2A ❚ WEDNESDAY, MARCH 14, 2018 ❚ APPEAL TRIBUNE Marion County wants recycling to go into trash 17-year-old program scales back on items it will accept Tracy Loew Salem Statesman Journal USA TODAY NETWORK Shredded paper, egg cartons, milk boxes and most plastic containers are all about to be banned from Marion County’s blue bins. The county’s 17-year-old curbside recycling program is scaling way back on items it will accept, in response to China’s refusal to take most recyclable materials from the West. Beginning Monday, those items and more should be thrown in the trash, said Brian May, the county’s Environ- mental Services Division manager. “It’s going to be huge,” May said. “Residents of Marion County are very big recyclers. We know it’s going to be a huge change to our nature.” On Jan. 1, China stopped allowing many materials to be imported for recy- cling, saying contamination levels were too high. China was the world’s largest importer of recycled paper and plastic, and took most of Oregon’s recycling. About half of Marion County’s recy- cling goes to Salem’s Garten Services, with the rest heading to Pioneer Recy- cling Services in Portland. Both recyclers are among 16 state- wide that have received special permis- sion from the Oregon Department of Recycling sorters pull non-recyclables off a conveyor belt at Garten Services in Salem in January. ANNA REED/STATESMAN JOURNAL Environmental Quality to send recycla- ble materials to the landfill. “Our warehouse was filled up to the point where it was unsafe. We ended up having to stick some stuff outside. We didn’t have a choice,” said Will Pose- gate, Garten’s chief operations officer. “But the stuff doesn’t stop coming in.” artists could exhibit their most contro- versial works. The Silverton Art Associ- ation’s Borland Art Gallery, at 303 Coo- lidge Street, once again is sponsoring a "Silverton Salon.” A variety of artwork in various medi- ums and subject matter, including tasteful nudes, will be exhibited. The exhibit is open to the public weekdays, 9 a.m. to noon, and weekends, noon to 4 p.m., through April 1. K-8 school, the evening features din- ner, dessert, a huge raffle, a silent auction and a cakewalk. After last sum- mer’s extensive seismic upgrades, this year’s theme is “New Look, Old Tradi- tions.” All proceeds support kids at Victor Point. A meal ticket is $5. A family pass is $25. Raffle tickets are $1 apiece. Prices for silent auction items vary. Buy tickets ahead of time or at the door. Winners need not be present. For more info, call 503-873-8048. — Christena Brooks See RECYCLE, Page 3A IN BRIEF ‘Treasures from the Attic’ at Lunaria Gallery Lunaria Gallery is inviting art-lovers to visit an eclectic show featuring works curated from the attics of its member artists. They have combed through their collections to find their best pieces to share. Shows run through April 2. The gallery, at 113 N. Water St., is open daily 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. — Christena Brooks ‘Silverton Salon’ now open at Borland Art Gallery Historically, a salon was a place where Outdoor Continued from Page 1A GDP was larger than that of utilities ($287 billion); mining, including the ex- traction of oil and gas ($260 billion); but less than transportation and warehous- ing ($562 billion); and construction ($792 billion). And the industry is expanding. In 2016, it grew 3.8 percent, compared to the overall economy’s growth of 2.8 per- cent. The report was released by U.S. De- partment of Commerce’s Bureau of Eco- nomic Analysis on Feb. 14. “The public will no doubt be sur- prised at the economic importance of this industry as we release prototype statistics measuring the impact of ac- tivities like boating, fishing, RVing, hunting, camping, hiking, and more,” said U.S. Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross in a news release. Unlike other reports analyzing the outdoor recreation industry’s economic footprint, this is the first one not con- Victor Point Chili Feed is March 15 have the data to back that up.” That information can be useful when advocating for conservation or trying to change policy, Cottingham said. Although the Department of Com- merce analysis was more narrowly fo- cused, Cottingham said the federal find- ings aligned with the state report. The Recreation and Conservation Of- fice is in charge of distributing and mak- ing grants. Having economic data “helps to justify our investments as part of the bigger economic engine,” Cotting- ham said. Similarly, Sam Mace, the Inland Northwest Director for Save Our Wild Salmon, said the potential economic benefit of conservation has long been a key plank in Save Our Wild Salmon’s platform and something they’ve consid- ered and highlighted on the Lower Snake River. “Often that is the bottom line way you can protect these resources, by showing the economic driver that they are,” she said. The federal report will be a useful ad- vocacy tool, said Katherine Hollis the conservation and advocacy director for OR-SAL0008013-10 www.ANewTradition.com the Mountaineers. “It’s definitely inline with how we ap- proach conservation work,” she said. “There is intrinsic value in these places. But also the outdoor recreation industry is growing. Period. Across the board.” The Mountaineers are based in Seat- tle and have 13,000 members, most of whom are in Washington. The yearly basic alpine course has a wait list of more than 200 people, she said. “They put the recreation economy at 2 percent of the GDP,” she said. “That’s a lot. That says something about the im- portance of these landscapes and how we engage these landscapes.” The Idaho Department of Parks and Recreation found that Idaho’s state parks contributed $184 million to the state’s economy in 2016, according to a study published earlier this month. The Department of Commerce study didn’t look at outdoor recreation retail manufacturing revenue occurring out- side of the U.S. Additionally, the BEA re- port didn’t include money spent on rec- reation trips less than 50 miles from a person’s home. Classifieds: call 503-399-6789 Retail: call 503-399-6728 Legal: call 503-399-6791 Staff TUALATIN SALEM 8970 SW Tualatin Sherwood Rd 412 Lancaster Drive NE (503) 885-7800 (503) 581-6265 PORTLAND TIGARD 832 NE Broadway 12995 SW Pacifi c Hwy (503) 783-3393 (503) 783-6869 EASTSIDE MILWAUKIE 1433 SE 122nd Ave 17064 SE McLoughlin Blvd (503) 783-6865 (503) 653-7076 Privately owned cremation facility. A Family Owned Oregon Business. Family Nurse Practitioner To Place an Ad Web site: www.SilvertonAppeal.com NO Hidden Costs “It’s such a cool experience to find such wonderful doctors to work with – doctors who care about patients as much as these two do.” Phone: 503-873-8385 Email: sanews@salem.gannett.com Simple Cremation $595 ton, which she closed to be a new mom and take a fellowship in obstetrics at Truman Medical Center, Lakewood in Kansas City. Before that, she attended Oregon State University and OHSU. Now she’s taking on the financial side of this new practice, along with seeing patients. Hupp, 29, grew up in Silverton, get- ting her first work experience on her family’s Christmas tree farm and as a lifeguard at the city pool. Her bache- lor’s degree in nursing is from the Uni- versity of Portland, and she earned master’s and doctorate degrees from the University of Washington in nurs- ing and nursing practice, respectively. Her residency was at the Center of Excellence in Primary Care at the Pu- get Sound Veterans Administration, and she also volunteered on a medical mission bus to underserved patients in Washington. A broad array of cases provided Hupp with experience in gy- necological, geriatric and general fam- ily care. Along with seeing patients, she will oversee human resources at the new Silverton practice. Bay, Houts and Hupp became friends while working together for Family Medical Group of Silverton. Bay was there eight years, Houts for 10, and Hupp for four. Theirs will be the first local practice to use Epic, the electronic health rec- ords program recently unveiled at Leg- acy Silverton Medical Center, Bay said. It’s used by all Providence and Legacy hospitals, OHSU and Salem Hospital. Silver Creek Family Medicine will host a soft opening in the evening on May 4. Located at 111 West C Street, its regular hours will be 8 a.m. to 5 p.m., Mondays through Thursdays; 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Fridays; and 8 a.m. to noon, Sat- urdays. Until the office opens, its web- site the best point of contact: www.silvercreekfamilymedicine.com. Address: P.O. Box 13009, Salem, OR 97309 Fax: 503-399-6706 LOW COST CREMATION & BURIAL Continued from Page 1A Kelsey Hupp, Victor Point School’s annual Chili Feed will be Thursday, March 15, from 5 to 8 p.m. A long-standing tradition as this rural ducted by a private industry association such as the Outdoor Industry Associa- tion. According to the Department of Commerce report, the outdoor recrea- tion industry employed 4,280 people in 2016, up 2.9 percent in a year and up 6.5 percent from 2012. Earnings for those workers grew even quicker. Compensation for those em- ployees totaled $203.5 billion, a 5.2 per- cent increase from the previous year and up 18.5 percent from 2012. While the BEA study is unique na- tionally, the Washington State Recrea- tion and Conservation Office commis- sioned and published its own economic study in 2016. That analysis found that outdoor rec- reation resulted in $21.6 billion dollars in annual expenditures in Washington and created roughly 200,000 jobs. The Washington study was the first of its kind in the state. “Now we know it’s a huge driver to our economy as well,” said Kaleen Cot- tingham, the director of the Recreation and Conservation Office. “We have known that intuitively. 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