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COM 0942.143 2006-2008
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COM 0942.143 2006-2008
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Last modified
5/12/2008 1:39:51 AM
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5/8/2008 7:23:20 PM
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Communications
Communications - Type
COM
Communications - Council Term
2006-2008
Communication
0942
Point
143
Author
Brenda J. Ford, Council Member; Chair, Public Works and Intergovernmental Relations Committee
Communications - Referred To
COUNCIL
Comments
Presented: Council - 4/22/08
Document Relationships
BIL 224 Draft 01 2006-2008
(Related)
Path:
\Council Records\Bills\2006-2008
COM 0942.000 2006-2008
(Related)
Path:
\Council Records\Communications\2006-2008
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<br /> <br /> <br /> <br /> <br /> <br /> powered by you and gThQ Honok Adverfir <br /> <br /> <br /> LOCAL NEWS <br /> Posted on: Wednesday, April 16, 2008 <br /> <br /> Six million pounds of trash piled on shores <br /> <br /> A third of items found in worldwide beach cleanup from smokers <br /> <br /> By H. Josef Hebert, Associated Press <br /> The world's beaches and shores are anything but pristine. <br /> <br /> On a single day in September, volunteers scoured 33,000 miles of shoreline worldwide <br /> and found 6 million pounds of debris. That included everything from cigarette butts and <br /> food wrappers to abandoned fishing lines and plastic bags that threaten seabirds and <br /> marine mammals. <br /> In Hawai'i, 3,056 volunteers picked up 45,568 pounds of trash over 87 miles of <br /> coastline. That worked out to 10 pounds of garbage every 100 feet. <br /> <br /> A report by the Ocean Conservancy released today catalogues the mess found on <br /> beaches and rocky shorelines in 76 countries from Bahrain to Bangladesh and in 45 <br /> U.S. states. <br /> "This is a snapshot of one day, one moment in time, but it serves as a powerful <br /> reminder of our carelessness and how our disparate and random actions actually have <br /> a collective and global impact," Vikki Spruill, president of the Ocean Conservancy, said <br /> in an interview. <br /> <br /> During the International Coastal Cleanup, volunteers worldwide scoured ocean <br /> coastlines and beaches on inland lakes and streams, providing a "global snapshot of <br /> the ocean trash problem." <br /> TRASH PER MILE <br /> <br /> The most extensive cleanup was in the United States, where 190,000 volunteers <br /> covered 10,110 miles - about a third of the worldwide total - and picked up 3.9 million <br /> pounds of debris on a single Saturday last September, according to the report. <br /> That's 390 pounds of trash per mile, among the highest rates of any country, although <br /> the high number also reflects the large number of U.S. volunteers who took part, said <br /> Spruill. By comparison, volunteers in neighboring Canada collected 74 pounds per mile <br /> and those in Mexico, 157 pounds per mile, said the report. About 65 pounds of trash <br /> were collected per mile in China and 46 pounds per mile in New Zealand. Volunteers <br /> covered one mile in Bahrain and found 300 pounds of trash. <br /> <br /> But Spruill said the volume of trash collected tells only part of the story. It's the items <br /> that are found that tells us about the behavior of people enjoying the beaches and <br /> coastlines of the world. <br /> "It represents a general carelessness we have.... We'r+e the bad guys. Trash doesn't fall <br /> <br /> from the sky. It actually falls from our hands," Spruill said. <br />
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