Courtesy of Pine Street neighbor Cristina Domínguez Ramírez.

Courtesy of Pine Street neighbor Cristina Domínguez Ramírez.

This Wednesday is a red Wednesday, which means trash and recycling pickup. Ideally, rolling recycling containers are stored and deployed in the back alleys along with trash cans. Please make sure you pick up containers after pickup tomorrow night.
If you have not done so already, don’t forget to sign up for your Recycling Perks.
In order to take your recycling to the next level, read this: 10 ways to improve your recycling.
In recycling news, the Carolinas Plastics Recycling Council (CPRC) and the National Association for PET Container Resources (NAPCOR), Florence, Kentucky, have announced the release of the jointly produced “Your Bottles Means Jobs (YBMJ)” video. The two-minute video tallies the 3,500 jobs in plastics bottle recycling and related fields in the Carolinas, including bottle sorting, recycled material processing and manufacturing of recycled-content products, such as polyester fiber made from recycled PET (polyethylene terephthalate) bottles.
From the article in Recycling Today:
“We are pleased to promote recycled plastics processing and manufacturing jobs in North and South Carolina and to see recent investment by industries that facilitate or use recycled plastic material feedstock to create and sustain jobs,” says Chantal Fryer, director of recycling market development for the South Carolina Department of Commerce. “The ‘YBMJ’ video shows us how these jobs add up and is part of an ongoing YBMJ campaign to encourage everyone to recycle just two more bottles each week in support of local jobs.”
She adds, “Although our video is Carolinas-focused, our message of local collection supporting local economies, job creation and infrastructure is relevant across the U.S.”
Your Bottle Means Jobs from Charles Morris on Vimeo.
From FaceBook event page:
Each year a special ceremony is held in Hollywood Cemetery to honor the many children who have passed away. The ceremony is held at the Angel of Hope statue in the Idlewood section.
Inspired by Richard Paul Evans’ best-selling novel by the same the name, the Angel of Hope is a bronzed angel that sits in numerous cemeteries across the country to memorialize lost children and create a place for collective healing.
Join us on Tuesday, December 6, 2016 at 6:00pm for this year’s candlelight ceremony. The event is free and all are welcome.

Neighborhood and riverfront as seen from the new pedestrian bridge, which is named after late Oregon Hill resident and City planner T.Tyler Potterfield.


Artist Sean Taggart has a new design for Vinyl Conflict that will soon be available on t-shirts and hoodies (in time for holiday gifts, y’all!)

1989. Courtesy of William Pickett.
From CommunityCrimeMap.com:
DRUG/NARCOTIC VIOLATION
6XX CUMBERLAND ST
Nov 30, 2016 at 12:04 am
Data provided by Virginia Commonwealth University Police Department
From email announcement:
The VCU Horn Choir will be performing during Pine Street Baptist Church’s 11:00 am worship on December 4. All are invited to attend.

From email announcement:
All are invited to the St. Andrew’s Annual Santa Breakfast in Baldwin Hall (of the school building) from 9-11 am on Saturday, December 3, 2016. Christmas Shop, Pancake and Sausage Breakfast, photos with Mr. and Mrs. Santa Claus. Breakfast is $3.50 per person or $10 for families.
What are you missing out on by not registering now for Richmond’s most epic polar plunge? How about the chance to win an overnight stay at the Hilton in downtown Richmond on either Friday or Saturday of Shiver weekend (January 28, 2017), a $50 gift card at Hilton’s new 1885 Cafe & Market, and a $50 gift card to Penny Lane Pub. Pretty sweet swag, I’d say.
In other news, KVB’s Mike Baum tells me the 5K that precedes the Shiver will incorporate the T. Tyler Potterfield Memorial Bridge (a.k.a. the T-Pot Bridge), which Brown’s Island and Manchester. The exact route hasn’t been mapped yet, he said, but it should be the first race in Richmond to include the gleaming new pedestrian bridge (which opens this Friday night at 6 p.m.).
Click here for more on Shiver in the River and to sneak in under the wire for early bird registration.
