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Hannah Testa - Taking on the Plastics Crisis

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Hannah Testa Taking on the Plastics Crisis
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    Taking on the Plastics Crisis
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Taking on the Plastics Crisis: summary, description and annotation

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Taking on the Plastics Crisis delivers straightforward advise for getting involved in the global movement to eliminate single-use plastics. Booklist, Starred Review
Brief yet inspirational, this story will galvanize youth to use their voices for change.Kirkus Reviews
Taking on the Plastics Crisis is a sobering and inspiring read by a brilliant young change maker. Now is the time for all of us to come together to solve the plastic pollution crisis.Ed Begley Jr. (actor and environmental activist)
In this personal, moving essay, youth activist Hannah Testa shares with readers how she led a grassroots political campaign to successfully pass state legislation limiting single-use plastics and how she influenced global businesses to adopt more sustainable practices. Through her personal journey, readers can learn how they, too, can follow in Hannahs footsteps and lower their carbon footprint by simply refusing single-use plastics.

Pocket Change Collective is a series of small books with big ideas from todays leading activists and artists. In this installment, youth activist Hannah Testa, the founder of Hannah4Change, chronicles both her personal and political mission to save the Earths oceans by limiting single-use plastic products.

Hannah Testa: author's other books


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Id like to dedicate this book to my parents and my family and friends for their - photo 1
Id like to dedicate this book to my parents and my family and friends for their - photo 2
Id like to dedicate this book to my parents and my family and friends for their - photo 3

Id like to dedicate this book to my parents and my family and friends for their endless love and supportHT

PENGUIN WORKSHOP An Imprint of Penguin Random House LLC New York Penguin - photo 4

PENGUIN WORKSHOP An Imprint of Penguin Random House LLC New York Penguin - photo 5

PENGUIN WORKSHOP

An Imprint of Penguin Random House LLC, New York

Penguin supports copyright Copyright fuels creativity encourages diverse - photo 6

Penguin supports copyright. Copyright fuels creativity, encourages diverse voices, promotes free speech, and creates a vibrant culture. Thank you for buying an authorized edition of this book and for complying with copyright laws by not reproducing, scanning, or distributing any part of it in any form without permission. You are supporting writers and allowing Penguin to continue to publish books for every reader.

The publisher does not have any control over and does not assume any responsibility for author or third-party websites or their content.

Text copyright 2020 by Hannah Testa. Illustrations copyright 2020 by Penguin Random House LLC. All rights reserved. Published by Penguin Workshop, an imprint of Penguin Random House LLC, New York. PENGUIN and PENGUIN WORKSHOP are trademarks of Penguin Books Ltd, and the W colophon is a registered trademark of Penguin Random House LLC.

Visit us online at www.penguinrandomhouse.com.

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data is available upon request.

Ebook ISBN 9780593223512

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PROLOGUE February 15 2018 It might seem like an ordinary forgettable - photo 7
PROLOGUE
February 15 2018 It might seem like an ordinary forgettable date but in the - photo 8

February 15, 2018: It might seem like an ordinary, forgettable date, but in the state of Georgia, it was Plastic Pollution Awareness Daya day I helped create with a state senator when I was fourteen.

I remember that day like it was yesterday. I stood inside the Georgia State Capitol, holding a rolled-up paper in my clammy hands. My heart was fluttering. My fingers trembled with fear. I was about to deliver a speech to fifty-six state senators. But first I had to wait for the speakeran adultat the podium to finish hers.

From the side of the stage, I gazed out at the crowd: No one seemed to be paying any attention to the person giving her speech. My chest tightened. I had been working toward this moment for a yearto be on this very stage to raise awareness about the growing plastics crisis. And all I could think was how no one would listen to my speech either, especially because I was just a teenager.

Over the course of 2017, I started to see the plastics industry for what it really was: powerful corporations and lobbyists, people paid by companies to influence politicians. And the last thing they wanted was for a speech like mine to be heard. In fact, the plastics industry came out in full force to stop this event from happening, and when I really think about it, their motives can be summed up with one word: fear.

Fear that I might shine a light on the realities of single-use plastics and their negative impact on the environment, animal welfare, and our health. Fear that the industry would lose money, as it saw a decline in the use of plastic. Fear that people like me were using their voices. But any attempts to stop me only made me want to speak louder. So, I stood my ground.

But as I stood in the capitol building, ready to deliver that speech, I suddenly started to lose confidence in myself. If the senators werent listening to an adult, why would they listen to me?

Each passing minute felt longer than the next. As the woman at the podium spoke her last words into the microphone, the state senators hardly seemed to notice. No one clapped. Tough crowd, I thought. I took a deep breath. It was my turn. I felt my legs quiver as I stepped up to the podium and lowered the microphone. I looked out at the room, scattered with senators milling about, talking among themselves, paying little attention to me. I scanned the audience and found my mom and brother smiling at me. Beside me stood my dad, and my friend and mentor, John R. Seydel, a director with the city of Atlanta. On my other side was Senator Nan Orrock, the politician I worked with to create this historic day. For a brief moment, I felt at ease, having all these people with me for support.

I took another deep breath to soak in this moment: There I was, a high-school freshman who wasnt even of voting age, and yet I was about to deliver a speech to the decision makers in my home state of Georgia. Forget pinch me momentsthis was make-or-break.

I opened my mouth and began my speech. Suddenly, it was as if every senator simultaneously realized that there was a teenager at the mic. Silence blanketed the room and every eye was on me. Everyone was listening to me. To my voice.

For the next few minutes, I spoke about the growing crisis before us. I spoke about how plastic is washing up on our shores by the tonflooding our oceans and choking our animal and marine life. And how microplastics are seeping into our bodies through water bottles and other single-use plastics. And how, by 2050, plastic production is projected to quadruple, further adding to carbon dioxide emissions that contribute to climate changeunless we act now.

This is our moment. This is our movement. This is our mission, I said, wrapping up my speech. I concluded it with a final question: Are you with us?

My speech was met with an overwhelming round of applause.

From that momentthat unforgettable February dayI recognized firsthand that young people have voices, and we can be heard. I realized then and there that political movements start with a decision to use our voices. And for me, it started with the decision to take on the plastics crisis.


I - photo 9In many ways plastic can be considered a miracle product Plastic has - photo 10In many ways plastic can be considered a miracle product Plastic has the - photo 11
In many ways plastic can be considered a miracle product Plastic has the - photo 12
In many ways plastic can be considered a miracle product Plastic has the - photo 13

In many ways, plastic can be considered a miracle product. Plastic has the power to help save lives in the form of prosthetics and heart valves. By swapping out steel for plastic, we are able to manufacture more fuel-efficient cars, quickly and at a more affordable price for consumers. Without plastic, we would have never put a man on the moon by 1969. Plastic, it can be argued, has changed the world for the better.

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