The Chestertown Environmental Committee wants your old bottle caps from just about any bottle and collects them weekly. This means less plastic ends up in dumps or the environment, where it can persist for thousands of years. And it’s something that individuals can do now to clean the environment.
The Environmental Committee, aka the “Green Team,” was started by former Mayor Margo Bailey in 2008. Its 29 members collect bottle caps — and other recyclable items — at a booth in Chestertown’s farmers market on High Street each Saturday. The committee is also lead organizer for Chestertown’s annual Earth Day celebration, scheduled for April 20 this year. For more information on the Green Team and its work, subscribe to their monthly newsletter.
According to Jon Hanley, a long-time member of the group, they collected 1,400 pounds of bottle caps last year. All colors are acceptable. Once the committee has a full load, a volunteer drives them to Wilmington, Del., where Eco Plastic Products turns them into park benches and other items.
About 17,200 caps are needed to make one bench, plus $500 to hand-sort the caps by color and for the energy needed for the job. That price includes a discount for the bottle caps provided.
So far, the project has produced 10 benches now scattered around Chestertown: one at town hall in honor of former town manager Bill Ingersoll, one by Chesapeake Bank on High Street, a couple in a new serenity garden in the High Street cemetery, and at Washington College — even a few at private residences. Two more benches are in production, Hanley said.
Eco Plastic was founded in 2018 by Jim Kelley and Charlie Falletta. They wanted to be involved in community projects, Kelley said. That included recycling and employing special needs workers, such as disabled veterans and autistic individuals. They have eight workers, some of whom are part-time, as well as volunteers. Since their founding, Kelley estimates they’ve produced more than 500 benches, removing some 75,000 pounds of plastic from the waste stream.
If you’d like a bench for your own yard or business, a full-size bench is $525; a “shorty” bench is $350. The company also makes picnic tables and bicycle racks, with lifetime guarantees. You can see their products and place an order directly at the Eco Plastic website. Kent County residents can contact Hanley — jonphanley@gmail.com — for details, for help in placing an order, or if they would like to sponsor a bench. You don’t need to supply your own bottle caps to order one of their products (although there’s a $5 discount per 100 lb. if you do). “We have plenty of bottle caps,” Kelley said.
In addition to the bottle-caps-to-benches program, the Chestertown Environmental Committee collects alkaline batteries (non-rechargeable), compact fluorescent lamps, dental hygiene products, cosmetics, pickleballs, wine corks, plastic bread clips, and curling irons and blow dryers. Many of these items are taken to recycling centers such as Terra Cycle near Columbia, Md. by Wendy Wander, who expanded the number of items the group accepts after taking on the job of managing the booth about three years ago. The compact fluorescent lamps are taken by Maryland Environmental Services, a state agency.
The batteries are sent to LaMotte Chemical in Chestertown, which recycles them without charge.
Chestertown isn’t the only place on the Eastern Shore turning bottle caps into benches. According to the Eco Plastic website, Queen Anne’s County School District collected 500 pounds of bottle caps, which the company turned into a bench in the school colors of green and yellow. Eco Plastic created its first bench in 2019 and has worked with various charities and nonprofits in Delaware and Maryland, creating benches for fundraisers and other worthy causes. There’s even one of their benches in Guam.
With microplastics now permeating the environment — in the oceans, in the blood of Antarctic penguins, even in raindrops — Eco Plastic is doing what it can to make things better. They’re part of a nationwide effort. There are companies in Indiana, Ohio, Arizona, and undoubtedly a number of other places turning bottle caps into benches and other useful products. This type of recycling is a good start.
Peter Heck is a Chestertown-based writer and editor, who spent 10 years at the Kent County News and three more with the Chestertown Spy. He is the author of 10 novels and co-author of four plays, a book reviewer for Asimov’s and Kirkus Reviews, and an incorrigible guitarist.
Title image: Pond at Pickering Creek Audubon Center, Talbot Co. Photo: Jan Plotczyk