25 Tour Guides Trained To Engage Guests On Negrense Culture, Heritage

DOT continues to strengthen tourism services by equipping guides with knowledge of Negrense culture and historical heritage.

72 Agencies To Join National Single Window By 2028

The initiative aims to simplify processes and reduce administrative burdens for businesses engaged in trade activities.

2 Caraga Schools Get PHP9.2 Million Mushroom, Greenhouse Projects

DA continues to invest in agricultural innovation by equipping state colleges with modern production facilities.

Who Was Running The Foundation When The Money Declined?

As scrutiny grows, foundation leaders face pressure to explain not only the funds, but the decisions behind them.
Home greeninc Rice For Trash Project Gaining Popularity In Quezon Town

Rice For Trash Project Gaining Popularity In Quezon Town

0
79

Residents of this town have been showing more cooperation with the local government’s waste management efforts by participating in a novel project where they can have their trash exchanged for rice.

Municipal Environment and Natural Resources Office (MENRO) chief Ronald Cortez said in an interview on Thursday afternoon that the “Bigas Palit Basura” started last year as the local government unit’s (LGU) initiative to minimize trash in the environment.

The townsfolk are urged to gather discarded materials such as plastic wrappers, shampoo sachets and other packaging materials, cut them into pieces and stuff the shredded trash inside a 1.5-liter plastic bottle.

Cortez added the bottle is then weighed and correspondingly exchanged with rice according to its weight.

“On average, each bottle weighed 3/4 to 1 kilogram which is a big help to our people,” he said.

Cortez emphasized that the initiative has been very successful, noting that the rice allocation intended for the second quarter of this year has been used up since April.

In an interview, Mayor Webster Letargo said his office initially allotted only 90 sacks of rice every quarter for the project but they are planning to increase the allocation.

The local executive lauded his constituents’ enthusiasm, saying even schoolchildren have been participating in the campaign.

Meanwhile, Cortez said the collected bottles stuffed with plastic trash can be used to strengthen the walls of buildings due to their sturdiness when compressed.

“We are also exploring the idea of the stuffed bottles as walls for libraries in the villages and areas conducive to learning,” he said. (PNA)

Society Magazine