Tag Archives: Sienna Schwartz

Sienna Schwartz’s “Speckless”: Making A Dent In Microplastics

Water bottles are everywhere.

And the average American consumes up to 1,000 microplastic particles from bottled water — every week.

51 trillion tons of microplastics float in our oceans. Together they weigh over 234,000 tons — and pollute even the deepest parts of our marine ecosystems.

Microplastic particles reduce photosynthesis in crops like wheat, rice and corn by up to 14%. That puts up 400 million people at risk of starvation, over the next 20 years.

A minuscule amount of the world’s plastic water bottles.

Those frightening statistics come from Sienna Schwartz.

But the young Westporter does more than just warn people about our wasteful ways, and our planet’s grim future.

She’s doing something about it.

Move over, Greta Thunberg. Make way for Sienna Schwartz.

Sienna Schwartz

The Staples High School rising junior has created a superb website and Instagram.

Speckless — whose tagline is “Everyday Choices. Extraordinary Impact” — is well-designed, and wide-ranging.

It raises awareness of the dangers of microplastics. It offers simple actions anyone can take. And it provides links to practical alternatives to plastic products.

Speckless is the antidote to 2 constant complaints: We’re destroying our environment. And young people don’t care about anyone except themselves.

Sienna is passionate about both human and envornmental health. When she realized the extent of microplastics — they’re in the food we eat, the water we drink, and the air we breathe — she was equally stunned by how few people realize the dangers.

Her research began while writing a proposal for a study she plans to conduct this year. It focuses on how microplastics affect C. elegans worms under different bacterial environments.

After spending hours each day diving into scientific papers, she realized the wide spread of microplastic pollution.

That led to #MicroplasticMonday posts. She searched online for practical, high-impact swaps, which turned into #SustainableSwapFriday series.

She found dozens of microplastic-free products too: bottles, mugs, cast iron skillets, ceramic mixing bowls, glass spice jars, shampoos and conditioners, shorts, baseball caps, windbreakers, and much more.

Three of Speckless’ many microplastics-free products.

Feedback has been great, Sienna says. Readers are often shocked to learn the extent — and danger — of microplastic particles.

Her hope of course is that people then take action: reducing use, finding alternatives, educating others.

Microplastics are tiny. Individual actions are, too.

But Sienna Schwartz knows that, together, we can make an impact on our soil, our oceans, our air.

And our future.

(“06880” often profiles Westport teenagers doing amazing things. If you enjoy this coverage, please click here to support our work. Thank you!)

Teens, Y’s Men Bridge Generations, Ideas

A bridge is much more than a physical structure over water.

It can be a metaphor for any kind of span.

The other day, a group of Westporters met to bridge both ideas and ages.

Everyone made it across.

And when they got there, they enjoyed what is always on the other side: a new and different view.

BridgeBuilders is the local chapter of a national organization, BridgeUSA.

The goal of BridgeUSA is “not to change minds or create centrists, but encourage students to engage differing beliefs, experiences and perspectives. What unites us is not agreement on policies, but a shared mindset.

“The BridgeUSA Mindset champions understanding, empathy, open-mindedness, and a willingness to engage those who are different from us.

“It’s not about what you believe, but how you express what you believe.”

BridgeUSA works on 82 college campuses.

But a pair of Staples High School students recently brought it to a younger level.

And an older one.

In the aftermath of last spring’s unrest over Israel and Gaza, and during the 2024 presidential campaign, Jake Shufro realized that plenty of people were shouting about their own point of view, and shutting their ears to others’.

Plenty of other people, meanwhile, were not talking about issues at all. They did not know how to have an actual discussion. Or they were too turned off by polarization to try.

Jake is a very involved junior. He’s secretary of Westport’s Youth Commission; an active participant in Model UN Club and We the People, and a squash player.

His longtime friend, sophomore Sienna Schwartz, is similarly engaged. She’s a Student Council officer; a writer for Staples’ STEM Journal; a member of Women in STEM and participant in the Sikorsky STEM Challenge, and a soccer player and track athlete.

They contacted the national BridgeBuilders group, which is eager to add high schools to their roster of colleges.

Much of today’s discourse consists of shouting — and not listening.

Jake and Sienna were trained on how to moderate effective meetings. They learned, for example, to make sure participants focused on ideas, not on the people presenting them, along with how to keep discussions on track.

They found out it’s best to start with a non-controvesial topic.

But Jake and Sierra also realized that limiting their BridgeBuilders to high school students would exclude other, important points of view.

“We wanted intergenerational dialogue and wisdom,” Jake says. And, he notes, older participants might learn something from younger ones.

Their original idea was to partner with the Senior Center. But it closes at 3 p.m. — just 15 minutes after the school day ends.

Enter the Y’s Men of Westport and Weston.

The group of retired and semi-retired residents is as energetic and stimulating as high school students. They certainly are “wise” — and they’re always looking for new projects.

Y’s Men Jim Marpe and Tucker Mays took the lead. Working alongside Jake and Sienna, they came up with their first topic: whether mandatory national service (military or otherwise) is good for young Americans.

It’s an idea, they thought, that could be viewed from a variety of perspectives, rather than through traditional political lenses.

From left: Jim Marpe, Jake Shufro, Sienna Schwartz, Tucker Mays.

Jake and Sienna invited a range of students they knew, primarily from their social studies classes. None were yet 18: draft age.

Jim and Tucker reached out to a similar range of Y’s Men. Some were military veterans. Others served in the Peace Corps.

The 90-minute discussion, in a Westport Library meeting room, was wide-ranging. It was civil.

And, for the teenagers and senior citizens alike, it was eye-opening.

Listening respectfully, at the Westport Library. 

The students learned first hand about the draft, the Vietnam War, and the peace movement.

The Y’s Men learned that many of the teens understood the importance of some kind of service. They learned too about discussions that go on in history and English classes, and what the students feel comfortable writing and talking about.

And the topics they feel uncomfortable discussing.

The 4 organizers had worried that the older participants might monopolize the discussion. That did not happen.

“Everyone spoke. There were lots of rich opinions,” Sienna says.

“There was disagreement, but it was civil. There was no finger-pointing.”

Staples students and Y’s Men, after the first meeting.

Jake, Sienna, Jim and Tucker plan to meet monthly. They’ll invite different students and Y’s Men to join them.

The next topic — later this month — is “the future of work.”

The teens and seniors are excited to keep going.

“In our country, we need to talk with each other better,” Jake says.

“That’s what democracy is. It’s bad for democracy if everyone has the same viewpoint.

“But it’s equally bad if we let those viewpoints pull us apart.”

(To learn more about BridgeBuilders, click here.)

(“06880” reports regularly on Westport’s teenagers, senior citizens — and everyone else in between. If you like our work, and/or have been featured in it, please click here to support us. Thank you!)