from
Assemblymember
LINDA B.
ROSENTHAL
Winter 2008
Dear Neighbor,
Rising energy costs and growing alarm about environmental degradation and global warming
remind us daily how vital it is to renew our commitment to energy efficiency. As your
Assemblymember and a member of the Assembly Energy Committee, protecting the
environment and promoting energy conservation and efficiency is one of my top priorities.
This newsletter offers suggestions, tips, and resources for conserving energy and going green
in our apartments, buildings, neighborhood, and city. I hope you find this information helpful.
This newsletter also provides information on green legislation I am working to pass in Albany.
I welcome your suggestions for environmental policies and programs you would like to see
adopted in New York State.
Please let me know how I can be of assistance in your efforts to green your home or building
by contacting my district office.
Sincerely,
Linda B. Rosenthal
Member of Assembly
Tips for
Greening
Your Apartment or Home
Turn down your thermostat
You can lower your home’s fuel consumption by approximately 3% for each degree that you lower
your thermostat. You can also install programmable thermostats that adjust the temperature
automatically. The easy-to-install thermostats can be set to drop the temperature just before
bedtime or warm the house in the morning before you rise. You’ll save 10% a year on heating and
cooling bills just by turning your thermostat down 10 to 15% for eight hours while you sleep.
Insulate your windows and doors
Heat loss through windows accounts for 10 to 25% of your home heating bill. Save money on your
energy bill and stay warmer by adding weather stripping to your windows and doors. You can hire
a professional or use a range of do-it-yourself products. Windows should be caulked on three sides,
leaving the bottom to provide an escape for moisture. When working on doors, add weather-stripping
to the top, sides, and bottom threshold. You can seal the space under the door with a strip or even a
removable “draft snake.”
Invest in quality storm windows
You’ll pay a little to save a lot. Storm windows can increase the comfort level of your home while
reducing the expenditure of energy dollars. They hold the heat inside where you want it. You can
install them yourself with a few simple tools and a few hours of work.
Upgrade appliances
Modern appliances are much more efficient than their predecessors, so consider upgrading yours.
New stoves, for example, are insulated around the perimeter to keep heat inside, while older models
are not. Newer air conditioning units use less energy to generate cold air. Appliance energy use adds
up: the average refrigerator accounts for nearly 10 % of the average home’s total energy use.
"Be cool" and save money by switching your air conditioner
You can save money by switching to an ENERGY-STAR model air conditioner.
According to the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), the average New York
family spends $1,900 a year on energy bills, with nearly half going toward heating
and cooling costs. ENERGY-STAR qualified air conditioners can save you money
by using 10 to 25 % less energy than a conventional new model or up to 40 % less
energy than a 10-year-old unit.
Switch to ENERGY STAR-qualified compact fluorescent light bulbs (CFLs)
Compact fluorescent bulbs last longer by using less energy, thereby lowering your electricity bill without
scrimping on the quality of light. ENERGY-STAR- qualified products in general are certified by the EPA
for providing such high energy efficiency. These bulbs must be disposed of properly since they contain
trace amounts of mercury. For information on disposal of CFLs visit:
http://www.nyc.gov/html/nycwasteless/html/at_home/special_waste.shtml
Unplug chargers and appliances when not in use
Many electronics, such as cell phone chargers and small kitchen appliances, continue using electricity if
they remain plugged into an outlet. These plugged-in devices can be responsible for up to 40% of your
energy costs.
Switch to a green energy provider
Electricity generated from wind, solar, and other renewable energy sources is good for the environment.
Thousands of New York State residents have switched to green power, helping to reduce our dependence
on fossil fuels, such as oil, gas, and coal. By choosing green power and paying a premium, they are helping
to create a cleaner, healthier environment.
Your electric service is made up of two parts, supply and delivery. In New York’s competitive electricity
market, you can now shop for your supply of electricity and you can support cleaner, sustainable energy
solutions by selecting green power for some or all of your supply. More information on green energy can
be found at: http://www.askpsc.com/or by calling 866-GRN-POWR.
Bring a cloth or canvas bag to the supermarket
Petroleum is used to produce millions of plastic bags each year, and you can help reduce our country’s
oil consumption simply by bringing a cloth or canvas bag with you to the grocery store. You will also help
to reduce New York City’s waste. While cloth bags are reusable, plastic bags take decades to decompose.
Switch to paperless bank statements
Reduce your clutter and help the environment. Log on to the Web sites of the companies whose bills you pay
each month and enroll in their paperless banking program. If every home in the U.S. viewed and paid bills
electronically, the country would save 18.5 million trees and reduce 2.2 billion tons of toxic air pollutants per year.
For many more tips go to: http://www.getenergysmart.org/
GREENING YOUR BUILDING
The Apartment Building Recycling Initiative (ABRI)
Help your apartment building reduce, reuse, and recycle. New York City’s Apartment Building
Recycling Initiative (ABRI) offers you a chance to expand recycling in your building. Participants
are trained to improve recycling in their building and work with the Department of Sanitation to
promote and assist recycling plans. This free program provides participants with regular updates
and helpful information to keep their building well informed about the latest ways to reduce waste.
Interested participants must be at least 18 years old, live in, work, or manage a residential building
with 3 or more units that receives Department of Sanitation collection, and work cooperatively with
building management and attend at least one training session.
More information can be found at:
http://www.nyc.gov/html/nycwasteless/html/recycling/recycling_abri.shtml
The Weatherization Assistance Program (WAP)
WAP helps individuals and families increase the energy efficiency in their homes. Assistance is
available to both homeowners and renters. Eligibility is based on income, and priority is given to
senior citizens as well as to families with children or disabled individuals. The increased energy
efficiency yields an average savings of 20 % or more to participants. For more information, visit the
Division of Housing and Community Renewal’s Web site at
www.dhcr.state.ny.us
On the West Side, Housing Conservation Coordinators (HCC) works with income-eligible buildings
to implement weatherization through the Division of Housing and Community Renewal. If you are
interested in learning more about HCC’s weatherization program, contact Karen Jackson-Campbell,
Weatherization Director, at 212-541-5996.
Cogeneration
Cogeneration is a process whereby buildings produce their own heat and electricity through the
use of machines known as microturbines. Microturbines are generators that produce electricity.
The heat produced from the microturbines is captured to heat the building. Cogeneration is in use
throughout the city in many commercial and some residential buildings. The benefit of cogeneration
is to reduce a building’s electricity and heating costs, and to reduce New York City’s overall energy
demand by taking buildings off the power grid.
More information on cogeneration can be found at:
http://www.epa.gov/chp
Submetering
Submetering makes it possible for residential buildings that have one master electric meter to
charge shareholders and unit owners for the power they use, rather than dividing power costs among
the residents on the basis of their proportionate interest in the co-op or condo. Studies have confirmed
that residents in master-metered buildings tend to consume more electricity than residents with
individual apartment metering. Electrical submetering has been established as an effective energy
conservation measure and way for residents to save money.
More information on submetering can be found by visiting
http://www.dps.state.ny.us/submetering
and clicking on the “sample tenant notification” and “checklist” links.
ELECTRONICS RECYCLING
YOU CAN RECYCLE MORE THAN YOU THINK!
Recycling remains one of the most effective methods for limiting waste and protecting
our environment. Today, more products than ever are being recycled for a variety of uses.
You probably own many things that can be turned into green-friendly furnishings, clothing,
or other reusable products.
Recycling Electronics
What does your old computer or camera have in common with a milk carton? They are all
recyclable. Before you toss your old cell phone, camera, or computer into next week’s trash,
consider that 20 to 50 million tons of electronics waste (often called e-waste) is discarded
globally every year. In fact, e-waste currently makes up five percent of all municipal solid waste.
Aside from directly contacting merchants, the New York City Department of Sanitation periodically
sponsors electronic recycling days in Manhattan.
Recycle unwanted computers, monitors, and printers through one of the retailer or manufacturer-sponsored,
take-back programs listed below, or through a recycling vendor. Additionally, New York City law will require
all electronics manufactures to adopt e-recycling programs beginning in July 2009.
Manufacturer Take-Back Programs:
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Apple: 888-638-2761;
http://www.apple.com/environment/recycling/nationalservices/us.html
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Canon: 800-385-2155
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Dell Inc.: 800-915-3355;
http://www.dell.com/content/topics/global.aspx/about_dell/values/environment/recycling_main?~ck=ln&c=us&l=en&lnki=0&s=corp
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Epson:
http://www.epson.com/cgi-bin/Store/Recycle/RecycleProgram.jsp
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Hewlett-Packard:
http://www.hp.com/hpinfo/globalcitizenship/environment/recycle/index.html
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IBM: 888-SHOP-IBM;
http://www.ibm.com/ibm/environment/products/recycling.shtml
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Lenovo: (including IBM laptops)
http://lenovo.ecotakeback.com/
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Lexmark: 800-LEXMARK (539-6275);
http://www.lexmark.com/recycle/
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Sony: 877-439-2795;
http://www.sonystyle.com/webapp/wcs/stores/servlet/CategoryDisplay?catalogId=10551&categoryId=8198552921644513777&langId=-1&storeId=10151
-
Toshiba:
http://explore.toshiba.com/innovation-lab/green
Most charge a processing fee, and some restrict the brands that they will accept. Dell Inc. and
Hewlett-Packard can provide a home pick-up service.
Retailer Take-Back Programs for Electronics:
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Best Buy: has a program for recycling appliances
and televisions when individuals purchase a new appliance or television from the retailer.
Best Buy also accepts cell phones and ink cartridges at Best Buy stores.
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Office Depot: will accept any brand of used
electronics provided that they are not cracked or leaking. These items must be able to fit
within one of their three boxes. (The largest box is 14”x18”x18”, which is big enough for a
monitor, but not a large television.) The box must be purchased for $5, $10, or $15 depending
on its size. The filled box can then be left at the store for recycling.
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Radio Shack: has an in-store program for recycling
rechargeable batteries and cell phones.
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Staples: will accept any brand of used computers,
monitors, laptops, printers, faxes, and all-in-ones for recycling at any of its stores for a $10 per
large item fee.
KEEP IT HEALTHY AND GREEN WHEN YOU CLEAN
Many everyday cleaning products can harm us and the environment. Luckily, there are plenty of
natural alternatives that are just as effective. The chart below points out the most common cleansers
that can be replaced with safer options.
Alternatives to Household Hazards
Products and traditional cleansers that can be substituted as natural alternatives:
Avoid the use of harsh chemicals by wiping away grease and spills after use. For spills, let
oven cool slightly, sprinkle salt on the spill, wait a few minutes and wipe area clean with a
wet cloth. For scouring the oven, use baking soda (do not let baking soda touch wires or
heating elements) and a damp sponge. Scour racks and burners inserts with steel wool.
For clogged drains, try a plunger first. Dissolve 4 oz. baking soda and 8 oz. vinegar in
a small amount of boiling water. Pour down drain and wait for fizzing to stop. Flush
with tap water.
Sprinkle baking soda around the bowl followed by vinegar. Scrub with
a toilet brush. Vinegar is a mild acid and should remove hard water scale.
Sprinkle any of the following on the surface to be cleaned: baking soda, borax,
or dry table salt and scour with a damp sponge. Rinse thoroughly with water to remove grit.
Basin, Tub, and Tile Cleaner
Cut a lemon in half and dip it in borax. Rub surfaces with lemon and rinse.
Mix 1/4 cup vinegar in 1 gallon of water. Scrub with a brush.
Dissolve ½ cup vinegar and ½ cup borax in warm water.
Apply to tiles and grout with a sponge or brush. Wipe and rinse clean.
Glass, Window, Mirror Cleaners
Wipe away surface dirt with a paper towel or soft cloth.
Window Cleaner 1: Mix a solution of 2 tablespoons vinegar
to 1 quart water. Apply with a wad of newspaper.
Window Cleaner 2: Mix 3 tablespoons ammonia, 1 tablespoon vinegar,
3/4 cup water in a spray bottle. Wipe down with a squeegee to prevent
streaking. Avoid spilling cleaner on painted or varnished woodwork.
Window Cleaner 3: Mix ½ cup cornstarch in 2 qts. warm water and apply
with a sponge. Wipe windows dry with a soft cloth.
Mix 1 part borax and 1 part washing soda.
Depending on how hard the water is, adjust proportions to
avoid soap film on dishes.
Furniture Polish 1: Mix 1 part lemon juice with 2 parts olive or vegetable oil.
Furniture Polish 2: Mix 2 teaspoons lemon oil and 1 pint mineral oil in a spray bottle.
Furniture Polish 3: Mix equal portions of denatured alcohol, fresh strained lemon juice,
boiled linseed oil, and gum turpentine in a labeled jar. Shake before each use.
Melt 1/4 cup paraffin in a double boiler. Stir in 2 qts. mineral oil. Transfer to labeled containers.
Clean silver items with toothpaste, mild dishwashing liquid, and warm water using an
old toothbrush on tarnished areas.
Brass and Copper Cleaners
Combine 1 pint of soap jelly, 1 cup whiting (powdered chalk), and 1 teaspoon ammonia
into a paste and beat together before soap jelly congeals.
Rub the paste on metal articles.
Wash them in hot sudsy water, rinse, and dry with a soft towel.
To make soap jelly:
-
Dissolve 1 cup of shaved soap or soap flakes in 1 qt. of boiling water.
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After soap is entirely melted, pour it into a jar with a wide mouth and place it in
a cool place until the mixture jells.
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Copper can be cleaned by rubbing a mixture of salt dissolved in hot vinegar.
Rinse and wipe with a clean rag.
General Cleaner/Disinfectant 1: Mix 1 tablespoon baking soda,
1/4 cup vinegar, 1/4 cup ammonia and 1 gallon hot water.
General Cleaner/Disinfectant 2: Dissolve ½ cup borax in 1 gallon warm water.
General Cleaner/Disinfectant 3: Mix ½ cup ammonia, ½ cup baking soda,
and 1 gallon warm water into a bucket. After cleaning, rinse with clean water. Unused cleaner
can be stored in a labeled bottle or jar.
Other general cleaners include: #1 vinegar, salt, and water, #2 vinegar in water, #3 baking soda
and water, and #4 soap pads.
Ants: Mix 1 egg white, 2 tablespoons sugar, 1 tablespoon boric acid, and
½ cup water together until boric acid is dissolved. Spoon into jar lids and set lids in areas
where ants appear and travel. Refill the lids when solution dries out. Allow three to four weeks
for poison to take effect.
Roaches: Mix 16 oz. boric acid, 1 cup flour, 1/4 cup sugar and pieces of
finely chopped onion. Add water a little at a time to make a soft dough. Shape into small balls
and place these where roaches travel and hide.
Keep out of the reach of children and pets.
Place cedar blocks, lavender sachets and other dried herbs in closets and drawers.
The nontoxic alternatives, including baking soda, washing soda, borax, boric acid, and ammonia, can be
purchased at supermarkets and pharmacies. Linseed oil, turpentine, and whiting can be purchased at
hardware and/or paint stores.
Source: New York City Department of Sanitation
LEGISLATIVE UPDATE
Important Energy Legislation
Light Pollution
In 2008, I passed a bill in the Assembly that mandates healthy, safe and energy-efficient
outdoor lighting. This bill would limit excessive outdoor illumination, which wastes energy
and creates harmful and unnecessary glare. I also passed a bill mandating that state lighting
efficiency standards for public buildings be established. Such standards would protect public
health and safety and conserve energy by eliminating wasteful artificial night lighting. We must
all act to limit our energy consumption; the state should be no exception. These bills will
implement at the state level the same common-sense energy-saving measures to which many
individuals have already committed in their daily lives.
Even when our methods of generating power for residential, commercial, and municipal lighting
are as efficient as possible, emissions resulting from the burning of fossil fuels pose a significant
threat to public health. Contaminants in these emissions are killing our lakes, tainting our air and
drinking water, and contributing to global warming. Poorly designed and inefficient outdoor night
lighting is estimated to waste between $3.5 and $4 billion annually. The bill requires state lighting
efficiency standards to include methods to eliminate wasteful lighting. These methods will help to
reduce the pollution that results from the unnecessary use of energy.
This legislation would empower NYSERDA to include in its listings of energy-related products
information on the types of outdoor lighting best suited to reducing wasted energy, glare,
deterioration of the natural nighttime environment, and interference with astronomical observation.
Diesel Generators
In 2008, I introduced a bill in the Assembly that would restrict the use of diesel-powered electric
turbines in areas of the state where air quality has already deteriorated as a result of diesel-powered
turbine use. Diesel-fired turbines emit several orders of magnitude more oxides of nitrogen, sulfur
dioxide, carbon dioxide, and particulate matter per unit output than natural gas combined cycle units.
They emit 300 times the emissions of that emitted by a state of the art combined cycle natural gas
power plant. The use of diesel-generated electricity would still be permitted under certain circumstances,
such as for emergency back-up during a power outage. In response to the electric price spikes that
occasionally occur during the summer months, the New York Independent System Operator (ISO), the
Long Island Power Authority (LIPA), and NYSERDA have all instituted financial incentives for diesel
generators to operate when prices are high. This bill would reduce the unhealthy use of pollution-generating
diesel power.
Bigger Better Bottle Bill
In 2008, the Assembly passed the Bigger Better Bottle Bill. The Bigger Better Bottle Bill would update the
state’s five-cent bottle deposit law on bottled beverages. I am proud to have been a co-sponsor and a strong
and outspoken supporter of this important measure. This bill would attach a five-cent rebate to bottled water,
juice, and teas, which were not covered in the original 1982 bottle bill. Additionally, any unclaimed deposits
would be redirected from the bottling industry, where unclaimed deposits currently go, to the State
Environmental Protection Fund. The Environmental Protection Fund is a critical resource in New York;
it provides funds to local governments and nonprofits to purchase park lands or historic resources and
develop and preserve these resources, as well as for other open space conservation and land acquisition
initiatives. This bill is crucial to reducing litter and solid waste disposal. Each year, three billion carbonated
beverage bottles end up in landfills and incinerators, contributing to greenhouse gas emissions and choking
our planet with non-biodegradable garbage. Thanks to the success of the original bottle bill, more than six
million tons of bottles and containers have been recycled.
Improving the bottle bill is both environmentally and fiscally responsible; this legislation would provide the
state with an estimated $144 million in revenue from unclaimed deposits every year, according to the
Container Recycling Institute. I believe taxpayers’ money should benefit our communities, not the
bottling industry.
Net Metering
In 2008, I co-sponsored a bill to expand net metering that was passed into law. Net metering is an
electricity policy designed to benefit consumers who own small, reliable renewable energy facilities,
such as wind or solar power, or vehicle-to-grid systems. In this context, “net” means “what remains after
deductions”—the deduction of any energy outflows from metered energy inflows. Under net metering, a
system owner receives retail credit for at least a portion of the electricity he or she generates.
This bill removes restrictions on net metering, giving credit to electric ratepayers who generate renewable
energy and passing along the unused energy to others in the system. I believe that allowing net metering
will benefit both the environment and the economy, while at the same time providing incentive for energy
consumers to be more environmentally friendly. New York should be leading the nation in common-sense,
environmentally sound public policy, and net metering is a huge step in the right direction.
This initiative and all other bills in New York State that reduce carbon emissions have my enthusiastic
support. I am committed to saving our environment and protecting our pocketbooks by promoting policies
that emphasize energy efficiency.
Green Building
In 2008, I co-sponsored legislation that was passed into law which expands green building in New York
State. One law requires all new state buildings to comply with green building principals. Another law directs
NYSERDA to establish a Green Residential Building Grant Program to encourage green residential
construction. In the district, I always advocate that new developments be built with Leadership in Energy
and Environmental Design (LEED) certification, which requires use of reused materials in construction and
reduced water and energy usage in building design, among other requirements.