UNH`s Main Street Magazine Catch the Vibe…the Clean Vibes – 2001
Transcription
UNH`s Main Street Magazine Catch the Vibe…the Clean Vibes – 2001
G a t chth e Vib e..rTheC Iea nVib e By P ila ra F el ga te ahorrthow rnuch sarbagevolr produce on a clailybasis.This irrclrrr'k:s flfirk toilet lrupcr'.lissrrcs"anv sort of r.rapper. excessfoocl, and evervthing clsc I I tlrat rrrakesi1sn-av to the trash can. Though you nay think 1'ouonlr" contributc to a tiny percentag^e of the earbage that gcts thlou'n ou1 of your clorm or house, the tnrth is that vou as a single person rnake n lot of "nort-ent, i:uurrir,l Nor', think about hor. rnuch garbage thele n'oulcl bc iI vorr rntrltiplied the anrount oI trash you nake evelvday Lrvsa1',80.000 people" ancl then multiplv that by l.hreedays. \6ar, take about 20 pcople ancl clean it all up ancl r'orr'll have some iclea of what the peoplc u'ho l.orlc for []lean \ribes do. []lean \ribcs" an inclependentcorporatiorr bascclout. o-[Norlhem Neu- Eng-landblings a whole ner- meaning to "taking orrl.dre garbage." 'l'his grorrp of paid ernploveesand voluntocrs alike are responsiblelitr the \-aste rnanagernenta1 somo of tlre lalgesl out-door concertsthat have or:cun:eclin lccrcnt vcars. After all the fans leave the site (ancl all thcil trash). Clean \,ibers go to n'ork and don'l. stop until eyelvthing is pickcd up. \\,'hat separatesthern florn plain olcl garbage collectols is 1.ha1. Clean Vibes reclcle as rnuch :rs thol' f.iossiblycan, decreasingthc arnount of n'aste that goesinto landfills ancl incineral.ors. Ther' also promote recycling amongst the fans during the concert in hopes that after a shorv is over, thev u.'ill contirrue to rcc\iclc. ,0,*rrour,7 Great Northeast Productions to do another three dav Phish shou' and with l-Ieart in charge of operations Clean Vibes began to take a cohesiveform. ClearrVibes was asked back the next vear by Great Northeast Productions to do the waste managemert for vet another Phish shou'-.The I-emonn'heel,in 1998, was Phish's third big out-door concert and was held at the same location as The Great \[ent. At this show" Heart says, Clean Vibes started to become ar organized operation. Six rrronths later. afier one other Phish show in Oswego,N! Clean Vibes did their biggest show yet. Phish's millennium New Year''sEve concert in Big C,vpress,FL, had approximatelv 80,000 attending fans and a whole lot more garlrage than Clean Vibes had ever seerbefore. "At that point u'e had pretty much perfected it," said Heart who stopped managing Clean Vibes after that point. Clean Vibes was first conceived right here at L,INH lvith a fundraiser for the Cornmunity Environmental Outreach Project or C.E.O.P.in 1995. That year C.E.O.P.put on a multi-perfolnlance concert to raise moncv for studerrt projects in their organiztrtion and contracted Great Northeast Productions to bring Phish, The Indigo Girls" and -Bltres taveler to Ll.\H. C.E.O.P. not only had a successfulshow" but also successfullycleaned up after it, lccycling much of the w-asteand catching the al1ention of Creat Northeast Productions. Brjan Heart, the fbunder of the Student Environmental Action Coalition (SEAC), was one of the students involved in the clean up of that concert. He along u.ith other students became the foundels of Clean Vibes when thev were asked by Great North East Productions to clean up for Phish's three dav concert, The Great Went in 1.997 at Loring Air Force base in Lirnestone, Maine. "Four of us from UNH were the ones responsible for Thc Great Went. We lealned at lot on how to do it at that show, but it u,-asharrl," said lleart. After this show they n'ere asked back again by Anna Borofsky, the present co-o\rner of Clean Vibes said that this show took twelve davs to clean up with 20 to 60 people working at all times. "At Big Cvpressthere N'ereabout 100 tons of recl'61i1* and 300 tons of trash," said Borofsky n'ho after that yeal took over the management of Clean Vibes along with friend and co-worker Evangelyn Morse. fip until this point, Clean Vibes had been under the budget of Great North East Productions, but irr the year 2000, after Phish's NYll concert. Clean Vibes broke off to become its own companv. Now they contract with other production companies to do rlanagement at rnulti-da1',multi-band festivals. "We started as a 'deal with the mess' organization... Evangelvn and I evolved it into something much more education based," said Bolofsk\'. "Our big thing is to not be the trash companl', but to make people at shows aware of the mess that they're capable of making." Clean Vibes instills their less-messideology through several different approaches to the fans. The--vtry to dissuade fans from making a mess in the first place by greeting them as they come into the concert and talking to them about rec1,cling. They make their presenceknor''n by handing out bags for trash or recycling and having several recvcling stations placed around the grounds. They try to coax them into recycling by offering free tickets to up-coming shows or merchandise to a fan s'ho brings back a lull bag of garbage or recvclablesto a Clean Vibes station. Still. despite all their efforts" and even the efforts of man.v of the fans, there is always a mess to clean up after the show. Borofskv said that lrom 20 percent to 60 percent of all waste found is recvclable containels like cans and slass or plastic bottles. They can usually divert 40 percent of all the waste to recycling the other 60 percent ends up in landfills. "It's disturbing when you seehorv' much people leave behind, " said Morse. "People leave evervthing: tents and clothing, food. We trv our best to go through and salvage everything we can. We try to donate to Coodn'ill and find a good home for u,-hateverfood is left from venders...." The work is not eas\: Picking up garbage for tens of thousands of people js not necessarilvenjovable. But" as Nlandy Balich, a no$,rpaid ernplo,vceof Clean \ribes, says, it can be a good time "It's fun...There are some really good benefits like vou get into shows for free, you get fed, you get to meet bands sometimes, and if vou find stuff vou get to keep it," said Balich. "It's a lot of physical work, but fClean Vibes] is so needed. It's getting bigger and people are getting better about their trash. " Dave Pine, Balich's friend and co-worker at Clean Vibes, feels that their servicescan also provide a chance for people to understand garbage on a personal level. "It's something that everyone should have to do in their life so they can get an idea of just hou' much trash people pro- duce ...Before I never really thought about where nty r''aste went. An individual produces a lot of trash...," said Pine. "It's all about awareness,"said Morse" echoing Pine's sentiment. "We want people to go home and reallv think about where their trash goes.We want people to really think about their trash becausepeople have no ideal " With a grand total of 16 events as its own companv and 11 this past summer alone, Clean Vibes has begun to make an impression on the concert world. Vith an1'rvherefrom three to 10 full time employeesand 10 to 50 volunteers depending on the size of the show, there is more than enough involvement to continue working the festival summer scene and hopefullv expand to a full1, national, even global, level. Both Morse and Bolofsky feel that there is a lot of room for growth within Clean Vibes. "I think it has the potential to be nation wide if not international. Right now there's nobody else doing this in a cohesiveway," said Morse. "It has the potential to go far. It's a really good thing, iust on the environmental standpoint of it. It's also good for the production companies, it makes them look good." Borofsky feels that there is room for expansion geographically as well as musicallv" reaching beyond the jam band sceneand into other realms of music, // "We've been pretty successfulat havpresencern ing a presence in tnat that scene...lllt1 scene...but,we we v ng definitelv want to srow to cover other markets," said Borofskv With the motto "Keep the sceneclean", Clean Vibes has managed to effectively bring the idea of recvcling s,-asteat concerts into lealitt'. "\I,'e drove it into everyone's head that not onl1, at festivals should .voupick up after yourself and recycle, but in every aspect of your life," said Pine. In this sense,Clean Vibes hopes to send a messagethat reacheswell beyond the concert gates and into the lives of each of the fans. Morse understands that people know about recvcling but don't ah'ays do it because they think it's difficult or confusing. She hopes that Clean Vibes, in its own little way can change that manner of thinking. "One of our missions at Clean Vibes is to show people how easy it is to do the right thing. Then they feel good about it, and themselves."