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Holy smoke! Holitrash! | Philstar.com
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Health And Family

Holy smoke! Holitrash!

CONSUMERLINE - Ching M. Alano -

With Christmas just around the proverbial bend, you can feel the frenetic holiday rush and maybe even imagine the traumatic holitrash the morning after the night before.

Holy smoke! What’s holitrash? It sure stinks, but it’s a new word coined by the EcoWaste Coalition, an environment watchdog/advocate for sustainable life changes. Don’t look now, but holitrash refers to the humongous piles of trash that the holiday season usually leaves behind.

And now, the environmental group is calling on the new batch of barangay and youth officials to get their act together and get this holitrash out. How? Now, that’s a tall (mounting?) order. Even as we see our garbage bins overflowing, these young people are brimming with energy. According to EcoWaste, they can instigate a range of creative initiatives to slash the anticipated Christmas holitrash.

To motivate the newly-installed Barangay and Sangguniang Kabataan (SK) officials to think and act “green” this Christmas season, the EcoWaste Coalition has come up with a list called “Barangay Simple” for a less wasteful or more prudent celebration of the country’s grandest and longest fiesta season.

Christmas a la “Barangay Simple” simply means promoting and applying the basic 3Rs — reduce, reuse, recycle — to lessen the impact of the holiday consumption and merriment on the environment.

 Roy Alvarez, president of EcoWaste Coalition, thoughtfully notes, “Adopting a ‘Barangay Simple’ celebration will trim down the volume of earth’s resources that we use and throw away, while inculcating the profound simplicity of the birth of the Redeemer, the reason for the season, in our communities.” 

He adds, “As elected role models, our Barangay and SK officials are urged to espouse and lead the much needed ecological reforms in the community life, starting with the need to simplify Christmas.”

Adding their green thoughts to the list were Rene Pineda of the Citizens Concerned with Advocating Philippine Environmental Sustainability, Manny Calonzo of the Global Alliance for Incinerator Alternatives, Beau Baconguis of Greenpeace, Eileen Sison of the Institute for the Development of Education and Ecological Alternatives, Neneng Jocson of the Krusada sa Kalikasan, Cathy Untalan of the Miss Earth Foundation, and Sonia Mendoza of Mother Earth Foundation. 

So, take these simple tips for a “Barangay Simple” Christmas:

I. REDUCE:

• Refrain from putting up banderitas, especially buntings made from new plastic bags. Please don’t create a dumpsite in the sky!

• Abstain from installing too many Christmas lights in the Barangay Hall and on the adjacent streets.  You need not compete with the lights and glitters of the Araneta and Ayala Commercial Centers.

• Give up “Merry Christmas” tarpaulins — it’s too “plastic” — and help lessen unwanted mess on the streets. 

• Avoid putting Christmas noche buena gifts for needy families in plastic bags. Place them in bayong or reusable bags instead.  Desist from organizing “disposable” Christmas parties. Stick to a zero waste theme, abandoning the use of convenient but throw-away plates, cups, and utensils in favor of washable and reusable party wares. SK can adopt schools and orient them to have waste-free get-togethers.

• Reduce fat, salt, and sugar by serving nutritious lutong bahay in the barangay pamaskong salu-salo, avoiding junk food altogether.

• Give raffle prizes that will inspire others to cut their trash and improve the quality of community environment such as reusable carry bags, vermi worms for composting, vegetable seeds for home gardening, bamboo shoots for riverbank remediation, and other living gifts.  

• Set up trash cans (with proper segregation) around churches during the nine-day Simbang Gabi (dawn Masses).

• Organize local “Iwas PapuToxic” campaign to reduce firecracker-related injuries as well as toxic litter, smoke, and noise.

II. REUSE:

• Refrain from buying new Christmas decorations.  Check the Barangay storeroom for ornaments that can still be repaired and reused. Create the barangay or church belen (Christmas crib) with reused items.

Decorate only with minimal stuff that can be reused over and over again. 

• Organize a barangay ukay-ukay (reusable/recyclable bazaar) from household, school, and corporate donated items to raise funds for families in need.

III. RECYCLE:

• Organize community-wide Christmas exchange gift of unwrapped “white elephant” or recycled gift items for kids and teeners.

• Arrange a junk exchange where residents can bring and swap useful items such as outgrown clothes for children and adults from the closets.

• Set up donation boxes at the Barangay Hall, places of worship, and stores for used toys, books, and clothes that can be distributed to the poor.  The signage for the campaign can say something like “Give Mother Earth a Christmas gift, too, recycle!

• Organize a recycled toy-making contest.

• Partner with homeowners’ associations and the informal waste sector to collect clean recyclables during and after the Christmas season.

Holy night, may our Christmas be full of joy, not of holitrash!

* * *

We’d love to hear from you. E-mail us at ching_alano@yahoo.com.

 

ADVOCATING PHILIPPINE ENVIRONMENTAL SUSTAINABILITY

ARANETA AND AYALA COMMERCIAL CENTERS

BARANGAY

BARANGAY HALL

BARANGAY SIMPLE

BULL

CHRISTMAS

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