raking autumn leaves

Ewing Community Gardens Fall Clean Up This Saturday

A Fall Workday Planned for Sept 21st from 9 – 5.  All hands are needed.

This is a heads up that a site clean up for the Community Gardens is planned for this Saturday, the 21st from 9 – 5.  We are extremely fortunate in that we are going to have the volunteer services of a team of Bonner and other TCNJ students.   We also hope that some of the gardeners will participate.
We ask for your help with our agenda for the day.  All contributions of newspaper (no glossy pages) and cardboard would be most appreciated for weed suppression in the paths.  We also desperately need wheelbarrows (and possibly shovels) to move the mulch.  If you have tools that we could use for the day we would be very grateful.  Any contributions of homemade goodies to sustain the workers would also be gratefully accepted.  And finally, if you could donate an hour or two of your time weeding, moving mulch, etc., it would be incredibly helpful.  We have a lot of work facing us and as they say, many hands make light work.
Thanks to all for their anticipated assistance and community spirit.

Ewing Community Gardens Meeting

The September Meeting of the Ewing Community Gardens will be held this Wednesday from 6:30 – 8 p.m. at the Gardens on Whitehead Road Extension.  An election will be held to determine the garden leadership for the next gardening season.  All 2013 plotholders are eligble to vote.  Please come and help determine the future of Ewing’s community of gardeners.

Rain Location: Ewing Senior and Community Center

Dispose of Your Unused Medications Safely on National Take Back Day

If your your medicine cabinet is filled with expired drugs or medications that you no longer use, and you are concerned about detrimental environmental effects from improper disposal, here is the information that you need to properly dispose of them.

The Ewing Police Department will be participating in the DEA’s twice yearly National Prescription Drug Take-Back Day which will take place on Saturday, October 26, 2013, from 10:00 a.m. to 2:00 p.m. This is a great opportunity for those who missed the previous events, or who have subsequently accumulated unwanted, unused prescription drugs, to safely dispose of those medications.  Just go to the Ewing Police Department at 2 Jake Garzio Drive.  Enter the main door and make a left to go down the hallway to the Police Department.  Ewing Police will have an officer between 10 and 2 to take the items.

All medications are accepted, prescription and over-the-counter, as well as liquids.  Hypodermic needles are not accepted.  The disposal is handled completely securely; all accepted medications with any labels that you leave on the containers are placed in a large cardboard box, lined with plastic.  At the end of the day the contents are taken to the prosecutor’s office.  The DEA will pick up and incinerate.

Guidelines for Drug Disposal

If you are unable to participate on the day the FDA’s guidelines for proper drug disposal follow:

  • Follow any specific disposal instructions on the drug label or patient information that accompanies the medication. Do not flush prescription drugs down the toilet unless this information specifically instructs you to do so.
  • If no instructions are given on the drug label and no take-back program is available in your area, take them out of their original containers and mix them with an undesirable substance, such as used coffee grounds or kitty litter — to make the medication less appealing and unrecognizable — then put them in a sealable bag, empty can, or other container to prevent the medication from leaking or breaking out of a garbage bag.

You should also remove any identifying information on the label to protect your identity and privacy.

Despite the safety reasons for flushing drugs, some people are questioning the practice because of concerns about trace levels of drug residues found in surface water, such as rivers and lakes, and in some community drinking water supplies. However, the main way drug residues enter water systems is by people taking medications and then naturally passing them through their bodies.  That said, the FDA does not want to add drug residues into water systems unnecessarily. The agency reviewed its drug labels to identify products with disposal directions recommending flushing or disposal down the sink. This continuously revised listing can be found at FDA’s Web page on Disposal of Unused Medicines.

National Take Back Day Information

Date: October 26, 2013
Time: 10 a.m. – 2 p.m.
Location: Ewing Police Department, 2 Jake Garzio Drive

It All Adds Up to Cleaner Air

The Ewing Green Team Launches It All Adds Up to Cleaner Air” Campaign Challenging Ewing Residents to Reduce Vehicle Idling

Vehicle exhaust is the leading source of hazardous air pollution in New Jersey, adding to rising rates of childhood asthma

Parents who idle their cars while dropping off and picking up their children at school probably aren’t aware that they may be putting their children at serious health risk.  With their “It All Adds Up to Cleaner Air” campaign, part of a nationwide effort to educate the public about the dangers of vehicle exhaust, the Ewing Green Team is asking parents to help keep Ewing kids healthy by turning off their car engines.

Did You Know?

Vehicle emissions are a major cause of air pollution, which contributes to increased rates of asthma, cancer, as well as other respiratory problems, reproductive effects, birth defects and other serious health effects.   Our kids are exposed to some of the most excessive exhaust fumes in their daily trips to and from school.  A February 2001 study, No Breathing in the Aisles, by the Natural Resources Defense Council (NRDC) and the Coalition for Clean Air found that “children who ride a diesel school bus may be exposed to up to four times more toxic diesel exhaust than someone traveling in a car directly in front of it.  The study found that excess exhaust levels on school buses were 23 to 46 times higher than levels considered to be a significant cancer risk according to the U.S Environmental Protection Agency and federal guidelines.”

Why Not Idle?

Protect yourself and your passengers.  Exposure to your vehicle’s exhaust is much higher inside your vehicle than outside and is especially true when the car is idling. So if you are sitting idling in your car in a line at your Bank’s drive up teller or drive thru or whatever, Turn It Off!

Protect your vehicle.  Another little known fact is that excessive idling can actually damage your engine, so turning your engine off might help you avoid expensive engine repairs.  Idling more than 10 seconds also uses more fuel than restarting the engine.  Manufacturers assure that frequent restarting won’t harm an engine.

Protect the Environment.  By turning off your engines you can reduce pollutants that contribute to climate change and cause smog.  Each gallon of gas produces 19 pounds of carbon dioxide which is the principal greenhouse gas that contributes to climate change and pollution.

Save Money.  Vehicles that idle 10 minutes per day waste more than 29 gallons of fuel each year. Do the math. At $3.50 per gallon, that’s over $101 wasted per year.[1]

It’s the law.  Idling more than 3 minutes is against the law in NJ.[2] Ewing Township has also adopted an anti-idling resolution to protect our citizens.  You can help us keep our town clean, improve local air quality, and save money by conserving fuel and reducing health care costs.

“The health of our kids rests on all of our shoulders,” said Peter Boughton, Chairman of the Ewing Green Team. “It is estimated that in just one month, the average driver picking up and dropping off their child generates three pounds of emissions.  Just by turning off the ignition, we can make a huge difference in the quality of air we breathe.”

The Ewing Green Team asks that Ewing residents join in our efforts to promote a healthier Ewing by adhering to the following guidelines: (1) if you are going to wait more than 10 seconds, turn your vehicle off, (2) educate others about the effects of idling and (3) report diesel vehicles idling more than 3 minutes by calling (877) WARNDEP.    Take the Green Team‘s anti-idling pledge at https://ewinggreenteam.wordpress.com/pledge/

If you are interested in promoting a more sustainable Ewing, join the Ewing Green Team at our meetings on the 4th Wednesday of each month at 7 p.m. at the Ewing Senior and Community Center, 999 Lower Ferry Road, Ewing Twp.   If you would like to learn more about us, please check out our website at https://ewinggreenteam.wordpress.com/.   Contact the Green Team at ewinggreenteam@gmail.com.

[1]http://www.epa.gov/region8/air/rmcdc/IdleFreeSchoolsPresentation.pdf

[2] http://www.state.nj.us/dep/aqm/Sub15v2002-12-26.pdf

Monthly Green Team Meeting Wednesday, August 28th

The monthly meeting of the Ewing Township Sustainable Green Team will be this week on Wednesday night.

All Ewing residents who wish to participate in planning for Ewing’s sustainable future are welcome.

Green Team members, please read the July minutes prior to attending so that they can be approved.

Date: Wednesday, August 28th
Time6:30 – 9 p.m. (Note the early time)
Location: Ewing Senior and Community Center, 999 Lower Ferry Road, Ewing, NJ 08628