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Our online actions area provides a place to learn about issues affecting women and girls, exchange opinions, facts and stories and find practical ways to make a difference.
Poverty is the primary focus of our online activism because women are so heavily affected by it. Help us build a better world for women by taking part in our latest action:
[1]In the U.S., more than HALF A BILLION cell phones are ready for recycling, and more than 11 MILLION phones are added to that total each month!
Good Deed Foundation and The Women’s Funding Network are recycling cell phones to:
- Support programs that lift women and families out of poverty;
- Help provide lasting solutions to climate change, a major contributor to poverty worldwide; and
- Provide 911 emergency phones for senior citizens and people at risk.
Join us! Your effort to recycle cell phones makes all of the difference. Request an envelope for yourself or a box for your entire office, school or place of worship [1]. Once your box is filled, call FedEx at 1-800-Go FedEx and they will pick it up – all postage paid!
- Roughly 60 percent of used cell phones sent in can be refurbished and resold. These cell phones generate the greatest amount of revenue to help lift women and families out of poverty and provide lasting solutions to climate change.
- Another portion of the recycled phones are programmed to dial only 911 and donated to domestic violence survivors, elders and low-income people at risk for use in emergencies.
- The remaining cell phones are recycled according to EPA standards.
- A staggering 70% of people in poverty globally are women and children.
- In the United States alone, 14.6 million women and nearly 13 million children are living below the poverty line – equal to the combined populations of Iowa, Indiana and Wisconsin.
- Recycling just one million cell phones reduces greenhouse gas emissions equal to taking 1,368 cars off the road for a year.
Recycling cell phones is simple and fun. To get started, request an envelope or box [1]. For more information about the cell phone recycling program, click here [2].
Spread the word! Tell a friend [3] about cell phone recycling!
Links:
[1] http://www.surveymonkey.com/s.aspx?sm=JztkGOHqjEqtC8Ep_2fQ3m_2fw_3d_3d
[2] http://www.wfnet.org/sites/wfn.civicactions.net/files//Cellphone_1pager_0.pdf
[3] http://www.freetellafriend.com/tell/?u=3321