Local News
City now selling ads on trash bins
SALEM — One person's trash may soon be another person's billboard.
The city has started selling advertising space on its Big Belly trash compactors, those green, box-shaped, solar-powered bins that can hold four to five times more garbage than regular receptacles.
The city owns about 20 of them, spread across the downtown, Salem Willows and the Salem ferry parking lot.
Now, for a $500 fee, a company can buy a yearlong sponsorship of one of the trendy trash cans and post its name or logo on a special panel on the side.
Salem is one of the first communities to sell ads on the bins, according to manufacturer Big Belly Solar.
But there is one lingering question: Will any company want its image associated with rubbish?
"In an urban environment, people put their logo and signs on a variety of different objects," said Jeff Barz-Snell, a member of the city's Renewable Energy Task Force. "My guess is there wouldn't be a lot of concern about advertising on the side of a trash can."
Tom Watkins, the project manager in the mayor's office, said the companies would be supporting green technology.
All the money raised from the ads will be earmarked for future renewable energy and efficiency projects, he said.
"We're hoping people can embrace the idea and, in doing so, get a decent deal for advertising," Watkins said.
In the past, the panels have been used to plug community events, such as the Witches Cup bike race and the Living Green & Renewable Energy Fair.
So, will trash cans revolutionize the world of marketing? Might fire hydrants be next?
Probably not.
No one has come forward to buy an ad since the city announced the program on Aug. 26, though Watkins admits the city is still in the process of getting the word out.
Meanwhile, Salem Chamber of Commerce Executive Director Rinus Oosthoek said he didn't know how many businesses would take advantage of the program, but that soliciting sponsors couldn't hurt.
"There are a lot of environmentally conscious companies that fit the idea," Oosthoek said.
"Hey, it's worth a try."
- Local News
-
-
Scratch tickets worth $10,000 stolen at mall
PEABODY — An estimated $10,000 worth of scratch tickets were stolen from a newsstand at the Northshore Mall.
A robber broke into the Gateway News kiosk right after the 9:30 p.m. closing Wednesday and grabbed the lottery tickets, according to police. -
Cops vs. codgers in Jimmy Fund benefit ball game
PEABODY — A Labor Day tradition will resume Monday in Peabody when police officers face the Northshore Oldtimers in baseball.
This year is the 54th anniversary of an event that raises money for the Jimmy Fund. Players will take the field at Emerson Park at 10 a.m., following a baseball clinic for 8- to 12-year-olds that begins at 8 a.m. -
Family's injured dog gains Facebook fans
DANVERS — A family's 3-year-old cocker spaniel named Sammy, which was mauled during a walk last month, now has a Facebook page called "Sammy Super Dog" and plenty of well-wishers, owner Kristen Litka said.
-
Police
Peabody
Wednesday
A woman contacted police at 5:41 p.m. to report that she found a diamond ring at Toys "R" Us at the Northshore Mall.
Police went to the Friendly's restaurant on Route 114 at 8:32 p.m. on a report of a female customer having fainting spells. A 40-year-old Peabody woman was transported to Beverly Hospital by ambulance. -
Police copter spots 'grass' plot
PEABODY — A state police helicopter was high in the sky Wednesday searching for an armed robbery suspect when it discovered a small plot of marijuana on the ground.
Members of the Massachusetts State Police Air Wing were assisting Peabody police following a robbery outside a Sovereign Bank branch on Lowell Street. They spotted the small growth in woods between Oak Grove Cemetery and Winona Street, according to Peabody police. - 100,000th pet adopted from Salem animal shelter
- Woman faces drug charges
- Police: Man, 22, beat two children
- Batten down the hatches
- Before lunch, firefighters at 2 fire scenes
- North Shore college ranks expected to swell this year
- Runway ceremony honors late flight instructor
- DUI checkpoint announced
- Olive Garden could bring 100 jobs to Danvers
- State rep testifies on coal dumping
- Grant helps with new operating rooms
- Police seek help to ID amnesia victim
- Ex-Coast Guard commander is named principal
- Police
- Police probe robbery outside bank
- How did suspect still have license?
- Foreclosures spike, tied to joblessness
- New owner says he is encouraged by theater ticket sales
- No free parking at Danvers High
- Survivor 'driven' to raise money for cancer cure
- Chase leads suspect onto dead-end street
- Meet the teachers: 47 new staffers join schools
- A house is raised in Ipswich
- Police
- Woman arraigned in scooter crash
-
Scratch tickets worth $10,000 stolen at mall





