This might annoy some of my visitors but that's the point. They need to be annoyed.
Read this carefully cigarette smokers.
You're an idiot. About the only good thing to say about you is you're killing yourself. Good riddance when that happens.
South Florida groups target cigarette butts on beaches
A massive amount of toxic waste has been dumped on South Florida
beaches, and it has nothing to do with oil spills, sewage leaks or any
of the usual environmental suspects.
Volunteers in Hollywood
next weekend will head out to the beach to clean up cigarette butts,
items that deliver a unique dose of toxic chemicals to the marine
environment. The weekend after that, at a beach cleanup in Lake Worth, volunteers with the Surfrider Foundation expect to pick up thousands of them.
The
Ocean Conservancy says cigarette butts consistently top the list of
items picked up in cleanups the group organizes around the world, well
ahead of plastic lids, bottles and food wrappers.
Although
many people think of cigarette filters as little sticks of cotton, they
actually consist largely of a plastic called cellulose acetate that is
not biodegradable. And by its very nature, a used filter is full of
chemicals. A study last year in the peer-reviewed journal Tobacco
Control found that used cigarette butts were "acutely toxic" to both
marine and freshwater fish.
"The filter is specifically designed to absorb the vapors and as the
filter becomes wet, they leach toxins," said Nicholas Mallos, marine
debris specialist for The Ocean Conservancy. "And recent research has
shown a threat to marine life."
Communities throughout South Florida have tried various methods of dealing with them.
At
the Windjammer Resort and Beach Club in Lauderdale-by-the-Sea, manager
John Boutin provides guests who smoke with little metal buckets of sand
to take out to the beach. "It's working great, and it's reducing the
amount of cigarette pollution we have," he said. "Guests are very
receptive. Now they have easy access to an ashtray, instead of using
the beach as an ashtray."
Along the beaches of Palm Beach County, the Surfrider Foundation conducts monthly cleanups, where cigarettes are invariably the most common item.
"We pick up thousands every cleanup," said Todd Remmel, chairman of Surfrider's Palm Beach County chapter. "It's sad. Birds and fish and other wildlife are eating these things."
The next cleanup takes place May 19 in Lake Worth.
It's
not just smokers at the beach who are to blame. Most cigarettes tossed
onto the ground even miles inland eventually get carried via sewers to
the ocean, environmentalists say.
"It's the most littered item in
the world," said Stefanie Sekich-Quinn, who works on the issue
nationally for the Surfrider Foundation. "It's killing fish, it's
lingering in our oceans. Our oceans are turning into a plastic soup."
The
Hollywood cleanup, called Kicking Butts Off the Beach, is being held by
the American Lung Association, Transforming Our Community's Health and
other groups. It takes place May 12 in North Beach Park from 9 a.m. to
noon. Their last cleanup in Pompano Beach turned up 2,500 cigarette butts in half an hour.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.