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Rikki Landry's avatar

Rikki Landry

STARBUCKS

"To educate, engage, and empower partners to practice sustainable habits- one less piece of plastic at a time"

POINTS TOTAL

  • 0 TODAY
  • 0 THIS WEEK
  • 549 TOTAL

participant impact

  • UP TO
    1.0
    low-plastic meal
    consumed
  • UP TO
    6.0
    plastic items
    avoided
  • UP TO
    1.0
    plastic footprint
    calculated
  • UP TO
    1.0
    bag of litter
    collected
  • UP TO
    1.0
    advocacy action
    completed
  • UP TO
    1.0
    community event
    hosted or attended
  • UP TO
    32
    individuals
    recognized for sustainability
  • UP TO
    18
    ideas
    shared
  • UP TO
    193
    minutes
    spent learning

Rikki's actions

First Steps: Start with You

Track my plastic use for a day or a week

Awareness is the first step toward change. I’ll track how much plastic I use in a day (or week), paying attention to packaging, food containers, and single-use items. I’ll reflect on what surprised me most and what I could do differently.

COMPLETED 12
DAILY ACTIONS

First Steps: Start with You

Estimate My Plastic Consumption

Understanding my plastic footprint is a powerful first step toward making change. I will complete a short online plastic calculator, like the one from rePurpose Global, to estimate my annual plastic use and explore ways to reduce it.

COMPLETED
ONE-TIME ACTION

Level Up: Influence Friends and Family

Start a household challenge to reduce plastic

Change starts at home. I will create a fun challenge with my household — like using no single-use plastic for a day or swapping out a product — to make plastic reduction a shared goal.

UNCOMPLETED
ONE-TIME ACTION

Level Up: Influence Friends and Family

Prepare a low-plastic meal with a friend or family member

Reducing plastic can be easier — and more fun — when shared. I will plan and prepare a meal with friends or family that minimizes single-use packaging and plastic waste.

UNCOMPLETED
ONE-TIME ACTION

Level Up: Influence Friends and Family

Pack a low or no-plastic lunch and talk about it with others

Food packaging is a major source of plastic. I will pack a lunch with little or no plastic and use it as a conversation starter with coworkers, classmates, or friends to share tips and inspire change.

COMPLETED
ONE-TIME ACTION

Level Up: Influence Friends and Family

Catch microplastics in laundry before they spread

Washing synthetic fabrics releases tiny plastic fibers that end up in our waterways. I will install a washing machine filter or use a microplastic-catching device to capture microplastics before they leave my home — and I will share what I did and why with others to inspire more sustainable laundry habits.

UNCOMPLETED
ONE-TIME ACTION

Level Up: Influence Friends and Family

Celebrate someone else’s plastic-free effort

Positive reinforcement goes a long way in fostering sustainable change. I will celebrate someone’s effort to reduce plastic — whether big or small — by acknowledging their success in the feed or on social media and encouraging them to keep going.

COMPLETED 12
DAILY ACTIONS

Lead the Way: Shape Your Community

Teach or learn a skill to extend the life of a product I have

Learning or sharing repair skills can keep useful items in use and out of the landfill. I will teach or learn a skill to extend the life of a product — like sewing, electronic repair, or furniture restoration — and share what I did with my community, workplace, or group to encourage others to do the same.

UNCOMPLETED
ONE-TIME ACTION

Lead the Way: Shape Your Community

Recommend a documentary, podcast, or article about plastic to others

People are more likely to take action when someone they trust makes a recommendation. I will share a documentary, podcast, or article that helped me understand the impact of plastic to spark curiosity, conversation, and action in others.

COMPLETED 8
DAILY ACTIONS

First Steps: Start with You

Design my grocery routine for less plastic

Our grocery habits are one of the biggest sources of single-use plastic, from packaging on produce to plastic bags and containers. I will spend 20 minutes researching low-plastic shopping strategies and make a list of things to look for or do differently the next time I go to the store.

COMPLETED
ONE-TIME ACTION

First Steps: Start with You

Understand plastic labels

Those recycling numbers and symbols can be confusing. I will spend 5 minutes learning what different plastic labels mean, including what can and can’t be recycled, to make more informed choices when I shop.

COMPLETED 11
DAILY ACTIONS

Level Up: Influence Friends and Family

Give a small gift that helps someone reduce plastic (e.g., tote, bottle, soap bar)

Giving can be an act of change and inspiration. I will give a thoughtful, plastic-free or plastic-reducing gift — like a reusable bag, bottle, or bar soap — to someone in my life and share why I chose it.

UNCOMPLETED
ONE-TIME ACTION

Level Up: Influence Friends and Family

Visit a local recycling center, landfill, or transfer station

Seeing where waste goes can change how we think about what we throw away. I will visit a local facility to learn more about the waste stream in my community and share what I learn with others and in the feed.

UNCOMPLETED
ONE-TIME ACTION

Lead the Way: Shape Your Community

Share a favorite low-plastic product or tip on social media

Simple swaps or strategies can inspire others—especially when shared publicly. I will post about a favorite plastic-free product or habit on social media to help normalize sustainable choices and show others that small changes are doable and worth trying.

COMPLETED 7
DAILY ACTIONS

Lead the Way: Shape Your Community

Organize a plastic audit in my workplace or community group

Understanding what types of plastic show up most can inspire smarter solutions. I will organize or take part in a group plastic audit to track what’s being used and start a conversation about alternatives.

UNCOMPLETED
ONE-TIME ACTION

Lead the Way: Shape Your Community

Participate in or organize a community clean up

Plastic pollution is visible in many communities. I will take part in or organize a cleanup event to remove litter, raise awareness, and spark conversations about how plastic ends up in our environment.

COMPLETED
ONE-TIME ACTION

Participant Feed

  • REFLECTION QUESTION
    Lead the Way: Shape Your Community
    How does working with others to clean up your community make you feel? What kinds of plastic waste did you find the most, and what does that say about local habits or systems?

    Rikki Landry's avatar
    Rikki Landry 7/09/2025 11:23 AM
    • Adventurer 🏔
    We clean up a local park trail every month, the most common thing we find is water bottle lids and cigarettes. My state is part of a bottle/can deposit to support recycling (it's effective- 88% of bottles are returned through the bottle drop program!), but the lids frequently don't make it to the bottle drop location.
    The community always thanks us for cleaning up, which feels good, but all we are doing is making the trash go somewhere else. The world needs to reduce our demand of single use everything.

    • Linzi Lee-Blodgett's avatar
      Linzi Lee-Blodgett 7/10/2025 9:08 AM
      • TEAM CAPTAIN
      I love your reflection, Rikki. Totally true that we are just moving the trash to somewhere else when clean up, but it is also very important to take actions yourself. We do community clean up, too and have been thinking to make some posters and invite the community members to join next time :)

  • Rikki Landry's avatar
    Rikki Landry 7/09/2025 6:28 AM
    • Adventurer 🏔
    Spent three days traveling, with a teenager. Even with bringing our own cups for starbucks runs.... I underestimated the amount of drinks a teenager wants while on the road. I want her to have road trip memories of getting icees or milkshakes with her mama, but there has to be a better way than this pile of cups in the trash can.

  • Rikki Landry's avatar
    Rikki Landry 7/04/2025 4:46 PM
    • Adventurer 🏔
    I ate a zucchini from my garden with dinner tonight. More home grown vegetables will help me avoid plastic food packaging, especially salad ingredients!
  • REFLECTION QUESTION
    First Steps: Start with You
    What do you think the confusion around plastic labels says about our waste systems — and how could they be improved? What role do you think clear labeling should play in helping people make better choices — and who should be responsible for that?

    Rikki Landry's avatar
    Rikki Landry 7/03/2025 4:15 PM
    • Adventurer 🏔
    I spent one hour searching for a place to recycle #5 plastics. My best chance is to save them up and drive an hour north to the transfer site in a bigger city that accepts #5.
    Not only is it complicated to understand different plastic types, it's complicated to find where recycles anything other that 1 & 2.
  • REFLECTION QUESTION
    Level Up: Influence Friends and Family
    Which microplastics solution did you choose? Did you learn anything interesting or surprising while deciding what to purchase?

    Rikki Landry's avatar
    Rikki Landry 7/03/2025 12:35 PM
    • Adventurer 🏔
    I spent some time researching the options suggested here... Cora Ball did not have favorable reviews. Most said it was a waste of money, only to end up being thrown away- adding to plastic in landfill. Guppy bag had better reviews, but I don't see myself putting my clothes in a bag when I wash them. It's a chore to get them to the washer without the extra step of putting them in a bag. So now I'm on to searching for an external filter that catches the microplastics before the water leaves your house. That research is for another day. Any suggestions?
  • REFLECTION QUESTION
    First Steps: Start with You
    Did your estimated plastic footprint surprise you? How does it compare to the global average? After estimating your annual use, how did it feel to put a number on it? Did it inspire a sense of urgency, or something else?

    Rikki Landry's avatar
    Rikki Landry 7/03/2025 12:14 PM
    • Adventurer 🏔
    I felt very proud of my plastic usage being below average.. until I got to plastic food packaging. This will be my biggest journey. I'm very grateful for ecochallenge to spark the inspiration to change my grocery shopping habits. It may take me another year to figure out how to make a dent, but my first commitment is to bring paper bags instead of using plastic bags at the bulk bins at Winco.
  • REFLECTION QUESTION
    Lead the Way: Shape Your Community
    How do you choose which products or tips are worth sharing, and why do you think they matter?

    Rikki Landry's avatar
    Rikki Landry 7/02/2025 9:54 PM
    • Adventurer 🏔
    I was celebrating a customer who chose for here ware and shared how the small effort added up to 200 cups saved from landfill in my store last week. This sparked a conversation about home swaps that were easy, like shampoo bars and reusable totes. We discussed that we were both from the south (moved to PNW) and how sustainable life was not a concern in the south but it was nice to find other transplants that had the realization that there is a better way to treat the earth.

    • Victoria Martusheff's avatar
      Victoria Martusheff 7/03/2025 8:55 AM
      I love this Rikki! I'm celebrating you for taking time to connect with your customer on both your journeys in sustainability.
  • REFLECTION QUESTION
    First Steps: Start with You
    What patterns did you notice in your plastic use — and what would it take to shift one of them?

    Rikki Landry's avatar
    Rikki Landry 7/01/2025 4:52 PM
    • Adventurer 🏔
    So much food is wrapped in plastic packaging. It seems impossible to avoid. But I realize it just needs better planning. Today I bought a sandwich and a package of almonds, both could have been made ahead and avoided the individual wrapped plastic.

    • Lisa Brenskelle's avatar
      Lisa Brenskelle 7/01/2025 6:37 PM
      • TEAM CAPTAIN
      yes - advance planning helps. I find that I produce more waste when I have less control/ability to plan, such as on vacations.
  • REFLECTION QUESTION
    Level Up: Influence Friends and Family
    How did it feel to recognize someone else’s effort? What impact do you think your celebration had on them?

    Rikki Landry's avatar
    Rikki Landry 7/01/2025 4:42 PM
    • Adventurer 🏔
    I celebrated several of my partners for using reusables for 100% of their beverages last week. Seeing them bring in bottles so they can put their take home beverage in reusables too is very inspiring that small acts in the store can make a big impact in their habits outside of the store too.