Update 2023-12-23:
The Real Trash Problem is the Producers, and How to Stop It 2023-12-23.
Update 2023-02-05:
Beyond cleanups: trash traps, ordinances, business permits, reusable substitutes, bottle deposits, and single-use packaging bans 2023-02-05.
Update 2020-11-18:
Landslide Yes on Georgia Amendment 1 to dedicate trust funds!
People shouldn’t litter, but individuals are not the real litter problem.
The companies that make all those throwaway items are the problem.
There are fixes, which we can implement.
One fix Georgians can vote on right now: vote Yes on Amendment 1 please!
There was no lack of trash on the Alapaha River in September,
at Berrien Beach Boat Ramp in Berrien County and at Berrien Beach in Lanier County.
We found the usual cigarette butts, shotgun shells, and yes, a few used diapers.
Plus tires.
To help stop tires being dumped by rivers, please
vote Yes on Georgia Constitutional Amendment 1
to stop fee diversions.
We found fewer shotgun shells and tires but more of everything else at
Twomile Branch in Valdosta, Sugar Creek, and the Withlacoochee River in August.
Come to the big cleanup this Saturday on the Little, Withlacoochee, and Alapaha Rivers in Lowndes County
and on Sugar Creek, Onemile Branch, and Twomile Branch in Valdosta
October 10, 2020!
We expect as usual
the most numerous items will be plastic and glass bottles and cans.
Bottles
Sure people shouldn’t litter, but
Anheuser-Busch and other beer makers, as well as
Nestlé, Coca Cola, and Walmart,
should stop making and selling disposable bottles and cans.
Fifty years ago those things had deposits on them,
and people would collect them for the cash.
In economic downturns such as right now, that could be useful to a lot of people,
and a lot more cleanups would happen.
Sure, there was still trash back then, but not as much.
People still do in Hawaii and nine other states:
California, Connecticut, Iowa, Maine, Massachusetts, Michigan, New York, Oregon, Vermont, plus Guam.
They don’t have nearly as big of a litter problem.
But Georgia or Florida do not have such container deposits.
Maybe we should change that.
No, recycling will not solve this problem.
There’s no market for plastic to recycle,
and recycling has been pushed by big oil for years as an excuse to make more plastic throw-away containers.
Laura Sullivan, NPR, 11 September 2020,
How Big Oil Misled The Public Into Believing Plastic Would Be Recycled.
You’ve probably seen the famous ‘Crying Indian’ ad from 1971: Continue reading →