Friday, April 4, 2008

Are we making good choices?

So, as you know humanity is good at producing above all trash - everyone of us contributes to the enormous amounts of trash that have to be disposed of every day. Landfills, incinerators, in some cases your backyard.
Now, some make more waste than others - often those who don't care or can't take care of it due to certain conditions. Do you care? Do you recycle?

Compare these numbers:
This is how much our trash costs us - why do we pay for people who don't care that their kids or my kids won't have a backyard free of plastic bags, bottles, or that forests are wiped out because those citizens don't wish to recycle paper?

Current (FY 07-08) Costs

Recycling $43,291
Trash Collection $289,330
Trash Disposal $622,277 - is that not a HUGE number??? Let's do something about it!

Let's face it - we don't pay taxes out of our sense of duty, nor the government trusts our sense of duty. Why do we leave it up to the conscientious residents to take their recyclables to the recycling facilities while for most people it's just easier to throw away all of it - why bother? They don't pay for excess trash! In fact, they would pay more for their gas - not to mention inconvenience themselves - to take their recyclables where they can be used.
However, if everyone had to pay for the trash they produce, choices could be made differently. It's not a new idea - Portland, Falmouth, Scarborough, Gorham, Windham are all doing it!
We can have control over how much trash is produced or recycled. We need to be able to make that choice.


Please let your city councilor know that you want them to introduce the pay per bag and recyclables curbside pickup program.
Say, there are 8000 households, that means that each produces on average $77 worth of garbage to be disposed of. Let's say it's average household can will have one bag a week. I think Portland charges $7 for 10 (smaller) bags. That's 52 weeks / 10 times $7 = $36.4 per household. And you can make a difference! You can bring your trash bag needs down! It will be especially easy with a curbside pickup. Just think of the good things it will be doing!
I mean, when you come home after work, and you know you may have done something wrong today - like yelled at your kid, or gave someone a finger, or didn't stop at a stop sign - well, put something into recycling bin, versus trash can, and there is already a reason to feel good about yourself. All change starts with us!
By the way, your kids recycle at school. They have many reasons to feel good about themselves. Do you?

2 comments:

Westbrook Diarist said...

Thank you for your kind words about my site.

However, I recommend you exhale at this very second if you're holding your breath for Westbrook's politicos to improve the recycling sitch in the city. There has been, there is, and there will be a stalemate on this issue until some minds are changed (unlikely) or shake-up occurs at either York Street or Room 114.

On a completely separate note, I'm open to possible collaboration.

John

Unknown said...

Here is another good choice to be made that will help reduce the household waste, keep things out of the landfills and find a second life for your beloved things you or your children no longer need.

Become a member of www.freecycle.org

What Freecycle IS about:

Freecycle IS about keeping things out of the landfill.
It IS about giving away something that has no use in our life anymore
to someone who could extend its usefulness a little longer.
It IS about giving gifts to people while clearing out our own clutter.
It IS about creating, building, and sustaining an environmentally
aware community.