(First published in The Dominion Post, January 8.)
Like my fellow Dominion Post columnist Dave Armstrong five days ago, I’ve
been muttering lately about the amount of rubbish littering streets and other
public places.
But while not wanting to boast, I’ve gone one step further than
Dave. I’ve kept a record of the litter I’ve picked up on my regular walks into
town.
Here are some examples, gathered over a period of several
weeks:
One Woodstock Bourbon and Coke can; one Lion Red beer can;
one Holiday cigarette packet; one McDonald’s Chicken McBites container; one NZ
Pure lager bottle; one McDonald’s paper bag; one Becks beer bottle; one Subway
wrapper; one chicken and chips container from the local Pak ’n’ Save; one KFC
paper bag; one McDonald’s fries carton; one meat pie bag; one DB Double Brown
carton; one Z Express cardboard coffee cup; one DB 33 Export beer can; and one
plastic bag, brand name illegible, which appeared to have contained chocolate
confectionery.
Some of this rubbish, no doubt, is discarded almost
unconsciously, like the plastic sandwich packaging I recently picked up in the middle of town. The effort required to
put it in the nearest rubbish bin, just three paces away, was clearly too
great for whoever devoured the contents.
But if that act could be attributed to mere laziness or
thoughtlessness, the behaviour of some litterers suggests a perverse element of
wilfulness.
Driving across the Remutaka Pass (we might as well start
getting used to the new and historically correct name now) a few weeks ago, I saw
an almost full bag of chips jettisoned from a vehicle in front of me.
This could be hardly be blamed on mere indolence or
absent-mindedness, since it requires a conscious act to wind down the window
and throw a parcel of chips onto the road.
Only days later, my wife and I watched as a McDonald’s paper
bag – still apparently containing food, judging by its obvious weight – was thrown
out the passenger-side window of a boy racer-type car travelling through town.
Unfortunately I didn’t have my Uzi submachine-gun with me at the time.
All these observations have led me to build up a profile of
the typical litterer.
Their most blindingly obvious characteristic is that they
have no taste. No surprises there: people who drink Lion Red or eat Chicken
McBites are unlikely to be sensitive to aesthetic concerns about the urban
environment.
They are also likely to be obese. That goes without saying,
judging by the evidence of their eating habits.
Their liquor of choice is likely to be some ghastly RTD or
equally undrinkable industrial-grade beer. I have yet to find an Ata Rangi
pinot noir bottle lying in a gutter.
Oh, and they probably smoke. That’s evident from the piles
of cigarette butts you occasionally see in gutters and supermarket carparks,
from car ashtrays that the owners were too lazy to empty into a bag at home.
Now to some questions. First, does it matter that some
people spread their offensive detritus across the landscape?
Yes, because it affects our quality of life in subtle and
insidious ways. Like the loathsome habit of tagging, it has a negative effect
on community morale and municipal pride.
Neighbourhoods that are strewn with litter give the
impression of being uncared for. This can have a multiplier effect: the more
neglected things look, the less incentive there is for people to take pride in
their surroundings.
The writer Bill Bryson puts it this way: “I see litter as part of a long continuum of
anti-social behaviour. One end of it is this minor thing like litter and small
bits of graffiti, and the other end is kicking somebody’s head in.”
There’s an environmental cost, too. Those cigarette butts,
for example, end up being washed into the stormwater system and polluting
waterways.
The next, and more important, question is: what can we do?
On a personal level, zero tolerance is not a bad place to
start.
I recently heard a radio host recall that as a boy, he threw
something out of the car window while travelling with his grandfather. Granddad
immediately pulled up and ordered him to walk back and pick it up. It was a
lesson he never forgot.
At national policy level, Singapore has the right idea. In
2014, its National Environment Agency issued 19,000 tickets for littering.
The maximum fine is now $S2000 for a first conviction and $S10,000
for a third. Offenders can also be sentenced to clean up public areas for up to
12 hours. Way to go, Singapore. How sad that we're far too timid to take a similarly tough line here.
1 comment:
And while the authorities are legislating to increase penalties for littering, can they also please reinstate big fines for obscene language? That pollutes the aural environment.
I chastely curse the day when as a hippie I swore as a means of expressing my freedom from boring conservative restraints. Like our rebellious habit of smoking funny cigarettes, it caught on and is now a plague.
Sorry.
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