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CafCu PRESS

Plastic Free Lunch Day USA press

CBS News, April 24, 2023
Plastic Free Lunch Day movement
​spreading across the country
⬇︎

ABC7 news, November 2, 2022
Students from Red Hook create Plastic Free Lunch Day, schools participate nationwide,


​NYC Plastic Free Lunch Day  May 16, 2022

Plastic Free Lunch Day PS 188 M
Plastic Free Lunch Day at PS/MS 188 The Island School in Manhattan
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Plastic Free Lunch Day at PS/MS 34 Franklin D Roosevelt in Manhattan
Monday, May 16 was the first New York City-wide 
PLASTIC FREE LUNCH DAY in school cafeterias across NYC!

A step to reduce plastic packaging in public school cafeterias and to protect student health
 press release ->
News 12, May 18, 2022
Brooklyn students & staff inspired to host plastic-free lunch day at school
P.S. 15 students in Brooklyn have inspired thousands of other students in the NYC school system to participate in plastic-free lunch day.

​6 Resources For Anyone Looking To Go Zero Waste
​
Ezvid Wiki Editorial on  17 March 2020

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​Last but not least, at #6 is Cafeteria Culture. This environmental education organization, based in New York, was founded in 2009, as part of a project to eliminate styrofoam trays in the city's schools. Since then, it has expanded its scope, working broadly to promote climate-smart communities, free of plastic and waste. To accomplish these goals, it combines science, civic action, media, and the arts to engage and empower young people.

Since then, it has expanded its scope, working broadly to promote climate-smart communities, free of plastic and waste.

A central part of Cafeteria Culture's work involves developing and deploying specific educational programs in schools. Furthermore, it encourages hands-on involvement from students, through initiatives like its Youth Advocates Program, which provides leadership opportunities in climate justice action. Cafeteria Culture has produced its own documentary as well, entitled "Microplastic Madness," which focuses on one class's fight against plastic pollution.

LAKW radio - One Planet: In 'Microplastic Madness,' Kids Take On The Plastic Pollution Crisis

​By ROSE AGUILAR & LEA CEASRINE • FEB 16, 2020
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LISTEN TO THE "YOUR CALL" ->...we speak with one of the founders of the upcoming Bay Area International Children's Film Festival and one of the filmmakers and youth climate activists featured in this year’s program.
The film Microplastic Madness takes us to Red Hook, Brooklyn – a community on the frontlines of the climate crisis – where youth are taking action against plastic pollution. How are youth experiencing and confronting the climate crisis?
Guests include, Maggie Dalencour,  co-narrator of Microplastic Madness
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Citywide Ban On Styrofoam Now In Effect   
By Kadia Goba, January 2, 2019
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Red Hook Star Review - February 1, 2019
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“I’ve learned a lot of things, not just the cycle of Styrofoam and plastics,” Dalencour told the RHSR.  ​“I’ve also learned how to communicate with my peers better; I was kind of quiet, but it gave me a way to open up.”       (read more ->)
Read more about student action to get styrofoam banned on NYC here ->
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WNCY.org, April 23, 2018
​Cafeteria Rangers Are Learning How to Reduce School Waste  Cafeteria Rangers from PS 188 the Island school spoke with  WNYC report Shumita Basu for Earth Day!
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"I like it because we're helping the universe and we're being responsible."
It's not as simple as setting up a five-bin station in any cafeteria. Cafeteria Culture outreach director Rhonda Keyser said when they first arrive at a school, they start by teaching the students Garbology 101, which Keyser described as "the journey of our garbage and the environmental injustice along the way." ​ (more ->)

Ecowatch     
​Ditch Plastic Lunches: Stand Up for Zero-Waste Schools

Marcus Eriksen, Nov. 20, 2017

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​(excerpt)
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E.V. school kids fuming over Styrofoam reversal, The Villager
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Recycling Pilot Program Turns Students into '
​Cafeteria Rangers'

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​Hear what our Cafeteria Rangers have to say!

SORTIN' IT OUT: COMPOSTING COMES TO NYC SCHOOLS

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Inside School Food, a production of
HeritageRadioNetwork.org     
July 13, 2015
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Green Inside and Out Interview with Cafeteiria Culture Director Debby Lee Cohen on WUSB radio from Stony Brook Univeristy, NY.
October 2, 2015

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CafCu students speak out for the bag bill 
at NY City Hall Bag Bill Rally - April 13, 2016

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Thank you to the students and parents from CafCu partner schools who came to the rally: NEST+m 3rd graders (pictured below), MS246 Walt Whitman 8th graders, Tompkins Sqaure Middle School 7th graders, and The Earth School, 5th graders.
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Schools to Begin Switch to
​Compostable Lunch Trays

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 Amy Zimmer , May 2015
Sortin' It Out - the music video
​​​MANHATTAN — City schools will begin to phase out Styrofoam lunch trays this month in favor of eco-friendly compostable ones, the Department of Education is expected to announce Wednesday.
(Excerpt:)
"It's really gigantic that New York City is doing this," said public school mom Debby Lee Cohen, who co-founded Cafeteria Culture, which is piloting a program to improve school participation in the composting program.

Cohen wants to make sure students, teachers, administrators and custodians understand why schools are making the switch. Cafeteria signs about what to sort is insufficient without classroom education on why kids are sorting, she said.

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CafCu's giant no-styro data Puppets and PS 34 M's fabulous ECO-stars, alum of our ARTS+ACTION program, made the press! Watch them all here!

NY City Hall Bag Bill Rally - PS 34 M students
March 23, 2015 - watch the video on YouTube here 

Culture at New York City Hall
ABC- 7 news: CafCu - PS 34 Students, who are plastic bag pollution experts, showed off their plastic bag creature puppets and hand-made no-sew reusable bags to the press at the NY City Hall Rally for the Bag Fee Bill (March 23, 2015)

PS 34 M student, Kate, interviewed by Telemundo 47
Telemundo 47 interviews Kate (PS34 M) about plastic bags - at City Hall with Cafeteria Culture,

"School Lunchroom Movement Wins NY Styrene Fight"
Earth Eats, January 2, 2014,  by Chad Bouchard
Styrofoam Ban Puppets
A child works the arms of Cafeteria Culture's giant puppet made of school styrene foam trays during a demonstration calling for a citywide ban in New York City. (Photo: Isabel Schuman for Cafeteria Culture)
(Excerpt:)
"The decision marks the culmination of a six-year fight that started over styrene use in the city’s public school lunchrooms.
Debby Lee Cohen, a public school mom and the director and co-founder of Cafeteria Culture, mustered for action with other environmentally-minded moms and teachers in the spring of 2009 to stop the waste of millions of polystyrene trays per day. Soon after, they launched a kid-driven pilot project to sort waste in lunchrooms, and 15 other groups in the city took up the cause.
“This landmark decision puts another nail in the coffin of toxic styrenes. It’s a victory for our health and our future!” Lee Cohen said in a release. “Our children’s children’s children will be thankful!”
Cafeteria Culture has pushed for compostable trays to replace polystyrene ones, and spurred collective purchasing to keep costs down."

華人參與策劃 小學生推塑膠袋法案  
Sing Tao Daily, 3/23/15, Rong Xiaoqing, reporter

CafCu PS34 at NY City Hall
參加昨日集會的小學生們。
(Excerpt)
本報記者榮筱箐紐約報道:在昨(23日)市府門前為推進塑膠袋收費法而舉行的集會上,十幾名小學生吸引了到場者的目光。他們有的頭上戴著塑膠袋做的「帽子」,或舉著塑膠袋做的「怪物」玩偶,有的手中拎著漂亮的布袋子,有的走到話筒面對記者宣讀自己寫的「反塑膠袋宣言」。成年人表達意見時或許顯得更加從容和堅定,但這些孩子發出的真摯聲音卻更加感人。
來自曼哈頓34小學的10歲學生Reana向到場媒體展示了一只白色繡花布袋,這是她在手工課課堂上花兩個小時自己縫製的,她想以此展示不用塑膠袋完全不影響購物。「你看,製作這樣一個袋子很簡單,我都能做到,你一定也能做到。」她說。
阿克雅說這是她第一次在市府門前講話,心裡特別緊張,但想到自己的同學朋友們都跟自己站在一起,緊張情緒就慢慢消解了,「他們鼓勵我說,演砸了也沒關係。」她笑說。...
​
「食堂文化」(Cafeteria Culture)組織代表柯含(Debby Lee Cohen)現場為孩子打氣,柯含說該組織在包括34小學的很多學校中為孩子們提供環保維權培訓,參加項目的孩子們不僅學到了表達自己理念的技能,同時也身體力行在學校食堂裡當起制止浪費的「小督察員」。

January 8, 2015
Department of Sanitation Determines Expanded Polystyrene Foam Not Recyclable

NEW YORK – The de Blasio Administration today announced that as of July 1, 2015, food service establishments, stores and manufacturers may not possess, sell, or offer for use single service Expanded Polystyrene (EPS) foam articles or polystyrene loose fill packaging, such as “packing peanuts” in New York City...
(Press Release includes this quote from Cafeteria Culture)
“This landmark decision to ban toxic and polluting styrene foam products is a huge grassroots victory for our children and our communities,” said Debby Lee Cohen, Director/Founder of Cafeteria Culture, founded as Styrofoam Out of Schools. “We applaud Mayor de Blasio for his longtime dedication to eliminating styrene foam, bringing us one step closer to becoming a zero-waste, climate-smart city!”
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 New York City Hall - Rally for foam ban bill  - Nov. 25, 2013- 
Cafeteria Culture's giant No-styro Puppets and our PS 34 M Eco-stars!
styrofoam ban rally at NY City Hall, November 2013
PS34 M students with City Council Member Lew Fiddler, Cafeteria Culture's Debby Lee & giant No-styro puppets
"Why Ban Foam Food Containers? The Recycling Plan Bloomberg Doesn't Want" Gotham Gazette, by Chester Soria, Dec 08, 201
"Reduce, refuse, recycle: Reactions to proposed Styrofoam ban" 
Home Reporter News, MEAGHAN MCGOLDRICK, December 4, 2013
“It would be irresponsible for the City Council to support the manufacture, use and industry-backed recycling scheme of a food container made with the carcinogenic chemical styrene, when there are plenty of affordable safe alternatives,” said Debby Lee Cohen, founder and director of Cafeteria Culture, just one of over 500 neighborhood/student groups that see the citywide restriction of Styrofoam sale as an improvement that puts public health and the environment first."

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WNYC News Foam: Ban it — or Recycle it?
Monday, November 25, 2013 WNYC
, LISTEN here! 
By Sarah Gonzalez : Reporter, WNYC/NJPR
Two foam monsters made out of dirty cups and take-out containers towered 20 feet high on the steps of City Hall as schoolchildren urged council members to pass a bill to ban foam plates and cups, because they are not biodegradable.
Instead, those foam objects sit in landfills for 500 years, says New York City Deputy Mayor Cas Holloway.
But the foam manufacturers and lobbyists who oppose the ban are pushing for program which would instead require foam products in the city to be recycled – not just cups and take-out containers, but the block-like foam that comes when you purchase a television.
Reporter Sarah Gonzalez spoke with Host Amy Eddings about the challenges of recycling foam in New York City, and the cost to businesses and consumers if the foam ban passes.   

 
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New Compostable Plates replace foam trays in the 6 largest US School Districts! 

Urban Schools Aim for Environmental Revolution
The New York Times - by Michael Wines, December 1, 2013

"Nothing seemed special about the plates from which students at a handful of Miami schools devoured their meals for a few weeks last spring — round, rigid and colorless, with four compartments for food and a fifth in the center for a carton of milk.
Looks, however, can be deceiving: They were the vanguard of what could become an environmental revolution in schools across the United States.
With any uneaten food, the plates, made from sugar cane, can be thrown away and turned into a product prized by gardeners and farmers everywhere: compost. If all goes as planned, compostable plates will replace plastic foam lunch trays by September not just for the 345,000 students in the Miami-Dade County school system, but also for more than 2.6 million others nationwide.
That would be some 271 million plates a year, replacing enough foam trays to create a stack of plastic several hundred miles tall."


LA Times - By Teresa Watanabe
"The districts are also aiming for more eco-friendly practices — replacing polystyrene and plasticwith biodegradable trays and flatware, for instance."
Read More:
The New York Times
NBC News
CBS New York
Bloomberg
Big Cities Join Together for Better School Food
NRDC SWITCHBOARD, Posted December 3, 2013, Mark Izeman's blog
Excerpt:
" Thus, NRDC, as part of our overall food advocacy work in New York and around the county, is thrilled to be working closely with the Alliance. Like these school districts, we see huge potential through this unique coalition to build new national markets for sustainable food and other products. We're also pleased to be working with the many groups who have done such great work to date—some real local and national school-food leaders including School Food Focus, Cafeteria Culture, Wellness in the Schools, and New York City Coalition for Healthy School Food.
-----------
Huffington Post Los Angeles - By Barbara Jones
"'Food service leaders also want to make the meals more appealing, so there may come a day when students get their meal on a plate rather than a tray -- just as they do at home,' Binkle said. There's even talk of getting rid of the spork."
-----------
Tampa Bay Business Journal - By PR Newswire
"'We want to give a national voice to a healthier meal program where costs are contained,' says Eric Goldstein, chief executive officer of School Support Services for the New York City Department of Education, who spearheaded this alliance. 
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THANK YOU, Mayor Bill DeBlasio, NY State Senator Liz Krueger and NY State Assemblymember Brian Kavanagh 
for being early supporters of a NYC styrofoam ban!

Bill de Blasio and Debby Lee Cohen - Earth Day 2010, Styrofoam Ban press conference
Earth Day 2010, STYROFOAM BAN Press Conference, 2010: NY State Senator Liz Krueger, then Public Advocate Bill de Blasio, Assemblymember Brian Kavanagh, NYC public school students, and Cafeteria Culture's Debby Lee Cohen, speaking passionately about eliminating Styrofoam trays in schools.

More...

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CBS New York
"Giant styrofoam marionettes were used at City Hall on Monday to protest the use of the material in New York City school lunch trays, WCBS 880′s Rich Lamb reported.
Cohen praised the city’s Department of Education for eliminating Styrofoam trays on Tuesdays, when paper boats are used, but insisted that more must be done."


Members of the press with media related inquiries, please contact us at: 
[email protected]
T: (347) 618-1875

​
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Our VISION
We envision a plastic free, equitable zero waste future where landfill and incinerator garbage as we know it no longer exists;
where post consumption waste from food to packaging is drastically reduced
and what remains benefits our schools, communities, and the environment. 


Cafeteria Culture (CafCu) is a Project of The Fund for the City of New York, a 501(c)(3) organization.
As such, your donations to Cafeteria Culture
are eligible for charitable deductions under section 170 of the Internal Revenue Code.
Cafeteria Culture is a vendor of New York City Department of Education via Fund for the City of New York


Copyright © 2023 Cafeteria Culture
  • About
    • About
    • Team
    • Our Story
    • Reports
    • Press
    • Partners
    • Contact
  • MICROPLASTIC MADNESS
    • MICROPLASTIC MADNESS
    • Host a screening
    • The Plastic Pollution Crisis
    • Creative Team and Credits
    • Movie Feedback
  • Plastic Free Lunch
    • Plastic Free Lunch
    • FAQs - Plastic Free Lunch Day
    • PFLD School Food Service
    • Action Plan ideas - PFLD
    • NYC Plastic Free Lunch Days
  • Take Action Toolkits
    • K-12 Toolkit - Plastic Free Lunch Day
    • K-12 Toolkit - Microplastic Madness
    • DIY DATA ACTION litter cleanup >
      • DATA +ACTION litter clean up
      • Student and Teacher Litter Data Collection
    • SORT2SAVE KIT >
      • SORT2SAVE KIT - Cafeteria Rangers
      • Downloads - S2S - Cafeteria Rangers
      • Daily Operations - S2S - Cafeteria Rangers
      • Videos - Cafeteria Rangers
      • S2s Quick Launch Guide
      • Job Descriptions for Cafeteria Rangers
      • SORT2save Cheer! - lyrics + video
      • SORT2SAVE - About, Partners, License Agreement
    • Foam Trays Out of Schools >
      • NYC Foam Ban
      • Trayless Tuesdays
      • No-Styro Puppets
      • FAQs - Getting Styrofoam Out of Schools
    • Alternative Messaging
    • Action at home
    • Action on Policy >
      • Plastic Water Bottle ban NYC
      • NY Bag Bill
  • Donate
  • Youth Advocates Program
  • MORE RESOURCES
    • Resource Library
    • Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) in Taiwan - Lessons Learned
  • Events
  • Latest - Cafeteria Culture blog
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