Shampooing the environment: Phoenix stylist sends hair to clean up oil spills

  • Slug: Hair cleanup. About 325 words.
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By DAVID CALTABIANO
Cronkite News

PHOENIX – One Phoenix hair stylist is using his customers’ discarded hair to help the environment.

Ellsworth Street Social Club, led by stylist Darryl Reynolds, stores his clients’ hair and sends packs to a Canadian-based company that will help process the hair into tools to clean up oil spills.

“Coming into the industry and understanding how much waste that we make, as a stylist, we really wanted to do something that would allow us to reduce our eco imprint,” Reynolds said. So he decided to take the hair shop green.

“Green Circle Salons came along and they had the idea of re-purposing hair into booms to clean up oil spills,” Reynolds said.

Green Circle has collaborated with other salons across North America to collect  as much discarded hair as possible, according to its website.

“We are a new company with a mission to make the North American salon industry sustainable by 2020,” according to a mission statement on Green Circle’s website. The company supplies bins for different categories of salon waste, including hair and hair products.

The Ellsworth salon then sends the full bins to Green Circle, which returns them to be filled again at a barber shop or beauty salon.

Client David Soto likes the idea.

“I’m all for it. If there is any way they can help with natural disasters, especially man-made natural disasters, I’m in support of it,” Soto said. “I’m hoping to see more businesses go in this direction.”

Virginia Miller, who majors in sustainability at Arizona State University, said the hair recycling program is a winning combination.

“Honestly, it’s a breath of fresh air,” Miller said. “To know that there is a local shop that I can go to that supports not only their community but reduce their environmental impact is really important to me.”

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Stylist Darryl Reynolds brushes discarded hair that will be placed in a bin and shipped to Canada to repurpose into a tool to clean up oil spills. (Photo by David Caltabiano/Cronkite News)
Stylist Darryl Reynolds brushes discarded hair that will be placed in a bin and shipped to Canada to repurpose into a tool to clean up oil spills. (Photo by David Caltabiano/Cronkite News)

Haircleanup3

Stylist Darryl Reynolds sweeps discarded
hair that will be used in tools to clean up
oil spills. (Photo by David Caltabiano/
Cronkite News)