Tagged: Breast Cancer

10K on 10-10-10

Can we reach 10K by 10-10-10? Please do it for Pink Cart and me!

What’s special about 10-10-10, other than numerical symmetry? It’s the day Cascade Cart Solutions hopes to have 10,000 Facebook friends for Pink Cart! Can we do it? Yes we can, but we need your help!

10-10-10 is also my birthday. Want to get me something very special? Become a Pink Cart fan on Facebook or ask some of your FB friends to become fans. The more people who understand the importance of increasing breast cancer awareness, the faster we’ll get there!

The Pink Cart is doing its part to help women celebrate More Birthdays!

OK, now you know October 10th is my birthday and you know what I want. I feel blessed to have another, but as many as 41,000 women won’t have another birthday this year. That’s how many mothers, daughters, sisters, aunts and friends die each year from breast cancer. That’s why the the American Cancer Society (ACS), The Official Sponsor of Birthdays, works tirelessly to raise funds and awareness to create a world with More Birthdays! And that’s why Cascade Cart Solutions (CCS) is donating $5.00 from the purchase of every Pink Cart to the ACS to fund breast cancer awareness efforts.

What will you do for Pink Cart on October 10, 2010?

Here’s your list of suggestions:
• Buy a Pink Cart from a local retailer.
• Find a local trash hauler that supports Pink Cart.
• Buy a Pink Cart online. It’s easy!
• Become a fan of Pink Cart on Facebook
• See how people across the nation – and soon Canada – are using their Pink Carts.
• Under no circumstances ask to know how old I am ;-)

Will one more Pink Cart really make a difference?

Absolutely! In fact, over 10,000 other people have asked the same question – that’s how many we’ve sold in nearly 30 states thus far, thanks to trash haulers, retailers, and, most importantly, people like you! Thank you so much for your support – it means the world to me and everyone at Cascade Cart Solutions and the American Cancer Society!

Jo-Anne

 

The Pink Cart is Filling Up!

It wasn’t that long ago that the first Pink Cart rolling trash can appeared on a curb and people stopped and said, “What’s THAT all about?” Now there are over 10K Pink Carts on curbs across the nation and thousands of people are discovering how easy it is help fund the breast cancer awareness work of the American Cancer Society® (ACS) and make a bold statement about their commitment.

The Pink Cart is $50,000 full, with a goal of $500,000.
Cascade Cart Solutions (CCS), manufacturer of the Pink Cart rolling trash bin, promised the ACS that they would donate $5.00 to breast cancer awareness for every Pink Cart sold. It started slowly, one customer at a time. But every Pink Cart was an ambassador of sorts, and every conversation that started with “Where did you get that?” ended with “I want one, too!” Soon, waste haulers got behind the program, making the Pink Cart an option for their customers. Some haulers even painted their trucks with a Pink Cart theme. CCS added an easy purchase option, offering 96-, 64- and 35-gallon sizes. As more and more Pink Carts roll to the curbs, the American Cancer Society has $50,000 more to invest in helping people understand a disease that affects almost 193,000 women each year, and takes 41,000 beautiful lives. But there’s much more that can be done.

Help fill the Pink Cart to the very top!
Help Cascade Cart Solutions fill the Pink Cart all the way to the top. If you haven’t yet purchased one, please do it now. If you don’t how to get one, ask us. The CCS $5.00 donation from your purchase will help fund breast cancer awareness projects.

Keep those Pink Cart photos coming!
New Pink Cart at your curb? Strut your stuff! Share them! You’ll find photo-sharing instructions here.

Tell us your story about how breast cancer has impacted your life. Send it to info@pinkcart.com – we’ll select stories to post here and send each published contributor a free 35-gallon Pink Cart.

 

Brenda’s Story – A True Inspiration

Name: Brenda Angel

State: Kentucky

Breast Cancer Connection: Lost her Sister, Lillie Sue Rogers Estes, to breast cancer

My sister was 40 years old when she got breast cancer. She was a strong person, perhaps the strongest I know. She lived for about one year after we found out. Our world would never be the same; she suffered so much. During her last year of life she had many surgeries including brain surgery but it had spread all through her body by the end. She fought hard though. She told me once that everything she went through was worth it if she got just one more day with her family. She left behind not only one brother and three sisters, but a parent, five children, and a grandchild. We all miss her so much and not a day goes by that we don’t think of her. She was truly an inspiration to us all.

If one thing could come of this, I wish it would be for all women to be checked regularly. We need to help spread the word. Please help end this awful disease! Thanks for reading my story.
Lillie Sue Rogers Estes

Hope and Joy have crept in to co-occupy the space

Hello Friends,

Well today is September 1st and the 24th anniversary of my Mum passing from breast cancer and even though my heart is heavy on this day for the first time ever I think hope and joy have crept in to co-occupy the space. Today also marks one year since we started The Pink Cart. This was the year that my path became clear and I was blessed with an opportunity to collide my personal life and my career with the desire to help Kick Breast Cancer to the Curb.

Our little Pink Cart idea is changing the conversation in municipal solid waste management today. Trash carts are usually dark colors like green, brown, black…the color of bruises, but lately women are changing the landscape and trading out the dreary for the meaningful and their influence, one cart at a time, is making a real difference.

Just the mere thought that rolling her pink cart to the curb would remind a woman to do her self breast exam or that our $5/cart donation could help find a cure simply gives me goose bumps.

Today, my only daughter landed in Estonia to do God’s work with the young mothers and children of the area and here at home in the United States I have landed in the exact spot intended for me. I am certain that my Mother is proud of us both.

Jo-Anne

Join the Pink Cart Movement and Online Community:

facebook.com/ThePinkCart
twitter.com/thepinkcart

Reflections on being a mother and a daughter on Mother’s Day.

Jo-Anne Perkins and her daughter at graduationThis Mother’s Day weekend is particularly special for me as I reflect on the first half of my life spent with my mother and the second half of my life spent with my daughter. At this point it is almost a perfect divide in time and I am awed by the positive influence both strong women have had on the person I am today.

As I write we are waiting for our family and friends to arrive and join us in a celebration of our daughter’s graduation from college. It’s hard to believe it has been four years since that August day we dropped her off. She has earned a BA in Social Work and is readying herself for the next phase of life.

Our daughter has a strong calling to serve the young mothers and children of Romania, and she has talked about it since she was fifteen. I was shocked when she first mentioned that God wanted her to go to Romania and serve Him because she wasn’t even old enough to drive. Yet, she knew. My “Mom” answer to that was “after college you can follow your heart” but she was determined and decided to take a year in between high school and college to move to Romania. It was the most difficult time for me – even harder than when she was born and I felt so all alone having just lost my own mother to breast cancer.

I wish my mother was here with us this weekend to celebrate, to stand beside her husband at the ceremony

After a year of very hard work and sacrifice she came back to earn her degree in Social Work so that she could return eventually to Romania better equipped to the serve the young mothers and children she longed to help and had grown to love. And so here we are, four years later. She is done with school and her plane ticket is purchased for June 1st.

She’ll return to Romania for at least two and a half years.

My friends are worried about how I will adjust to not having my only daughter in my daily life, but I have had years to come to terms with her devotion and I am nothing but incredibly proud, which over shadows my sorrow. How could I possibly be selfish when such sacrifice is staring me in the face?

I know she is with us in spirit and smiling brightly over her granddaughter’s shoulder. It is a glorious day and the perfect weekend to celebrate mothers.

I wish my mother was here with us this weekend to celebrate, to stand beside her husband at the ceremony as the two of them began our family’s journey over fifty years ago.
I know she is with us in spirit and smiling brightly over her granddaughter’s shoulder. It is a glorious day and the perfect weekend to celebrate mothers.

Jo-Anne

How many tax receipts will fit in a Pink Cart?

There’s never been a better time to find out – April 15 is right around the corner! And if you’re like many taxpayers, you’ve waited until the last minute to file and your organization leaves much to be desired. Why not throw it all into a 35- or 64-gallon Pink Cart and roll it down to your tax advisor? If you need the curbside 96-gallon model there’s a good possibility that you’ve either missed a few years or that you’re deducting things you’ll never get away with.

Buy a Pink Cart and you’ll feel better about April 15.

Not to mention February 3, August 27, October 12 and the other 361 days of the year. That’s because every Pink Cart purchase gives $5.00 to the American Cancer Society to help fund the fight against breast cancer. They’ll use it to help fund breast cancer awareness programs,[1] committing $118.1 million to explore causes, treatments and, someday, cures. Knowing that you’re helping in the fight against breast cancer should be enough to brighten any day of the year!

Kick cancer to the curb with a Pink Cart.

This year almost 193,000 women will be diagnosed with breast cancer. Despite the heroic efforts of healthcare professionals, approximately 41,000 will not survive.[2] That’s an unacceptable loss and the affects are felt for generations. You can help put an end to it by buying a Pink Cart in the 35- or 64-gallon size, or, better still, the 96-gallon model, perfect for trash or recyclables. Regardless of size, the American Cancer Society receives $5.00 per Pink Cart sold from the manufacturer, Cascade Cart Solutions.

It’s easy to buy your Pink Cart.

Ready to join the fight against breast cancer? Contact your local/regional hauler to place an order for a Pink Cart. Large haulers have expressed interest in helping distribute the Pink Cart to customers, as have several regional, private firms. You can place your Pink Cart order online. Or you can order the 35, 64, or 96-gallon Pink Cart directly from Cascade Cart Solutions.

Send us your Pink Cart photos!

Doing something special with a Pink Cart on Tax Day? Filling it with all of your old shredded receipts now that your refund is on its way? Share the joy through photos – instructions are in the FAQ section of this site.



[1] American Cancer Society/Cancer Reference Information http://ow.ly/1r2f3

 

[2] National Cancer Institute – http://www.cancer.gov/cancertopics/types/breast

Why Pink Carts?

You know that Pink Carts play a small but important part in the fight against breast cancer. But how did they come to be? Blogger Jo-Anne Perkins shares a moving story about her mother’s battle with breast cancer, and how that battle influenced her life.

Breast cancer stole my Mother.

Breast cancer has haunted my life for twenty-three years, ever since it stole my Mother from our family. While many memories have faded some details remain and often replay in my mind as if they happened recently. I remember being told the terrible news and how my thoughts starting wandering to the smell of burnt toast in the air and then suddenly there was no air and I couldn’t catch a full breath. I remember thinking about the chair I was sitting in and feeling little and wanting to fade into the fabric so that my Dad couldn’t see me anymore and would, of course, just stop talking. I remember the disbelief and yet I don’t remember tears. I don’t think there were tears, only fear.

My story is all too familiar.

My story is similar to thousands of other people that have lived through the anguish of watching women they love die from breast cancer. There is shock, disbelief, denial and then adrenaline which surfaces with the hope that you can change the outcome.

In just a couple of short months we learned that none of us could actually change the outcome, but our Mom’s passing did change our lives in ways that were both sad and wonderful. When she first got sick I was a newlywed and launching a new business with children planned sometime beyond five years, if at all. However, I had this crazy idea (remember the adrenaline?) that if there was a new baby then my Mother would consider her life really worth fighting for so I changed my plans and miraculously conceived a baby within weeks, but then lost my Mother to breast cancer shortly afterwards.

My Mom would have been a proud grandmother.

Our daughter was born nine months later and now at 23 she is an extraordinary person that has dedicated much of her life to missionary work abroad. A young woman of immense inner personal strength who lives her life in service of God and I am completely in awe of her grace. Her grandmother would have been extremely proud to know her, in my heart I believe she does.

A powerful coincidence and a chance to make a difference.

For years I’ve looked for ways to make a positive contribution in the fight against breast cancer; my two sisters and I are at heightened risk, along with millions of other women.

I spend much of my time working at a job I love, as the General Manager with Cascade Engineering, a Grand Rapids, Michigan company that makes rolling plastic trash carts. Cascade is a really innovative company that encourages its employees to think creatively and be entrepreneurial.

On September 1st, 2009, the 23rd anniversary of my Mom’s passing, our executive team was brainstorming ideas and because my mind and heart were elsewhere, I suggested that we create a Pink Cart campaign and give $5 from the purchase of every cart to the American Cancer Society (ACS) to be used in the fight against breast cancer. For me the suggestion was very personal but for the team it resonated as a way to do a really good thing for society and the business at the same time.

I encourage you to buy a Pink Cart and become part of the solution.

I am truly blessed with amazing and talented teammates at Cascade Engineering and before I knew it we were partnered with ACS, manufacturing pink carts and raising funds in the fight against breast cancer. I encourage you to purchase a pink cart, roll it to the curb, and let your friends and family know that you are part of the solution.

I am proud and profoundly humbled to be the first blogger on this site, which has been launched to provide a place for anyone who wants to share a story similar to mine or who wants to read about the experiences of others.

My Mother’s name was Arlen Kerr and she was an amazing woman that I honor today, and every day. Thank you.

Jo-Anne Perkins

Begorra! Shouldn’t that Pink Cart be green?

It is! Well, it depends on your perspective. Fill it with recyclables in the garage or with mulch in the yard and this Pink Cart plays a big part in the Green movement. But is it green enough for St. Patrick’s Day? Why not? Wednesday, March 17, a day of shamrocks, shillelaghs, green beer and “Éire go Brách!” is also a fine day to add a new tradition: Pink Carts for the lassies who are fighting breast cancer!

Give a Pink Cart on the greenest day of the year

Why a Pink Cart on St. Patrick’s Day? Why not? North of the Equator, St. Patrick’s Day heralds the arrival of Spring, and Spring means yard work, cleaning out the garage, and getting ready for backyard cookouts and pool parties. A Pink Cart is perfect for all this and more. It’s useful (built-in handle, easy-rolling wheels and a hinged cover) and it’s pink, so that everyone who sees it will know that you purchased a Pink Cart and we gave $5.00 to the American Cancer Society to help fund the fight against breast cancer.

St. Patrick will be proud that you purchased a Pink Cart

St. Patrick will be pleased that you remembered him on his special day, especially if you also remember the almost 193,000 women who will be diagnosed with breast cancer in the coming year, and the approximately 41,000 who will not survive.[1] Moms, wives, sisters, daughters, girlfriends, best friends – we all know and love someone who has faced this awful disease. The National Cancer Society continues to look for ways to beat breast cancer, but research takes money. Where will it come from?

Curb cancer with a Pink Cart

Finding a cure for breast cancer is going to take a lot of Pink Carts – in yards, garages, storage sheds, and especially at the curb on trash day. That’s where you can help. Contact Cascade Cart Solutions for a list of local/regional haulers to place an order for a Pink Cart. You can order the 35, 64, or 96-gallon Pink Cart directly from Cascade Cart Solutions on-line.

What are you going to do with your Pink Cart?

There are plenty of ways to put a Pink Cart to work – trash cart, garden cart, laundry cart, recycles cart, toy and sporting goods cart – a Pink Cart in any size is an easy way to organize your life. Suggestions for St. Patrick’s Day – fill a Pink Cart with four-leaf clovers, or St. Patrick’s Day party favors.

St. Patrick and over 193,000 women are counting on you in the fight to beat Breast Cancer. The only thing you can’t do is paint your Pink Cart green.


[1] National Cancer Institute – http://www.cancer.gov/cancertopics/types/breast

The Pink Cart illustrates the breast cancer equation.

1 in 8 women are diagnosed with breast cancer

1 in 8 women are diagnosed with breast cancer

Eight homes. Eight rolling trash carts. One of the carts is bright pink, underscoring the fact that one in eight women will likely develop breast cancer within the next 10 years.[1]

2009 estimates indicate that almost 193,000 women were diagnosed with breast cancer and that about 41,000 will not survive.[2] There are many ways to treat breast cancer – surgery, chemotherapy, radiation therapy, immunotherapy, and vaccine therapy – and research continues. But cancer research takes money, lots of it. Where will it come from?

More Pink Carts at more curbs.

Purchase a Pink Cart and we’ll give $5 to fund breast cancer awareness programs. Add a neighbor or two and the Pink Cart movement grows even more powerful.

Tell your neighbors about your commitment (they definitely want to know more about your Pink Cart!) and how easy it is to join you. The more Pink Carts on the curbs of your neighborhood streets, the faster the cure for breast cancer will be found.

The versatile, practical Pink Cart.

The 96- and 64-gallon rolling pink waste carts are ideal for weekly trash pickup at curbside; it’s the same cart provided by many municipal and private waste collection companies and will serve your trash needs for a decade or more. Contact Cascade Cart Solutions for approved haulers in your area. But you can also purchase the Pink Cart on-line in a 35-gallon size. You can use it for trash as well, providing it meets the requirements of your hauler. It’s also handy for storing other things: pet food (think horses, multiple dogs), sports equipment (anything smaller than a hockey stick), returnable beverage cans and bottles, yard waste, pet bedding, fertilizer, pool and yard toys … and many other uses in your garage, yard, basement, storage shed or pole barn.

Every time you use your Pink Cart, you’ll be reminded of your financial support of the American Cancer Society and the fight against breast cancer.

The Pink Cart not only rolls, it rocks.


[1] Based on cases diagnosed 2000-2002. “1 in” are approximates. Source: American Cancer Society Breast Cancer Facts & Figures, 2005-2006.

[2] National Cancer Institute – http://www.cancer.gov/cancertopics/types/breast

There’s a pink rolling trash cart at the curb!

pink-cart-108In thousands of communities across the country, tomorrow morning is trash day, also known as rubbish day or garbage day and, in more forward-thinking, sustainable municipalities, recycles day.

In physicians’ offices across the country, tomorrow is also a day that thousands of women will learn that they have breast cancer, one of the most common forms of cancer in women. Breast cancer is the number one cause of cancer death in Hispanic women. And breast cancer is the second most common cause of cancer death in white, black, Asian/Pacific Islander, and American Indian/Alaska Native women.[1]

The link that ties these seemingly unrelated facts together? Pink rolling trash carts. Here’s how …

Rollin’, rollin’, rollin’, hear those Pink Carts rollin’.

Tonight, in hundreds of thousands of garages across the country, people just like you will be stuffing the family garbage can, cramming plastic bags to the breaking point, separating paper from plastic and plastic from metal, and then carrying or rolling it all to the street for curbside trash pickup. But many of the people rolling waste carts to the curb will also be playing an important role in the war on breast cancer.

Pink Carts welcome the sunrise.

When the sun rises on trash day it shines on block after block of garbage cans, trash bags and rolling waste receptacles, a palette of dull browns, dusty greens, faded blues, bright pinks …

Bright pink carts?

Yes, bright pink rolling trash carts, conspicuous, but in a very good way.

And there’s something about this particular shade of pink; you’ve seen it before on … ribbons.

Pink ribbons! The American Cancer Society, with years of nationwide promotions and publicity, continues to wage war against breast cancer, one of the biggest threats to the lives of wives and sisters, mothers and daughters, friends and lovers.

But how can Pink Carts play a role in the battle?

Pink Carts curb cancer.

Even as appreciation of the simple beauty of the idea of owning a Pink Cart is still taking shape, you’re thinking, “How do I get one?” Next thought: “Buying a Pink Cart is one thing I can do to help curb cancer.”

Rolling a Pink Cart to the street says that you’ve stepped up to support the fight against breast cancer, the disease that claims the lives of more than 41,000 women each year.[2] A Pink Cart says you’ve made a promise to help curb cancer.

Get your own Pink Cart.

Want a Pink Cart of your very own? It’s easy. You can contact Cascade Cart Solutions to find out if your hauler is participating. Or you can order the 35, 64, or 96-gallon Pink Cart on-line directly from Cascade Cart Solutions. $5.00 from each Pink Cart sale goes directly to the American Cancer Society to help fight breast cancer.

The Pink Cart not only rolls, it rocks.


U.S. Cancer Statistics Working Group. United States Cancer Statistics: 1999–2005 Incidence and Mortality Web-based Report. Atlanta (GA): Department of Health and Human Services, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and National Cancer Institute; 2009. Available at: http://www.cdc.gov/uscs.

Underlying mortality data provided by CDC’s National Center for Health Statistics.