Thursday, December 23, 2010

Me-rry Evicted!

The nonprofit HANC recycling center in Golden Gate Park got a 90 day eviction notice on December 3rd 2010. On December 9th, Ed Dunn, HANC director, adorned the mask of Mr. Grinch and handed out fliers at the annual x-mas tree lighting ceremony in Golden Gate Park.

Check out the fun little video we made about it.

Me-rry Evicted! from Laccolith Films on Vimeo.

Monday, November 29, 2010

Ed Dunn stands up for HANC recycling

HANC rallys support at Inner Sunset Farmers Market from Laccolith Films on Vimeo.

Recycling and Native Plant Center EVICTED?
For many months as HANC recycling and native plant center have been trying to meet with community leaders about the fate of its operation at 780 Frederick Street, those leaders have been making plans without them. In April 2010, a clandestine design was drawn by city officials to re-purpose the almost acre of land that has been occupied by the recycling and native plant center for 35 years. HANC leadership was not privy to these plans until November 2010 when they also learned an attack had been launched against them by their next door neighbors.

Green versus Green
The historic HANC recycling center, also propagator of thousands of San Francisco native plants, now faces eviction for a similar sounding garden resource center (just without the recycling).

GGP has no recycling plan
It is important to note that Golden Gate Park has no official recycling program thus far. There are some embarrassing looking dumpsters tucked into a few corners; you can find one next to the kid's carousel near Kezar Drive where I often walk. The park, itself, was built over the unique and natural landscape of sand dunes and native lakes, it is a mostly planted area comprised of man-made pools and knolls. Doesn't a native nursery and recycling facility seem like a much needed part of our Golden Gate Park?

CRV is your money
Some neighbors who support HANC's eviction believe the action will curb the problem of people going through their curbside blue bins and deter those types of people from frequenting their neighborhood. Some would rather give their deposit money to the garbage company instead of a poor person. However, the bottle bill has a statewide mandate that gives people the right to reclaim deposits on beverage containers. Curbside recycling is not the same system and cannot be a substitute for bottle buyback unless the bottle bill is revoked.

Call for Open Discussion
Before we let this happen, let's learn more. Let's have some open discussion around the real issues plaguing our community and find ways to solve them together. Let's bring in experts and do studies that help us understand how to best use our public land in a climate crisis and how to combat poverty without simply removing it from view. Let's do what Ed Dunn, director of HANC and son of its founder, does everyday and stand up for people who cannot stand up for themselves.

Support Community Recycling
Come out and be heard on Nov 30 at an Emergency Community Forum. Stand Up: December 2 at City Hall when the HANC recycling center comes up on the agenda. Write a letter and fill out the online postcard in support of community recycling in Golden Gate Park. Read Up: green vs. "green" in SF Bay Guardian. Listen Up: on the news at ABC 7.

Do Something. :)

Wednesday, November 17, 2010

Call for Open Discussion before shutting down 35 year old recycling center

IMPORTANT INFORMATION
FOR RECYCLING AND NATIVE PLANTS!


It has come to the attention of the Haight Ashbury Neighborhood Council (HANC) that the San Francisco Recreation and Park Department will attempt to evict the recycling center and native plant nursery from its 35-year home at Arguello and Frederick Streets near Kezar Stadium. They are apparently working with the Inner Sunset Park Neighbors behind closed doors for this eviction. This is the same group that sponsors the wildly popular Inner Sunset Farmers’ Market. HANC does not feel that it is right for one neighborhood organization not to directly contact another organization about possible grievances and work to resolve those differences or at least discuss them in an open and straightforward manner. This is especially true when the Recycling and Native Plant Garden Center is outside the boundaries of their organization.

Some facts about the Recycling Center:

·      Fiscally sponsors the Garden for the Environment at 7th Ave and Lawton Streets

·      Provides 10 green jobs

·      Operates a native plant nursery that serves all of San Francisco

·      Is a California State certified redemption center for bottles and cans

·      Conducts classes in gardening for native plants

·      Gives monetary grants to neighborhood organizations

For more information go to our website www.hanc-sf.org and look for the recycling center pages.   Please write a letter expressing your support or use the template below.  

When you take action on behalf of the center, let us know by emailing a copy of your letter to garbagefilm@gmail.com.  We are also working on a survey to help start a conversation on this issue.  If you have a suggestion for a good survey question, include that in your email as well!  Thanks for your efforts!! 

click to open and print

click to open and print

Tuesday, September 14, 2010

SF recycling center shut down?


The HANC recycling center is under new threat of eviction. Holding a month to month lease to operate their facility on Golden Gate parkland, the efforts to evict the center gained momentum in the last few months. A recent homicide of a homeless man near Kezar Stadium led some city officials to point the finger at the HANC center located nearby.

This video has excerpts from that meeting which took place on September 9, 2010 at The Urban School on Page Street.


SF Recycling Center shut down? from Laccolith Films on Vimeo.
District 5 Supervisor, Ross Mirkarimi, attended the latest HANC meeting to discuss the future of the center. He stressed that until solid data is made available that measures the impact of the recycling center to the city, they will continue to face opposition on issues like noise, criminality and homelessness. Recycling centers, in general, are not currently part of San Francisco's ecological plan. But why not?

Some facts that are currently available via the Californians Against Waste website are as follows.

• Just over 80% of recycled beverage containers in California are returned directly by consumers for cash or donated to schools, churches and other non-profits.

• Roughly 14% of recycled beverage containers are collected via curbside recycling programs.

Curbside programs, like Sunset Scavenger in San Francisco, also known as Recology, do not return cash for containers and charge residents for their services. They also offer a handy form to report recycling theft from their curbside bins.

The HANC recycling center estimates about 15% of their customer base suffer from extreme poverty and may be collecting from those curbside bins.

In attendance at the meeting last week was Kevin Drew from the San Francisco Department of Environment, Greg Gaar, Founder of the Native Plant nursery at the recycling center and Quintin Mecke, Communications Director in Tom Ammiano's office. HANC board members and general members were also present including a representative from the newly erected Hayes Valley Farm and the center's director, Ed Dunn.

Friday, August 27, 2010

Plastic for Plastiki




Recently, the Plastiki boat, built in San Francisco, landed at its destination in Sydney, Australia stopping at a well known plastic island in the middle of the ocean along the way. Floating on two liter plastic bottles, David de Rothschild and his skilled crew tirelessly designed, built and tested their vessel on the shores of the Bay at Pier 31 before embarking.

13,000 plastic bottles were donated to his group, Adventure Ecology, by the Haight Ashbury Recycling center. Each bottle had to go through rigorous testing to assure its strength before it could eventually end up as a piece of the plastiki boat. This video shows Charlie from the center telling us about the HANC contribution and excerpts of Ed Dunn, Executive Director of HANC and David de Rothschild, Eco-Adventurer, discussing plastic and the environment at Pier 31. See the prototype of the boat in its early phases and get a feel for the excitement and massive effort involved to make this eco dream a reality.

From spectacular efforts like those of Adventure Ecology, along with diligent grass roots efforts like HANC's, there is a wide range of possibilites when it comes to saving the earth. Pluripotent moments like these are the precipice of the future as we all decide where we stand on the environment and what we are capable of doing about it. Congrats to Plastiki and HANC for collaborating on such a unique and successful project!

Monday, July 26, 2010

Native Plants & Endangered butterflies



It's natural to depend on others. Nature itself is the greatest example of teamwork one can find in the world. Take the butterflies for example, without certain and specific plants, some species will soon disappear from earth. It's almost as if some plants were created just to feed the butterflies. Many of the coastal scrub plants native to San Francisco do have this type of lofty mission in life- to sustain the butterflies so that they may fly free.

Part of the effort at the Haight Ashbury Neighborhood Council recycling center is a Native Plant nursery dedicated to re-propagating native plants in any available backyard, public park or unwanted space in the city. Led by Greg Gaar, the nursery is a thriving center for spurring a team oriented landscape. The San Bruno Elfin butterfly, for example, feeds on Stonecrop and emits a dew that ants use to protect them from danger. Hear Greg talk about this and other butterflies in our short video above. Stay tuned to the blog for more videos like these!

Tuesday, July 6, 2010

The Family Cut



Here is a video showing the diverse group of people that recycle at Haight Ashbury Recycling Center in San Francisco! A more polished and shorter version is on display at The Red Vic Theatre on Haight Street. This one is for everyone who took the time to take part-thanks!

Polishing up the HANC video petition for its premiere on the big screen meant cutting some recyclers out of the picture. We loved everyone's contribution so much we thought we should show the original 47-person-long video petition. Made at the recycling center on November 21, 2009 with the customers there that day, the video petition was a collaborative effort by our team, the center and the community members. The video, in its shortened form, plays nightly at the Red Vic Movie House on Haight Street.

Thursday, April 1, 2010

SF Women's Film Festival

I will screen a trailer and take part in a panel of local documentary filmmakers on April 11 at 1pm. The event takes place in the Variety Screening Room in the Hobart Building at the corner of 2nd Street and Market. Tickets are $10. www.sfwff.org

Work-In-Progress Screenings coming up!

See us at El Rio on April 1st, 7pm with a collection of other short films as part of a fundraiser for the narrative short, Casting Shadows by Angela Park. El Rio is located at 3158 Mission Street
San Francisco, CA 94110-4560, (415) 282-3325.

The Family Cut

Polishing up the HANC video petition for its premiere on the big screen meant cutting some recyclers out of the picture. We loved everyone's contribution so much we thought we should show the original 47-person-long video petition. Made at the recycling center on November 21, 2009 with the customers there that day, the video petition was a collaborative effort by our team, the center and the community members. The video, in its shortened form, plays nightly at the Red Vic Movie House on Haight Street.