By
Ross Atkin. The Christian Science Monitor (www.csmonitor.com),
April 16, 2003.
©2003 The Christian Science Monitor
City
Improvement: Banishing Litter
The job of keeping a nation clean is never really done.
But after 50 years of trying, Keep America Beautiful Inc.
has learned a lot about how to encourage new antilitter
crusaders.
The
key, at both the national and local levels, is to help people
see what's in their own backyards and persuade them to do
something about it.
When
the organization began, that meant prompting a national
cleanliness ethic. The idea grew out of concerns about a
mounting litter problem, which had been brought on by a
growing population and economy, and by increased demand
for consumer goods after World War II.
Keep
America Beautiful blossomed in the 1960s with public-service
advertising campaigns such as the one in which Susan Spotless
scolds her dad for littering. Lady Bird Johnson, the first
lady, also brought attention to the cause by championing
highway beautification.
In
the ’70s, the famous crying Indian campaign, showing
a native American’s sadness at the sight of litter,
was introduced. That campaign was considered a landmark
in raising America’s environmental awareness, says
Ray Empson, president of Keep America Beautiful (KAB). But
awareness was not enough. Action was needed.
And
action has paid off. “Our roadways are undeniably
cleaner than they were 25 years ago,” says Mr. Empson.
“And some states have done a spectacular job of cleaning
their most highly traveled arteries.”
But
the antilitter army still has much work to do, especially
now, with an estimated 2.3 million volunteers participating
in the annual Great American Cleanup™, a three-month
campaign that ends in May.
Last
year, the event posted its usual impressive numbers. Among
them: 7,600 miles of shoreline cleaned, 10,000 junk cars
removed, 5,100 houses painted, nearly 2 million flowers
and bulbs planted, and 110 million pounds of litter and
debris collected.
But
once this year’s event is over, Empson must focus
on KAB’s other pressing mission: recruiting a new
generation to help with their cause.
Getting
children involved
Empson says it’s more difficult to reach young people
today, because the TV landscape is more fragmented and there
are more not-for-profit groups vying for public-service
airtime.
“
The hardest thing is to capture attention and to have our
issue surface as important in comparison with other ones
that children are being asked to pay attention to,”
he says.
That’s
why KAB has developed a curriculum to be used in the primary
grades. Waste in Place, the elementary school curriculum,
focuses on litter prevention and responsible solid-waste
practices. Last year, KAB volunteers and staff reached about
940,000 young people in their classrooms.
Beyond
that, it’s important to engage teenagers with challenging
neighborhood projects. One strategy that appeals to them
is competition. It also helps to make cleanup events more
dramatic and more physically challenging. In Washington,
D.C., for example, teens got on bikes and inline skates
and descended on areas throughout the city that needed cleaning
up.
But
the best way to drive home the antilittering ethic has always
been to have people roll up their sleeves and dig in. “We
think there’s extraordinary value in experiential
education, seeing and picking up the litter along the roadway,
and being unhappy about how it’s gotten there,”
Empson says.
Sharla
Hotchkiss would certainly agree with that statement. Ms.
Hotchkiss has been an antilitter activist for 17 years,
but the “keep it clean” ethic has been with
her for much longer.
In
fact, her “green” journey began during a family
trip when she was 8 years old, on the road between El Campo
and Wharton, Texas.
Her
grandmother, an avid gardener and nature lover, must have
seen someone littering, because she suddenly and firmly
decreed: ”Never throw anything out the car window
unless it's a wildflower seed.”
Ms.
Hotchkiss, remembering this edict, went on to become an
activist extraordinaire. Two years ago she received the
Mrs. Lyndon B. Johnson Award, which honors women dedicated
to making America more beautiful.
One
of her most notable achievements is maintaining a 95 percent
reduction in litter in Midland, Texas (hometown of George
W. and Laura Bush), where she is the former executive director
of Keep Midland Beautiful, the local KAB affiliate (there
are 535 affiliates nationwide). She has also been president
of Keep Texas Beautiful.
Today,
she trains teachers, civic leaders, and those who run the
network of more than 62 certified KAB local organizations
in the state.
“
If you were to come to one of our projects—tree planting,
litter pickup, recycling, or whatever it might be—you’d
like the people, because they're real positive,” Hotchkiss
says. “They believe in what they’re doing, and
they’re so happy to find something that they can do
that they know makes a difference.”
Hotchkiss,
like Empson, believes recruiting is crucial, but she focuses
on a more local level.
Making
litter their business, too
In Midland, stores are encouraged to accept recycled bags
and cashiers are asked not to bag items unnecessarily. Fewer
bags means fewer plastic eyesores blowing around and snagging
on the mesquite that is so prevalent in this part of wind-swept
west-central Texas.
Trouble
spots, Hotchkiss says, are often near grocery, discount,
and convenience stores, as well as fast-food restaurants.
(Drive-through customers are noticeably more careless with
their trash than those who get out of their cars.)
These
businesses, however, are actually among the best supporters
of Keep Midland Beautiful, and frequently underwrite cleanup
efforts by supplying money plus goodies - food and T-shirts
- to the volunteers.
“
The last thing these stores want to see is litter with their
name on it by the side of the road,” Hotchkiss explains.
“They don’t want their brand associated with
negative behavior.”
Part
of what makes Keep America Beautiful successful, she believes,
is its ability to deliver both instant and long-term gratification.
Cleanup projects offer the former, tree-planting the latter.
The
group also places great value on being nonconfrontational.
“We don’t point fingers, we network,”
Hotchkiss says. “It’s really hard to get angry
with people in your community who are planting trees and
picking up litter, and that’s why political folks
will get involved with us. We don’t embarrass them.”
Hotchkiss
seldom confronts litterers, preferring to lead by example
and encouraging others to follow her lead.
“Go
pick up some trash,” she suggests to this reporter.
“You’ll be amazed at how good it makes you feel.”
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