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APRIL 21, 2008 (0 comments)
25th Street Fair going green
By Jerry Webber

It’s 25 years old. It’s big. It’s back. And it’s greener than ever.

The Encinitas Street Fair celebrates its 25th anniversary this year and it promises to provide food, fun and entertainment as usual — but this year it has an added focus on the environment and the community.

“It’s just like a big get-together,” said Dody Tucker, executive director of the Downtown Encinitas MainStreet Association. DEMA is the organization responsible for the Encinitas Street Fair.

“Everybody in town comes down here and they always run into somebody that they haven’t seen in a while,” Tucker said.

The fair will be held on Saturday, April 26th and Sunday, April 27th. The fair’s hours will be from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. running along Highway 101 between D and J street in downtown Encinitas.

According to Tucker, there will be about 450 vendors located down the center of Highway 101, and DEMA officials anticipate between 40,000 to 50,000 people a day at the fair depending on the weather.

The fair will have four stages providing entertainment. Local fire personnel will serve a pancake breakfast at the 7-11 on D Street and Highway 101 both mornings.

With all the music, the people, the food vendors and local bars and restaurants serving food, the sites, sounds and smells will be pretty familiar to people who have attended the fair in the past. But if you look close, you will see something new.

“Tell them to look for the recycling bins,” said Carris Rhodes, DEMA program assistant.

Rhodes’ focus is to make sure that the street fair is as successful as always, but this time around she wants it to be environmentally successful also.

“I think what we’re trying to do here is take a more proactive stance,” Rhodes said. “Rather than just saying that we have recycling, actually making sure that it gets done.”

In order to make sure that it gets done, DEMA has linked up with the Solana Center for Environmental Innovation. The Solana Center loaned DEMA 25 ClearSteam recycling containers for the fair and DEMA purchased five more to keep and use for this and future events.

The ClearStream containers use clear, plastic bags to deposit the recyclable materials in. The clarity reminds the user what materials they should be putting in, and provides a little bit of peer pressure because others can see what you left behind.

“We have tried a few other containers and this has worked best,” said Laura McIntire, the Solana Center Pollution Prevention Program manager.

“We’re hoping to bring this closer to a zero waste event,” McIntire said.

To help get the fair closer to a zero-waste event, DEMA will have 25 recycling bins spread along Highway 101. The bins will be mixed in with the nearly 100 trashcans that DEMA received on loan from EDCO Waste Collection and Recycling Co.

Five recycling bins will be dispersed in the beer garden. Another effort to limit waste
will be encouraging people to reuse their beer cups. According to DEMA, last year they sold nearly 3,000 beers and used almost as many beer cups.

“If people have a choice and they can see that this is something that is being integrated into a really large event it might carry over into something that they’re doing,” Rhodes said.

It is not just your environmental consciousness that they are trying to raise at this year’s fair. You can give to a good cause when you buy a beer.

The Crohn’s and Colitis Foundation will have at least 12 people bartending in the beer garden and donating their tips to the foundation.

“It’s a really good opportunity to get in front of a good audience and raise awareness,” said Jessica Johnson, endurance manager with the Crohn’s and Colitis Foundation.

The fair will combine community and environmental awareness in its efforts to support the Encinitas Preservation Foundation.

The Encinitas Preservation Foundation will have a booth at the fair in order to raise money to purchase two boat houses located on the 700 block of 3rd Street in Encinitas. These boat houses were built with recycled materials in 1929 by Miles M. Kellogg.

According to Tucker, the Preservation Foundation is already in the process of purchasing the boat houses from their current owners and will be raising money to help with completion of the purchase. Also, according to Tucker, efforts are being made to have the boat houses added to the national registry to have them designated as national landmarks.

DEMA offers a final request to lower the impact on the environment, the community, and traffic if you are coming to the fair.

“We like to encourage people to take the train if they can,” Tucker said.

The Coaster drops off on D Street just off of Coast Highway 101. Check the schedule to see if that works for you.

At the end of this month, the Encinitas Street Fair will offer up a unique combination of a good time festival atmosphere mixed with a broader awareness of the impact it can make on the greater community — and you are invited.

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