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Three
schools, Chirton Primary, Lavington Secondary and St Barnabas Primary,
Market Lavington won all three categories for their paper collections
beating over 100 other schools across the county in the scheme run
by Hills Waste.
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The
Waste Warrior!
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At
a ceremony held at the Material Recovery Facility just outside Calne,
Chirton Primary received the £500 award and the Waste Warrior
trophy for Most Kilograms Collected per Pupil and Overall winner.
They achieved an amazing 727 kilograms collected per pupil.
Lavington
Secondary School won the award for Most Paper Collected Overall,
the third year in succession that they have won this. They collected
46.5 tonnes of paper.
St
Barnabas Primary received the Best New School award, having only
joined the scheme in May last year. They have been collecting an
average 291 kilograms per month.
Altogether
165 tonnes (the equivalent of 600 small cars) of paper were diverted
from landfill to be recycled, saving 2800 trees, enough energy to
power a house for 82 years and enough water to flush a toilet 700,000
times.
The
Headteacher of Chirton Primary said the money would be used to help
buy play equipment for their playing fields, which are also used
by the community who had supported them by bringing their paper
to the school for recycling.
After
the ceremony, the staff and pupils were given a tour of the landfill
site to see what happens if rubbish is not recycled and then shown
how materials for recycling are sorted and handled before being
sent for processing.
The
Wiltshire Wildlife Trust’s Naomi Silverton, who co-ordinates the
scheme, said, "By seeing how a constant stream of lorries tip
rubbish into this huge hole, the children will see just how quickly
our landfill sites ware filling up. They already know the importance
of Reducing, Reusing and Recycling our waste - and they’re a really
good example to the rest of us."
The
pupils from Chirton had prepared a short presentation about why
we should recycle with some collages of what can and cannot be recycled.
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