Showing posts with label illegal dumping. Show all posts
Showing posts with label illegal dumping. Show all posts
from the Harlan Daily Enterprise:
Cameras suggested at dump sites
By JOEY WILLIAMS
Staff Writer
Published: Friday, April 11, 2008 2:56 AM CDT
The severe problem of littering in Harlan County was the focus of Wednesday’s meeting of the Harlan County Chamber of Commerce.
Lakis Mavinidis, Harlan County’s solid waste director, was the guest speaker and noted that not only is littering a problem for Harlan County but one the entire country needs to address.
“We in America currently produce 350 million tons of trash each year. That is an incredible number. We could line semi-trucks up bumper to bumper from here to New York, and we could pack each of them with garbage, and it still wouldn’t be 350 tons,” Mavinidis said. “So, it’s not only just a problem for this county, it is a problem nationwide. However, we have to do our part as a community to help solve the problem.”
The county received $46,000 last year to clean up litter, but Mavinidis said the amount ultimately used to clean up the county was $53,000. He estimated that it will take close to $1 million to clean up all the remaining illegal dump sites.
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Board members suggested security cameras be purchased and placed at illegal dumping sites. Mavinidis says that is something he plans to pursue.
“We would need to purchase at least 10 cameras. That would probably run us about $1,000, but I do think that it would be money well-spent. I think this could go a long way in actually catching the people who litter,” he said.
Also announced at the meeting were plans for a new morning talk show host for WFSR. Barry Leonard, who is currently the pastor at the Harlan United Methodist Church, will take over the morning show Monday through Friday.
“I wasn’t even thinking about this kind of thing happening right now. So, it was definitely a total surprise. I guess God just has things in store for you sometimes that are his plans,” Leonard said. “I have a lot of plans for the show. I plan on getting the community a lot more involved. That’s my main goal.”
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Labels: Harlan, illegal dumping
Containers will eliminate excuses for illegal dumping in Lawrence County
0 comments Posted by sarapennington at 10:25 PMFrom the Ashland Daily-Independent Online:
Put trash here
Published: March 31, 2008 04:03 pm
Lawrence County plans to use an $8,400 award from East Kentucky PRIDE to place 14 large roll-off trash bins at 12 locations throughout the county. Here’s hoping they prove more effective than the first “green boxes” placed throughout the county more than 25 years ago.
There are at least two reasons to hope that this effort will be more successful. One is that attitudes about illegal dumps and litter have changed in the last quarter of a century. The other is that the Lawrence County Fiscal Court recently enacted a mandatory trash collection ordinance.
Instead of ordinary household waste, Eddie Michael — the former Lawrence County school superintendent who now serves as the county’s deputy judge-executive — said the new dumpsters will be for old appliances, cabinets and other items too large to be picked up by regular trash collectors. In fact, about the only items that the bins will not collect are old tires and glass and items primarily made out of glass.
Back in the early 1980s, Lawrence County became one of the first area counties to place green boxes throughout the county where residents could deposit their household waste. It was hoped the dumpsters would eliminate — or at least reduce — illegal dumping in the county.
But it didn’t quite work that way. Instead of becoming a way to eliminate eyesores in the county, the green boxes became eyesores. So many people deposited trash in them, that the county could not empty them quickly enough. Thus, each of the dump sites soon became littered with trash. Finding the trash containers full, residents wanting to use them for their trash simply dumped the trash on the ground near them.
County officials soon concluded that the green baxes were causing more problems than they solved, and they were removed. What had seemed like a good idea for eliminating illegal dumping did not work that way in practice.
But in the ensuing years, attitudes about trash have changed. For that, PRIDE — Personal Responsibility for a Desirable Environment — deserves much of the credit. Since being founded in 1997 by U.S. Rep. Hal Rogers and the late James Bickford, secretary of the state environmental protection cabinet under former Gov. Paul Patton, PRIDE has emphasized the need to end the trashing of eastern Kentucky. The efforts of Rogers and many others have been effective. While illegal dumping continues to be a problem in the region, it is not nearly as bad as it was a decade ago.
Michael said no Lawrence County resident will be more than three miles from a collection bin. And if the elderly or disabled cannot get the items to the dumpsters, the county will pick them up. That should eliminate any excuses for throwing the old washing machine over a hillside instead of placing it in one of the dumpsters.
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Labels: illegal dumping, Lawrence County, PRIDE
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