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Containers for Change QLD
เข้าร่วมเมื่อ 26 ก.ค. 2018
We aim to encourage Queenslanders to recycle more containers and help build even more pride in the places we live. Containers for Change shows that recycling can make a difference to the environment whilst also creating job opportunities and supporting local communities.
Change It Up | Leave no 10c empty behind
Pack a bag or box to take your containers home, you'll be saving them from landfill and saving cash at the same time. It's a win win!
มุมมอง: 54 397
วีดีโอ
Change It Up | Donate your 10c empties
มุมมอง 54K14 วันที่ผ่านมา
Why not pass on your empties to help someone else score a refund? There's heaps of ways to do your bit so make change today.
Change It Up | Add a 10c container bin at work
มุมมอง 1414 วันที่ผ่านมา
Help fund the social club, donate to a cause you care about or throw that pizza party! Cash in on 10c empties at your workplace.
Change It Up | Cheers to enjoying 10c refunds
มุมมอง 4614 วันที่ผ่านมา
For cash to splash on yourself, collect 10c empties and watch those refunds add up. Start collecting today.
Change It Up | Leave no 10c empty behind
มุมมอง 3514 วันที่ผ่านมา
Pack a bag or box to take your containers home, you'll be saving them from landfill and saving cash at the same time. It's a win win!
Change It Up | Donate your 10c empties
มุมมอง 6414 วันที่ผ่านมา
Why not pass on your empties to help someone else score a refund? There's heaps of ways to do your bit so make change today.
Change It Up | Add a 10c container bin at work
มุมมอง 5021 วันที่ผ่านมา
Help fund the social club, donate to a cause you care about or throw that pizza party! Cash in on 10c empties at your workplace.
Container Pass Challenge with the Brisbane Lions ALFW 2024
มุมมอง 282 หลายเดือนก่อน
Container Pass Challenge with the Brisbane Lions ALFW 2024
Partner Spotlight | Sea World Marine Park
มุมมอง 843 หลายเดือนก่อน
Partner Spotlight | Sea World Marine Park
The Change Makers | Selwyn Nutley - Central Queensland Pet Rescue
มุมมอง 6283 หลายเดือนก่อน
Meet change maker Selwyn, an 81-year-old powerhouse in Emerald making big change for his furry friends at CQ Pet Rescue. Supporting the over 1.8 million containers donated to the animal rescue through Containers for Change; Selywns efforts support much-needed food, vet bills and more.
Meet the Operator | Tiffany Myler-Tyler - Central Queensland Container Refund
มุมมอง 3093 หลายเดือนก่อน
Meet Tiffany, from Central Queensland Container Refund. A mother, business owner, avid participant in her community and environmental warrior, Tiffany has made an incredible impact through her Containers for Change depot in Rockhampton.
The Change Makers | Moreton Island Rural Fire Brigade
มุมมอง 4934 หลายเดือนก่อน
Meet Scott, local legend and the First Officer of the Moreton Island Rural Fire Brigade (MIRFB). Since 2021, the MIRFB has raised over $37,000 through container refunds, thanks to the support of local businesses and the wider Moreton Island community. These funds have been crucial in purchasing essential fire fighting equipment and supplies for the brigade.
Partnership Launch | Sea World Foundation
มุมมอง 3935 หลายเดือนก่อน
Partnership Launch | Sea World Foundation
Meet the Operator | Sara Payne - Caboolture Container Recycling
มุมมอง 5896 หลายเดือนก่อน
Meet Sara Payne from Caboolture Container Recycling, who’s family has been a part of the recycling industry for over 40 years. Sara has been an operator with Containers for Change since scheme launch and has been supporting her local community for many years.
Containers for Change - Schools Program
มุมมอง 7176 หลายเดือนก่อน
Containers for Change - Schools Program
Meet the Operator | Ajay Dharam - Strong Street Recyclers
มุมมอง 4658 หลายเดือนก่อน
Meet the Operator | Ajay Dharam - Strong Street Recyclers
Knock Down Challenge with the Queensland Firebirds 2024
มุมมอง 668 หลายเดือนก่อน
Knock Down Challenge with the Queensland Firebirds 2024
The Change Makers | Renae McBrien - Queensland Children's Hospital 15sec
มุมมอง 94K9 หลายเดือนก่อน
The Change Makers | Renae McBrien - Queensland Children's Hospital 15sec
The Change Makers | David Sear, The Kayak Recycler 15sec
มุมมอง 691K9 หลายเดือนก่อน
The Change Makers | David Sear, The Kayak Recycler 15sec
Container Pass Challenge with the Brisbane Lions 2024
มุมมอง 629 หลายเดือนก่อน
Container Pass Challenge with the Brisbane Lions 2024
The Change Makers | Renae McBrien - Queensland Children's Hospital
มุมมอง 6739 หลายเดือนก่อน
The Change Makers | Renae McBrien - Queensland Children's Hospital
Meet the Recycler | Martogg Industries
มุมมอง 9769 หลายเดือนก่อน
Meet the Recycler | Martogg Industries
Meet the Operator | Tanya O'Shea - Impact Community Services
มุมมอง 21110 หลายเดือนก่อน
Meet the Operator | Tanya O'Shea - Impact Community Services
Containers for Change app - tap to make change
มุมมอง 6010 หลายเดือนก่อน
Containers for Change app - tap to make change
Containers for Change App - tap to make change
มุมมอง 6810 หลายเดือนก่อน
Containers for Change App - tap to make change
Great to see all familiar faces
This seems a little narcissistic.
Wonderful! Well done. Moreton island is stunning :)
Bless your souls. We need more people in the world like you blokes. Keep up the great work & please let me know if there is anything I can do to help or promote your cause ❤
You are amazing Selwyn! A true inspiration 🤗
Congratulations Selwyn. You are amazing!
So much pride in her work 🥹
20 000 a week!!!
Great place to recycle containers. Well done guys
Amazing
Wow love the video on this. Thank you for all you do your work so amazing.❤
🙏❤️💯🙌
I really like insider videos like this 👍
Wow Amazing Thank you for all that is brilliantly done from empty containers to something new. I salute u. 👌 👍
LOVE IT
Wow, if you drank one bottle of wine or spirits every single week for one year, you would make $5.20 in returns. Amazing
P r o m o S M 😆
God bless you, buddy. Thanks for taking care of the community ❤️
That is really good to see this program start up. Big ESO for everyone who is involved. Bless you 🙏
Miranda is so cute 😊
This clip still doesnt explain the difference in each refund point. All it does is list them 😑
Hi Lucy, you can read more about our different refund point types here: www.containersforchange.com.au/qld/5-ways-cash-your-containers
we don't need a tutorial we need a standardised approach, in brisbane qld i've gone to two (and i heard there's 3) types of recycling container/depot options 1. is a computerised self serve unman machine 2. a TERRIBLE scan/print sticker you put on bags (and they need to be DURABLE bags) or you can waste money and buy special bags with preprinted codes on them breaking the point of earning money, I have to waste $10 just for 10c from cans?? 3. i can't remember what this option is. Why can't you just make them all computerised??
Hi, thanks for your comment. We have lots of different return methods to suit the different ways that people return their containers including full-service depots, bag drops, reverse vending machines and also a home collection service. Take a look at our different return methods in this article www.containersforchange.com.au/qld/5-ways-cash-your-containers and take our handy quiz to find your perfect match! The Containers for Change scheme has created over 800 jobs in Queensland including creating employment opportunities for people of different abilities which we’re pretty proud of!
Annoying advert overplayed on podcasts.
Steely Dan ❤️😍❤️
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Containers For Change
Wow
First of all I think this is a great thing to be set up & doing, but...........It's a pity the scheme wasn't a bit more genuine. I often clean up the side of roads & I get good clean containers, but I also get grubby old ones. The Container For Change depots don't want to know about the old ones saying they won't get paid for them??? I thought the system was supposed to be about cleaning up the environment physically as much as getting as many recyclables returned for reuse??? I find it very disingenuous that older containers aren't taken. The scheme is also ripe for corruption with the hand in points able to easily short change people that don't count their own containers before handing them in & depots that just under pay you because of so called unreturnable containers as I've found out by experience. They only have to snip a little off each customer for it to add up to a decent amount per month???? I'd also like to know where the left over money is going from the balance of containers that aren't returned, that is collected/paid for by the consumer on each container, who keeps that???? Seems to me that someone is keeping the balance & I'm finding it hard to find info on this???
Thanks for the comment @yellowscott! Happy to answer your questions. 😊 Our refund point operators get paid for every container they count, which means they’re unlikely to purposely miscount your containers. Of course, they’re not immune from human error, so if you ever believe you’ve been short changed, please let the refund point know or get in touch with us and we’d be happy to help! Those businesses and the scheme are governed by legislation which outlines which containers are eligible for a 10 cent refund. Some aren’t, including containers sold before the scheme launched in 2018, which is why operators aren’t legally allowed to pay a refund on those containers. This also results in ‘short payments’ as some customers try to return ineligible containers as they’re not aware. Any unclaimed refund goes into scheme administration costs such as payments to refund point operators, logistics providers, processors and material recover facilities. We hope this has helped but if you’d like to chat more, feel free to email us at enquiries@containersforchange.com.au
First of all I think this is a great thing to be set up & doing, but...........It's a pity the scheme wasn't a bit more genuine. I often clean up the side of roads & I get good clean containers, but I also get grubby old ones. The Container For Change depots don't want to know about the old ones saying they won't get paid for them??? I thought the system was supposed to be about cleaning up the environment physically as much as getting as many recyclables returned for reuse??? I find it very disingenuous that older containers aren't taken. The scheme is also ripe for corruption with the hand in points able to easily short change people that don't count their own containers before handing them in & depots that just under pay you because of so called unreturnable containers as I've found out by experience. They only have to snip a little off each customer for it to add up to a decent amount per month???? I'd also like to know where the left over money is going from the balance of containers that aren't returned, that is collected/paid for by the consumer on each container, who keeps that???? Seems to me that someone is keeping the balance & I'm finding it hard to find info on this???
Thanks for the comment @yellowscott! Happy to answer your questions. 😊 Our refund point operators get paid for every container they count, which means they’re unlikely to purposely miscount your containers. Of course, they’re not immune from human error, so if you ever believe you’ve been short changed, please let the refund point know or get in touch with us and we’d be happy to help! Those businesses and the scheme are governed by legislation which outlines which containers are eligible for a 10 cent refund. Some aren’t, including containers sold before the scheme launched in 2018, which is why operators aren’t legally allowed to pay a refund on those containers. This also results in ‘short payments’ as some customers try to return ineligible containers as they’re not aware. Any unclaimed refund goes into scheme administration costs such as payments to refund point operators, logistics providers, processors and material recover facilities. We hope this has helped but if you’d like to chat more, feel free to email us at enquiries@containersforchange.com.au
First of all I think this is a great thing to be set up & doing, but...........It's a pity the scheme wasn't a bit more genuine. I often clean up the side of roads & I get good clean containers, but I also get grubby old ones. The Container For Change depots don't want to know about the old ones saying they won't get paid for them??? I thought the system was supposed to be about cleaning up the environment physically as much as getting as many recyclables returned for reuse??? I find it very disingenuous that older containers aren't taken. The scheme is also ripe for corruption with the hand in points able to easily short change people that don't count their own containers before handing them in & depots that just under pay you because of so called unreturnable containers as I've found out by experience. They only have to snip a little off each customer for it to add up to a decent amount per month???? I'd also like to know where the left over money is going from the balance of containers that aren't returned, that is collected/paid for by the consumer on each container, who keeps that???? Seems to me that someone is keeping the balance & I'm finding it hard to find info on this???
Thanks for the comment @yellowscott! Happy to answer your questions. 😊 Our refund point operators get paid for every container they count, which means they’re unlikely to purposely miscount your containers. Of course, they’re not immune from human error, so if you ever believe you’ve been short changed, please let the refund point know or get in touch with us and we’d be happy to help! Those businesses and the scheme are governed by legislation which outlines which containers are eligible for a 10 cent refund. Some aren’t, including containers sold before the scheme launched in 2018, which is why operators aren’t legally allowed to pay a refund on those containers. This also results in ‘short payments’ as some customers try to return ineligible containers as they’re not aware. Any unclaimed refund goes into scheme administration costs such as payments to refund point operators, logistics providers, processors and material recover facilities. We hope this has helped but if you’d like to chat more, feel free to email us at enquiries@containersforchange.com.au
First of all I think this is a great thing to be set up & doing, but...........It's a pity the scheme wasn't a bit more genuine. I often clean up the side of roads & I get good clean containers, but I also get grubby old ones. The Container For Change depots don't want to know about the old ones saying they won't get paid for them??? I thought the system was supposed to be about cleaning up the environment physically as much as getting as many recyclables returned for reuse??? I find it very disingenuous that older containers aren't taken. The scheme is also ripe for corruption with the hand in points able to easily short change people that don't count their own containers before handing them in & depots that just under pay you because of so called unreturnable containers as I've found out by experience. They only have to snip a little off each customer for it to add up to a decent amount per month???? I'd also like to know where the left over money is going from the balance of containers that aren't returned, that is collected/paid for by the consumer on each container, who keeps that???? Seems to me that someone is keeping the balance & I'm finding it hard to find info on this???
Thanks for the comment @yellowscott! Happy to answer your questions. 😊 Our refund point operators get paid for every container they count, which means they’re unlikely to purposely miscount your containers. Of course, they’re not immune from human error, so if you ever believe you’ve been short changed, please let the refund point know or get in touch with us and we’d be happy to help! Those businesses and the scheme are governed by legislation which outlines which containers are eligible for a 10 cent refund. Some aren’t, including containers sold before the scheme launched in 2018, which is why operators aren’t legally allowed to pay a refund on those containers. This also results in ‘short payments’ as some customers try to return ineligible containers as they’re not aware. Any unclaimed refund goes into scheme administration costs such as payments to refund point operators, logistics providers, processors and material recover facilities. We hope this has helped but if you’d like to chat more, feel free to email us at enquiries@containersforchange.com.au
First of all I think this is a great thing to be set up & doing, but...........It's a pity the scheme wasn't a bit more genuine. I often clean up the side of roads & I get good clean containers, but I also get grubby old ones. The Container For Change depots don't want to know about the old ones saying they won't get paid for them??? I thought the system was supposed to be about cleaning up the environment physically as much as getting as many recyclables returned for reuse??? I find it very disingenuous that older containers aren't taken. The scheme is also ripe for corruption with the hand in points able to easily short change people that don't count their own containers before handing them in & depots that just under pay you because of so called unreturnable containers as I've found out by experience. They only have to snip a little off each customer for it to add up to a decent amount per month???? I'd also like to know where the left over money is going from the balance of containers that aren't returned, that is collected/paid for by the consumer on each container, who keeps that???? Seems to me that someone is keeping the balance & I'm finding it hard to find info on this???
Thanks for the comment @yellowscott! Happy to answer your questions. 😊 Our refund point operators get paid for every container they count, which means they’re unlikely to purposely miscount your containers. Of course, they’re not immune from human error, so if you ever believe you’ve been short changed, please let the refund point know or get in touch with us and we’d be happy to help! Those businesses and the scheme are governed by legislation which outlines which containers are eligible for a 10 cent refund. Some aren’t, including containers sold before the scheme launched in 2018, which is why operators aren’t legally allowed to pay a refund on those containers. This also results in ‘short payments’ as some customers try to return ineligible containers as they’re not aware. Any unclaimed refund goes into scheme administration costs such as payments to refund point operators, logistics providers, processors and material recover facilities. We hope this has helped but if you’d like to chat more, feel free to email us at enquiries@containersforchange.com.au 😊
First of all I think this is a great thing to be set up & doing, but...........It's a pity the scheme wasn't a bit more genuine. I often clean up the side of roads & I get good clean containers, but I also get grubby old ones. The Container For Change depots don't want to know about the old ones saying they won't get paid for them??? I thought the system was supposed to be about cleaning up the environment physically as much as getting as many recyclables returned for reuse??? I find it very disingenuous that older containers aren't taken. The scheme is also ripe for corruption with the hand in points able to easily short change people that don't count their own containers before handing them in & depots that just under pay you because of so called unreturnable containers as I've found out by experience. They only have to snip a little off each customer for it to add up to a decent amount per month???? I'd also like to know where the left over money is going from the balance of containers that aren't returned, that is collected/paid for by the consumer on each container, who keeps that???? Seems to me that someone is keeping the balance & I'm finding it hard to find info on this???
Hey there, thanks for your comment. We've responded to the query you made on our other video and hope this helps 🙂
First of all I think this is a great thing to be set up & doing, but...........It's a pity the scheme wasn't a bit more genuine. I often clean up the side of roads & I get good clean containers, but I also get grubby old ones. The Container For Change depots don't want to know about the old ones saying they won't get paid for them??? I thought the system was supposed to be about cleaning up the environment physically as much as getting as many recyclables returned for reuse??? I find it very disingenuous that older containers aren't taken. The scheme is also ripe for corruption with the hand in points able to easily short change people that don't count their own containers before handing them in & depots that just under pay you because of so called unreturnable containers as I've found out by experience. They only have to snip a little off each customer for it to add up to a decent amount per month???? I'd also like to know where the left over money is going from the balance of containers that aren't returned, that is collected/paid for by the consumer on each container, who keeps that???? Seems to me that someone is keeping the balance & I'm finding it hard to find info on this???
Hi @yellowscott. Thanks for your questions and apologies for the delay in getting back to you. Any unclaimed refund goes into scheme administration costs such as payments to refund point operators, logistics providers, processors and material recovery facilities. If you'd like to find out more, feel free to email us at enquiries@containersforchange.com.au
Where does the unredeemed deposit money go?
We won't get an answer no doubt???
Hi there, thanks for your comment and apologies for the delay in getting back to you. Any unclaimed refund goes into scheme administration costs such as payments to refund point operators, logistics providers, processors and material recovery facilities. If you'd like to find out more, feel free to email us at enquiries@containersforchange.com.au 😊
Where does the unredeemed money go?
Where does the unredeemed money go?
Where does the unredeemed money go?
Where does the unredeemed money go?
I'd like to know this as well. It's hard to find info on this. The retailers that sell the drinks that fought so hard & long against these scheme's coming in???
Hi, thanks for your comment! Any unclaimed refund goes into scheme administration costs such as payments to refund point operators, logistics providers, processors and material recovery facilities. If you'd like to find out more, feel free to email us at enquiries@containersforchange.com.au 😊
👍🏾 old tribal link making changes aye....too deadly bro.
Keep it up..Cheers
Are scrunched bottles eligible? Or should the bottles remain in shape?
I’ve been doing this scheme since April and I’ve gotten back $100 so far