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thedrifter
10-17-08, 04:15 AM
Marine mattresses going green

Posted: Oct 16, 2008 05:20 PM
Updated: Oct 17, 2008 12:32 AM
By Tracy Gladden

HONOLULU (KHNL) - Troops at the Kaneohe Marine Corps base are stepping up their effort to help preserve the environment, one bed at a time.

Old mattresses find new life at the Green Bed Factory. This month, Kaneohe Marines have hired the company to recycle 700 mattresses and reduce the burden on Oahu's overflowing landfill.

"Each mattress will take up ten cubic feet of space, you times that by a couple thousand, you've got the size of your house in the landfill," factory manager Jim Riggs said.

"They break them down, strip them, they recycle the metal frames and then they send the padding materials over to h-power and actually burn them to create energy. Normally what we were doing was taking these to the landfill when we were done with them, we are replacing about 800 a year," Marine Demetrio Espinosa said.

The company is rebuilding 500 mattresses for the Army.

"Not all beds need to go to the landfill, a lot of them can be rebuilt, a lot of them can be recycled and that's what we do. You just don't like it because it's got a stain on it, have it rebuilt," Riggs said.

He says the company can strip your bed and put it back together for a third of the price of a new one.

"We love being able to do our part to help the community and really to make the island a lot greener," Espinosa said.

The Marines hope that the hotel industry will follow its environmental example and have decided to make recycling their used mattresses and annual program.


Ellie

thedrifter
10-17-08, 04:26 AM
Used Marine mattresses heading for recycling bin

Advertiser Staff

MARINE CORPS BASE HAWAII, Oahu - Troops at Marine Corps Base Hawaii in Kaneohe have turned over more than a few good mattresses to be recycled.

Officials said it’s the base's latest effort to help preserve the environment and reduce its ecological footprint on the island of Oahu.

This month starts the Marine Corps' contract with a local company, The Green Bed Factory, to remove and recycle old mattresses. Approximately 700 barracks mattresses will be diverted away from local landfills and recycled this month as part an effort to reduce the burden on local landfills and increase the scope of the base's recycling initiatives.

The base generates hundreds of old mattresses annually and recently found out about The Green Bed Factory, a business that breaks down mattresses into reusable and recyclable components. MCB Hawaii is the first military installation on Oahu to use this process and expects this program to continue into the future.

“The Marine Corps is a proven leader within the Department of Defense in resource conservation programs” Col. Robert Rice, commander, MCB Hawaii, wrote in a recent column in the base newspaper, “Hawaii Marine.”

“Going green is not a big leap for Marines; we're already green at heart. We need to practice it in everything we do,” Rice said.

Ellie