Level 1 | Milly Zantow: Recycling Revolutionary · Milly volunteered at many places in her...

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Milly Zantow Recycling Revolutionary

Transcript of Level 1 | Milly Zantow: Recycling Revolutionary · Milly volunteered at many places in her...

Page 1: Level 1 | Milly Zantow: Recycling Revolutionary · Milly volunteered at many places in her community . One place was a conservation (kon-ser-vey-shun) center called the International

Milly ZantowRecycling Revolutionary

Page 2: Level 1 | Milly Zantow: Recycling Revolutionary · Milly volunteered at many places in her community . One place was a conservation (kon-ser-vey-shun) center called the International

Biography written by:

Mia Forslund, PBS Wisconsin Education

Edited by:Georgia Beaverson

Becky Marburger, PBS Wisconsin EducationMegan Monday, PBS Wisconsin Education

Jessie Nixon, PBS Wisconsin Education

Special thanks to:The Stevens and Zantow Families

Elise Moser, author of What Milly Did: The Remarkable Pioneer of Plastics RecyclingDebra Burmeister, Neenah Joint School District

Karen Cody, Sauk Prairie School DistrictKerri Lintl, Sauk Prairie School District

Elizabeth Melby, Sauk Prairie School District

Page 3: Level 1 | Milly Zantow: Recycling Revolutionary · Milly volunteered at many places in her community . One place was a conservation (kon-ser-vey-shun) center called the International

Table of Contents

Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2

Family . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3

Crane Connection . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .5

Waste Woes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .6

A Plan Takes Shape . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .7

The Business of Recycling Plastic . . . . . .9

A New Solution . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .11

Conclusion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .12

Glossary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .13

Page 4: Level 1 | Milly Zantow: Recycling Revolutionary · Milly volunteered at many places in her community . One place was a conservation (kon-ser-vey-shun) center called the International

Introduction

Do you recycle? What can you recycle? Why should you recycle? Milly Zantow (zan-toe) cared a lot about the answers to these questions . She was a revolutionary (rev-o-lu-shun-air-e) in the world of recycling . Her work to recycle plastic changed her community, Wisconsin, and the world .

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Photo courtesy of the Stevens and Zantow families .

Mildred “Milly” Zantow (1923-2014)

Page 5: Level 1 | Milly Zantow: Recycling Revolutionary · Milly volunteered at many places in her community . One place was a conservation (kon-ser-vey-shun) center called the International

Family

Mildred “Milly” Taylor was born on February 13, 1923 . She and her six older siblings grew up on a farm in Oklahoma . Her family depended on their farm . They reused and repurposed (re-pur-pussed) all they could . When Milly got older she remembered what she learned growing up on the farm .

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Photo courtesy of the Stevens and Zantow families .

Here is Milly as a child on the farm, surrounded by her family . Milly is seated in the very front (1927) .

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After high school, Milly planned to continue her studies . Her family needed her to care for a sister recovering (re-kov-er-ing) from surgery . That changed her plan, but she tried to keep studying and working . Milly married Wayne Stevens and they had two sons . After Wayne died, she moved to California where she met Forrest “Woody” Zantow . They married and Milly and her sons moved to Wisconsin to live with Woody . Milly and Woody had a son together . They lived on the Baraboo Bluffs .

Photo courtesy of the Stevens and Zantow families .

A picture of Milly taken in 1943 when she was about 20 years old

Page 7: Level 1 | Milly Zantow: Recycling Revolutionary · Milly volunteered at many places in her community . One place was a conservation (kon-ser-vey-shun) center called the International

Crane Connection

Milly volunteered at many places in her community . One place was a conservation (kon-ser-vey-shun) center called the International Crane Foundation (ICF) in Baraboo . She cared for cranes and helped run ICF . In 1978 Milly went on a trip to Japan for ICF . She saw that people there sorted their trash before putting it out for pickup . She found out that they were recycling .

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This is Milly in the 1970s . What do you see in the framed picture behind her?

Photo courtesy of the Stevens and Zantow families .

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Waste Woes

Back in Wisconsin, Milly heard that the landfill in Sauk County was closing . It was almost full and leaked toxic chemicals into the ground . A new landfill might not be ready before the old one closed . Milly went to the landfill to see what was going on .

Much of the waste in the landfill was plastic . Plastic packaging for items was becoming more common . People tossed it after just one use . All of the plastic waste was not good for the environment (en-vi-ron-ment).

Milly thought that the plastic should be recycled . She went to the county board and told them her idea . They said no . They said they didn’t know how . They said nobody did . Milly didn’t give up .

Photo credit: Wisconsin DNR .

A bulldozer moving garbage in a landfill

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A Plan TAkes Shape

What she had seen in Japan inspired Milly . Some things were already being recycled where she lived . Milly did research to learn more about plastic . She wanted to know if and how plastic could be recycled .

She asked a milk company in Milwaukee what they did about defects in milk jugs . Did they throw them away? No . They melted them down and made new ones . When she heard that, she thought that recycling plastic had to be possible . She went to area plastics companies to ask if they would use post-consumer plastic to make their products . Would they use it? Well, it wasn’t so simple . Plastic waste had to be sorted by type, cleaned, and ground up before they would use it to make products .

This is what ground-up plastic can look like .

Photo credit: Wisconsin DNR .

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She went to the nearby University of Wisconsin campus to learn how to do tests to identify types of plastic . She also decided to get a plastic grinder to grind up plastic items . It was expensive . Milly told her friend Jenny Ehl (ail) about it . Jenny offered to help . They both cashed in their life insurance (in-shur-anse) policies to get the money to buy one . Then they drove to Chicago to get it .

Milly’s friend Jenny Ehl puts a plastic item into the grinder .

Photo courtesy of the Stevens and Zantow families .

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Plastic items to be recycled

Photo courtesy of the Stevens and Zantow families .

The Business of Recycling Plastic

In 1979, they started E-Z Recycling . E-Z stood for Ehl-Zantow, the last names of its founders, Jenny Ehl and Milly Zantow . They were busy from the start . Busy making a difference .

They spread the word in nearby schools and asked students to collect plastic items to recycle . People from the area helped them collect, sort, clean, break down, and grind up recyclables (re-si-kla-bles) .

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Milly at work recycling

Photo courtesy of the Stevens and Zantow families .

In 1982 they sold the business . It later became Wisconsin Intercounty Nonprofit Recycling (WINR) . Milly helped run WINR . They were doing good work, but there was still a problem .

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A New Solution

Most people couldn’t do the tests to tell plastics apart . They needed an easy way to identify and sort plastic items for recycling . So Milly, Jenny, and others came up with the idea to stamp a symbol into plastic products: a triangle with a number inside it . The number told what type of plastic it was .

For years they told everyone about their idea . In 1988, the Society of the Plastics Industry rolled out the Resin Identification Code system . Plastics recycling took off .

Here you can see the recycling symbol (a triangle made of chasing arrows) that has a number one inside and the letters PETE below . This means the item is made of polyethylene terephthalate, which is recyclable .

Photo credit: PBS Wisconsin Education .

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Conclusion

Milly kept talking to people about recycling and helped write Wisconsin’s recycling law . The law banned dumping recyclables in landfills .

Milly died on August 3, 2014, at age 91 . Her work with plastics recycling lives on . As recycling changes, more people like Milly will need to tackle new recycling challenges . Who will be the next problem-solver to stand up and become a revolutionary for our environment?

Milly never stopped sharing about the importance of recycling .

Photo Credit: Wisconsin State Journal .

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Glossary

conservation (n): . . . . . . protecting and taking care of things in nature like animals, plants, air, and water

environment (n): . . . . . . . the world of living and nonliving things

landfill (n): . . . . . . . . . . . . a place where waste is buried between layers of earth

plastic (n): . . . . . . . . . . . . . human-made material easily molded into different shapes to make useful items

post-consumer (adj): . . . something that has been used and thrown away

recycle (v): . . . . . . . . . . . . to save and break down items that may have gone into a landfill to make new items

Resin Identification Code system (n): . . . . . . . a set of symbols stamped on plastic

products that identify the type of plastic resin they are made of

revolutionary (n): . . . . . . someone who brings about a major change or changes in ways of thinking

and acting

toxic (adj): . . . . . . . . . . . . . something that may be harmful and can cause illness or even death

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For additional resources, visit pbswisconsineducation.org

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