at the Balcones Canyonlands Preserve developing an appreciation for endangered species and the work that goes into keeping them alive and well. Ecology action is a creative and inspiring non-profit organization that I've been blessed to work with. I will always remember the service I did in, Austin, Texas, and I look forward to seeing Circle Acres become a tool to teach future generations about the importance of protecting to world around them.

Hunter: 

From putting the roof on a pavilion to pulling a mattress off of a hill to wondering if we could all have a man-bun as glorious as Joaquin's, there is never a dull moment working with Ecology Action. For me, at least, coming from an environment where single-stream recycling (if any recycling) is pretty commonplace, seeing a recycling center involve the community in the sorting process, making them think a little more about what happens to their recycling and just what goes into making reusable items, was fascinating.

In the same vein of community involvement, the idea of turning a landfill into a nature preserve to be used to educate the community about how we view and use land was hugely motivational to the team. Everyone wanted to be a part of seeing Circle Acres take off, and I think everyone realized very quickly just how difficult something like that can be.

We are the third Americorps NCCC team to come and work with Ecology Action, and we will not be the last. It was a privilege to work with Ecology Action and even spend a few days with the Balcones Canyon Preserve team assisting them with habitat restoration. It has been such a positive experience for our team, and though we are leaving Austin, we are all taking with us a greater awareness of how land restoration works, and a different way of looking at waste.

If you are interested in learning more about the Americorps NCCC program, visit their program website here or get in touch with us!

A New Year at Circle Acres!

Alden Larrick

The new year brought a new AmeriCorps team and a beautiful weekend at Circle Acres! With all of the cold, wet weather we've been having over the last several weeks, the sunshine this past weekend made for a really beautiful visit and great first community workday of the year at Ecology Action's 9.7 acre brownfield site.

The most notable recent change to the site is the new pavilion that is starting to take shape. The foundation work was by far the hardest part (we have the super human efforts of our Nov/Dec AmeriCorps team to thank for that!), and now, with much of the structure in place and part of the roof, it's exciting to envision what it will finally look like! 

With lots of other improvements on the way, we are looking forward to officially opening this space to the public in late Spring of this year. Contact us for more information on how you can get involved in this awesome project! 

Introducing the Austin Materials Marketplace

Alden Larrick

In addition to the major progress at Circle Acres this year, a model for remediation that we hope to replicate in other brownfields around Austin, Ecology Action has also played a big part in another exciting, city-wide reuse and recycling initiative known as the Austin Materials Marketplace (AMM).

Made public earlier this year by the City of Austin and the United States Business Council for Sustainable Development (US BCSD), the AMM is an online database of waste materials generated by local businesses (brewers, granite and textile manufacturers, restaurants, auto service companies and contractors are just a few examples of participating industries) and waste materials wanted by other business who are able to use them in their own manufacturing processes (some examples include composters, insect breeders, and granite and textile re-manufacturers). Through the AMM, one company’s waste can become another company’s raw material. This reimagining of materials flows effectively closes the loop on the manufacturing process for participants and not only helps the environment by drastically cutting down on landfill waste disposal and associated CO2 emissions, but also provides many benefits to participating businesses. Some of these benefits include reduced waste disposal costs, networking opportunities, progress toward sustainability goals and a show of support for the implementation of universal recycling in Austin.

The AMM is currently being sponsored by the City of Austin in an effort to reach its zero waste goal of 90% landfill diversion by 2040. Over the course of the last year, Ecology Action has been working in partnership with the US BCSD to get the AMM off of the ground by identifying potential synergies between local businesses that are able to use each others’ waste material. We hope that 2015 will see new opportunities to bring even more businesses together in the name of reuse and recycling as knowledge and participation in the AMM continues to expand throughout the city.

To learn more about the AMM, check out this recent GreenBiz article.

 

The Americorps NCCC Sun 4 Team

Ecology Action

Ecology Action was once again privileged enough to receive a team from the Americorps National Civilian Community Corps (NCCC) program. NCCC teams are made up of 10-12 young people who travel the country working on exciting and important community based projects. This team has been focusing primarily on the completion of the Circle Acres Nature Preserve remediation project as well the as the construction of the first meeting space outlined in the Circle Acres Master Plan. They have made some incredible headway having completed all of the site's roughly 1.5 miles of trails and they have broken ground on the meeting space with the 2,000 square foot building site cleared and 16 massive holes dug for the foundations. 

This has been one of our best NCCC teams yet, bringing a ton of energy and enthusiasm to every day of work. They are camping on-site at Circle Acres during their stay here and have developed a pretty awesome little village in the clearing just in front of the building site. These are some hard core young people who take their individual commitments to community service very seriously. We are incredibly proud to have the opportunity to host and get to know them and will be very sad to see them go at the end of next week. The good news is, we were just notified that we will be receiving two more teams in the new year who will be working with us at Circle Acres from January until April. Look for more news from the this and future teams here and on our facebook page. 

If you are interested in learning more about the Americorps NCCC program, visit their program website here or get in touch with us and we would love to introduce you to the team.  

The Wood Ducks of the Montopolis Wetland

Ecology Action

The Central Texas drought,which has kept the Highland Lakes from refilling for several years now, has also kept the wetlands at Circle Acres dry for much of that time.  Only after periodic heavy rains do large marshy pools collect in the bottomlands here.  Whenever these pools appear, though, so does what may be the most glamorous occupant of Circle Acres -- the distinctive wood duck.

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Volunteer Spotlight

Ecology Action

Meet Mike Rogan. Mike has been the Circle Acres dedicated bird watcher since December of 2012. Since then he has spent countless hours watching the skies above the site, cataloging the winged wildlife that call Circle Acres home. He is a member of Travis Audubon, our wonderful and amazing local bird and habitat conservation organization and an incredibly dedicated volunteer.

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