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The Bellmore Lions
and Kiwanis groups support many local endeavors,
from scholarships for local students, to sending
disadvantaged children to camp, as well as
supporting a local food pantry, building ramps for
handicapped access, purchasing special viewers for
the blind and other causes.
Steps to reduce
carbon footprint
As for the greening
of the festival this year, Meyerowitz said, "Not
only are we helping the community, but we are
helping the environment." At the fair, the Bellmore
Kiwanis and Lions clubs raffled off a Smart Car, the
fuel efficient, energy miser "microcar," to call
attention to their initiative, and put in place
several other eco-friendly measures.
They began by
initiating green practices at all their events this
year. At the festival, the utensils, cups and plates
used by the Kiwanis and Lions to serve their
signature strawberry drinks and other treats were
biodegradable, as were the materials used by major
Bellmore food vendor sponsors, A Taste of Home
Bakery and Tommy's Village Pizza.
Also, the trash -- a
"couple of dumpsters' worth" of refuse, according to
Andrew Meyerowitz's brother and Kiwanis vice
president Seth Meyerowitz -- that the thousands of
fairgoers left behind was composted.
The
new "Green Expo"
Also underscoring the
festival's new environmentally friendly focus, Long
Island green businesses served as festival sponsors,
creating an interesting and educational Green Expo
area at the festival this year.
"The businesses that
were part of this area have shown that they are
dedicated to reducing the carbon footprint of their
business as well as the clients they serve," Seth
Meyerowitz said.
The festival's Green Expo
Title sponsor was East Meadow-based
Alure Home Improvement,
a leading home remodeling company and partner in the
"Green Levittown" initiative. The company provides
home performance energy audits and other innovative
green services.
"We offer the first
green kitchen with ice stone countertops, made of
cement and recycled glass," explained marketing
spokeswoman Lisa Barone. The company also offered
information about a variety of other energy
efficiency services they provide, including Energy
Star product recommendations and Owens-Corning
insulation products.
Another sponsor,
Freeport-based Chief Equipment, Inc. created a bit
of a stir with its battery powered "Auto mower," a
lawn mower that moved across a side area of the fair
grounds on its own. Two models were demonstrated,
recharged automatically at either a plugged in
electric base station or through a solar panel on
top.
At their exhibit,
representatives from the solar energy green sponsor
Bellmore/Wantagh-based Built Well Solar Corp.
answered fairgoers' questions about solar-electric,
solar hot water and solar pool heating systems for
homes and businesses, and distributed free
sun-yellow, biodegradable balloons. "Being that this
is my hometown, and I went to Jerusalem Avenue
School right here when it was still a junior high, I
was proud to be a sponsor," said Built Well Solar's
founder/owner Dan Sabia. "And we were happy to see a
thousand smiles on the faces of the little kids we
gave balloons out to." Another sponsor, Island
Park-based Empower CES offered information about
solar-electric systems.
Another "green"
sponsor was Farmingdale-based Renewal By Andersen, a
division of Andersen Windows, the only replacement
window manufacturer to receive Green Seal
Certification for Environmental Stewardship. Company
representatives were on hand to explain the
energy-saving benefits of its replacement windows,
which are manufactured with minimal environmental
impact. Melville-based Infinity Windows of Long
Island, which offers energy efficient replacement
windows and doors, was another sponsor at the
festival.
"This is what our
clubs are all about," Bellmore Kiwanis Club
president John Monks said, "improving the
communities that we live in and helping the members
of those communities."
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