Make
Use attributes for filter ! | |
Founders | Dale Dougherty |
---|---|
First issue date | January 2005 |
Category | Do it yourself |
Country | United States |
Based in | San Francisco |
Date of Reg. | |
Date of Upd. | |
ID | 1190873 |
About Make
Make: was an American bimonthly magazine published by Maker Media which focused on do it yourself and/or DIWO projects involving computers, electronics, robotics, metalworking, woodworking and other disciplines.
Charlie's Bar, Fermanagh, 'blown away' by Christmas ad response
... The two-minute video - which cost £700 to Make - shows a bereaved man - played by Fermanagh local Martin McManus, in a quiet moment of reflection while laying flowers in memory of a loved one...
David Cameron returns: What is going on?
... And what do those post-Brexit referendum Conservatives - many elected in 2019 - Make of David Cameron s return? Strategic blunder For a good number, not a lot...
Tom Emmer drops out of Speaker race before vote
... Now the same has happened to Mr Emmer, who earlier survived successive rounds of voting by Republican lawMakers that whittled down eight candidates in this latest round one by one...
Tom Emmer: Republicans pick third nominee for House Speaker
... On Tuesday, successive rounds of voting by Republican lawMakers whittled down the candidates one by one...
Israeli Arabs arrested over Gaza social media posts
... Israeli Arabs - many of whom prefer to be called Palestinian citizens of Israel - Make up a fifth of the country s population...
Recycling reforms see separate food waste bins for England
... The government says the new rules are designed to Make recycling simpler and to avoid people needing what it called an " excessive number of bins...
Campaigners call for more energy support for vulnerable households
... " These are people whose bills have become so unaffordable that they are having to Make the desperate choice nobody should have to Make - between heating and eating, " it said...
GB News apologises for Laurence Fox comments about female journalist
... And I think a lot of ministers bandy this about to - I m sorry - Make an enemy out of women...
Recycling reforms see separate food waste bins for England
By Jonah FisherBBC Environment Correspondent
Long-awaited plans to reform recycling in England have been announced by the government.
Most households will have a weekly food waste collection by early 2026 and there will now be a standardised list of items That councils Must recycle.
The government says the new rules are designed to Make recycling simpler and to avoid people needing what it called an " excessive number of bins. "
Critics called it " fiddling with a system That 's fundamentally broken".
" Simpler recycling will help us all recycle more easily, " environment secretary Therese Coffey said.
" Alongside weekly food waste collections, We Are ending the postcode lottery of what you can put in your bin so That wherever you live in the country, you will be able to recycle the same products With Confidence . "
England currently recycles about 44% of its household waste, a figure That has changed little since 2010. That 's compared to 57% in Wales, 48% in Northern Ireland and 42% in Scotland.
The new proposals state That English councils Must - with a few exceptions - Make a food waste collection every week by March 2026. That represents a change and a cost as at The Moment only about half of English councils collect food waste separately.
There was speculation earlier this year That these reforms would stipulate That different types of dry recycling would have to be collected separately from households. Last month Prime Minister Rishi Sunak even raised the Possibility - to some derision - That a " seven bin" policy was being considered and That he had stopped it.
Under the new plans, councils will continue to have the flexibility to choose whether to ask people to lump all their dry recycling together, or separate it for example into glass, paper or metal.
" Today's announcement That councils will be able to collect waste materials however they decide is a victory for Common Sense , " said Councillor Sarah Nelmes, environment spokesperson for The District Council's Network. " We can continue to rely on The Local solutions which have increased recycling rates. "
To Make recycling simpler, there is now a list of items which all councils will have to recycle. It includes things like aluminium foil, and several different types of plastic packaging.
" The government is fiddling with a system That 's fundamentally broken, " Nina Schrank from Greenpeace told Bbc News .
" The government needs to get serious and back measures to cut the amount of plastic packaging we produce as a country in the First Place . "
Related TopicsSource of news: bbc.com