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  • Green Tips 

    Maintain your central air conditioner by cleaning the outside compressor with a garden hose. (Be sure to shut off power at the fuse or breaker first). Keep plants at least one foot away from unit for adequate airflow.

    Reflective window film can help reduce heat gain during the summer, and it will keep furniture and carpets from fading.

    Set the water heater temperature at 120-degrees, about halfway between low and medium. This will help save energy and prevent scalding while keeping unhealthy bacteria from growing.

    Plant during the spring or fall when the watering requirements are lower.

    Divide your watering cycle into shorter periods to reduce runoff and allow for better absorption every time you water.

    Adjust your lawn mower to a higher setting. Longer grass shades root systems and holds soil moisture better than a closely clipped lawn.

    Replace an incandescent outdoor light or high-intensity floodlight with a high-pressure sodium fixture. The bulbs will last longer, use less energy, and handle temperature extremes better.

    Install a low-flow showerhead. They're inexpensive, easy to install, and can save your family more than 500-gallons a week.

    Don't buy recreational water toys that require a constant flow of water.

    Use a hose nozzle and turn off the water while you wash your car and save more than 100-gallons.

    Unplug any electrical device that's not being used. Many appliances, especially computers, televisions and VCRs draw power even when turned off.

    Place humidifiers and dehumidifiers away from walls and bulky furniture. These appliances work best when air circulates freely around them.

    Check your sprinkler system frequently and adjust sprinklers so only your lawn is watered and not the house, sidewalk, or street.

    Minimize evaporation by watering during the early morning hours, when temperatures are cooler and winds are lighter.

    Install a programmable thermostat. If you use it to set back the temperature by 10-degrees for eight hours every night, you'll lower your heating bills by 10-percent. A $50 digital thermostat can pay for itself in energy savings in less than a year.

    Plug the bathtub before turning the water on, then adjust the temperature as the tub fills up.

    Use ceiling fans to help circulate air throughout the house, and make sure your attic is properly ventilated. A ceiling fan should run clockwise during the summer, and counter-clockwise during the winter.


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  • Green Initiative - Left 240X60 
  • KARK 4 Goes Green 
    Reported by: Courtney Collins, KARK 4 News

    Thursday, Jan 10, 2008 @03:27pm CST

         "Going green" seems to be the hot phrase these days, and because we here at KARK 4 believe in that message, we've decided to do something about it.

         Many people are spreading the word about protecting the planet by being environmentally friendly. And because KARK wants to help out, over the course of the next year we're going to bring you stories about the simple things we can all do to make a difference.

         These days it seems everything is tinged green.

         Schools are being built to specific environmental standards. Weddings are being thrown with mother earth in mind. Having an environmentally friendly lifestyle no longer means just putting up solar panels or collecting rain water. Your neighborhood hardware store is starting to look more like NASA than a nut and bolt shop. And reduce, reuse and recycle is really starting to mean something.

         Anyone who works at a television station can tell you, putting on several newscasts a day takes a lot of paper.

         "We talked about, when we actually added up the amount of paper, we were embarrassed,” says Rick Rogola.

         We along with several other television stations are all part of the Nexstar Broadcasting Group. We felt that if we were to deliver the green message, we should practice what we preach.

         Our first step was to initiate an active recycling program. Instead of tossing newspapers, scripts and press releases in the trash, they have a new home in the recycling bin.

         Television stations do use a lot of paper, but we aren't alone. Americans use 50 million tons of paper annually. That's the equivalent of 850 million trees.

         Nexstar stations are also looking to re-use aluminum.

         "We run in cycles where we've done things one way for so long that we don't challenge ourselves enough to say what's the right thing to do? And now people ask themselves what's the green thing to do,” Rogola says.

         Conserving energy is also part of the process. Which means at the end of the day, computers should be shut-down, and lights switched off.

         We think that if we all do the little things, we can make a big difference. Hopefully we'll be able to leave this planet a better place for future generations.
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