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Nickel-deposit Cans Reach $200,000 for Small Town Youth

Treynor students are major recipients

Junior Optimist after sorting cans in the spring of 2021

Treynor youth are $200,000 richer and it came five cents at a time, with local people donating four million nickel cans and bottles.  

Little amounts do add up, with time and work.  In Iowa, they have a very popular beverage can and bottle redemption law called the “Bottle Bill”.  This law was enacted back in the late 1970’s as a litter control measure and early effort to encourage recycling.  Buyers of carbonated or alcoholic beverages pay an extra five-cents per container at the retail store when they buy the can or bottle.  Then they can take back that empty can/bottle to any retail store and get their five-cents back.  This five cents is their “deposit”, and is handled in the large scale by the beverage distributors statewide. 

Of course, no one messes with one can, they collect them until they have bags with hundreds of cans and take them back all at once for their refund.  In most small towns in Iowa, a group will ask local citizens to donate these bags of cans, and the group will cash them in and use the money for operations of Boy Scouts, or other youth groups.  Some communities have special projects such as fireworks displays they need funded. 

In the town of Treynor (population 1,000) parents were collecting nickel-deposit cans and bottles to send band students on a trip to the Fiesta Bowl Parade in 1998.  But after the trip, the collection effort stopped. 

Seeing the opportunity the Treynor Optimist Club decided that the generous people of Treynor may donate their beverage containers year-around, IF the money went to a variety of youth groups and projects.  In 1999, they set up their Optimist Can Kennel, which was just a 4’ by 8’ dog kennel that people could throw their cans and bottles into.  Being Optimists, they estimated that they could raise $200 per month.   Each month, a different group got the money.   The Optimists would help each youth group sort the donations into aluminum, plastic, or glass to go to a recycling redemption center, which is a business that handles this time of materials.  They sorted every two weeks. 

For years, this went on.  Sorting would usually take about one hour, so for two hours of work, the youth groups would eventually receive a few hundred dollars.  As a group activity, the youth were helping themselves, there was no door-to-door selling involved,  and the Optimist did all the accounting and financial management for free.  The Treynor Community embraced the idea.  More cans were donated and the monthly income grew.  The Kennel was enlarged to 8’ by 8’ by 6’ tall.  The monthly average income for the Can Kennel went up to $700 by 2020.  That is when the Covid Pandemic hit the United States.

Covid shut down the redemption business.  Although Iowa buyers still had to pay 5-cents per can, retailers and redemption centers were temporarily exempt from having to take them back, because of fear of Covid.  The stacks of sacks of cans and bottles grew in people’s garages.  No doubt, many people just threw these containers away because they had no place to take them to get their money back.

The Treynor Optimists had to make a choice, because they had no redemption center to take these cans either.  But being in rural Iowa, they did have one thing in their favor.  They had willing rural residents with barns and sheds out in the country.  If the bagged beverage containers, and boxed glass bottles could be stored until the redemption businesses reopened, then even bigger money could be made.  Youth groups had to come up with a place to store big bags of aluminum cans, plastic bottles, and boxes of glass bottles.  The Optimists would provide the transportation. 

During Covid, the consumption of beverages, and particularly beer and wine, soared.  The Can Kennel  was (and continues to be) filled every two weeks.  After the redemption centers reopened in spring 2021, the backlog was tremendous.  It took months before all the groups in Treynor could get their stored cans redeemed.  But by August, the last of the 2020 bags were delivered and the system caught up.  But now, people have seen how easy it is to just donate their redeemable containers.  They also see that their deposit money goes to help local youth.

After 22 years, sorting every two weeks, the Treynor Optimist Can Kennel has raised over $200,000 dollars and donated this back to the Treynor community youth programs.  For a detailed breakdown of who got the funds and how much, see  the website:  treynoroptimist.org 

How long will this last?  That depends on the future of the Bottle Bill in Iowa.  Big grocery corporations are lobbying strongly to change the law.  Some are currently collecting the deposit but refusing to give the deposit back when a consumer returns the can.

-Article written by John Klein, Optimist Member