Recycling World Mourns Death of Pat Franklin

Date: 17 Oct 2012 | posted in: Waste to Wealth | 0 Facebooktwitterredditmail

A tribute page for Pat Franklin can be found on the Container Recycling Institute website.

Reposted from Waste & Recycling News

October 16, 2012
By Waste & Recycling News Staff

Pat Franklin, founder of the Container Recycling Institute, has died.

According to an email from lifelong friend and the former CRI research director Jenny Gitlitz, Franklin died Sunday, a day after she was struck by a pickup truck while crossing the street near a farmer’s market in Oakland, Md. Franklin was preparing to make a drop-off at a recycling center.

“In a fitting final act of recycling, her organs were donated to give others life,” wrote Gitlitz. “She did not suffer.”

Franklin started the Container Recycling Institute in her basement in 1991 and was recognized as one of the preeminent experts on container recycling and bottle bills.

“[She] grew CRI from a shoestring operation to an internationally recognized source of original information and analysis on beverage container recycling,” wrote Gitlitz. “Pat was a shining light in the recycling movement.”

Franklin promoted bottle-bill legislation, wrote industry reports, secured grants, spoke at recycling events, helped organize bottle bill summits and served as a spokeswoman for recycling in literally hundreds of interviews. She was instrumental in the passage of the Hawaii bottle bill and the expansion of bottle bills in Oregon, Connecticut and New York.

She also wrote at least a half dozen guest columns for Waste & Recycling News.

“Pat was a jack-of-all-trades at CRI,” wrote Gitlitz in her email. “Yes, she could speak to reporters and members of Congress, debate beverage industry lobbyists, and secure prestigious grants, but she also stuffed envelopes late into the night, shlepped boxes to and from Kinko’s, prepared food for board meetings, hosted out-of-town colleagues in her own home, found ingenious ways to keep old computer equipment going, and kept her cats — and sometimes her husband — fed. When money was tight, she refused to take a paycheck so that her staff could be paid.”

Franklin retired as executive director in 2007, but remained with CRI as a consultant and continue to advocate for container recycling.

Last month, Franklin, 71, was the oldest participant the 2012 SavageMan Triathlon, according to Gitlitz. “She finished 11 minutes faster than she did in 2011.”

A funeral is planned for Friday in Fall Church, Va.

Contributions in Pat Franklin’s memory can be made to the Joanna M. Nicolay Melanoma Foundation, Oakland, Md.; to the Container Recycling Institute, Culver City, CA; and to the Flying Deer Nature Center, New Lebanon, NY.

NOTICE: In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, this material is distributed without profit for research and educational purposes.

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