Well, if you sent your note to the gov about curbside recycling, you probably also received the awesome form letter response from Sanitation Coordinator William Sundstrom on behalf of the Mayor. If you didn’t, I’ll give you a rundown of the contents:
- Bullshit
- More bullshit
- Some shit about you being lazy
- Bullshit
- Sincerely, Bullshit
Let’s pull some quotes to back up my interpretation, shall we?
St. Petersburg has one of the most successful recycling programs in Pinellas County, ranking ahead of all the large communities in Pinellas County in the amount of recycled material per capita, as measured by weight.
Thanks for that information, except that wasn’t the point. The point was that you should pick the shit up. We know it is successful because we’re the people lugging that shit to your inconvenient locations on a weekly basis. Just imagine how successful it could be if you made it easier.
A City-wide curb side recycling program has been given significant consideration over the years. More specifically, proposals were requested from private curb side recycling entities to provide a subscription based program. No bids were received from the private sector for this initiative due to the unrealistically high cost that would be charged to a relatively small portion of the total population.
Seriously, that’s what you came up with? “Dude, we tried: we asked someone else to do it and no one did.” That is so weak. Also, let’s go ahead and call bullshit since these guys can do it for $15/month.
A curbside program would have an annual operating budget in excess of $3 million dollars; generate environmental detriments associated with additional fuel consumption (20,000 gallons per year), vehicle air emissions and potable water usage, with minimal impacts to extending the life span of the Pinellas County Landfill. The high cost of operating a curbside program must be compared to the low resource return, typically from a 2%-4% reduction of the waste stream. This imbalance represents a negative influence on resource conservation, which is the goal of recycling.
That’s right kids, despite what you might have thunk: recycling is bad for the environment. Wow. This is such bullshit that it isn’t worth the 3 seconds of Googlesleuthing it would take to prove it wrong. You aren’t even trying, are you?
Matters of convenience, and political pressure, rather than practical reasons are often the driving force in the implementation of curbside programs.
Well, you got one point right: it is more convenient for you to continue to resist a curbside program than to implement one. Cheers to you.
I encourage you to respond if you received this message. Let them know that you are offended by the fact they sent you an e-mail trying to convince you that you are a lazy ass. Be sure to also mention that you are insulted that they thought you’d fall for the “recycling is bad for the environment” bullshit. And lastly I encourage you to close your e-mail, as I did mine, with “it is times like this that I am embarrassed to be a resident of St. Pete.” Bonus points if you add “P.S. I will pray for your lost soul, Mayor Baker.”
got a tip?
love
buy shit
subscribe
recent comments
- Lyndon: Luckily, they caught these scumbags.
- chaoward: As of my last update (from yesterday afternoon, but whatever) TROPIC STORM...
- Justin E: Or as these guys would say, “Faillicane.”
- judester: This shit was a hurricant.
- Justin E: They should call the next hurricane that starts with the letter N...
7 Responses
At least they got one thing right, I am indeed lazy.
I’ve got an idea for the city: enlist the tent dwellers to ride around town on the Post Office bikes and do door-side recycling.
Call it “Bumcycling!” Get it?
I love their “increased fuel costs and bad for the environment” argument. Won’t they be picking up the exact same amount of trash as they do now? It’s not like if we have curbside recycling we’d all the sudden be throwing out more stuff. It would be the same amount of trash!
By the way, I am a customer of oursprs.com and I am very happy with the service.
Below are my arguments for why a curbside recycling program makes perfect economic and environmental sense. This information has been derived from the Pinellas County Utilities page and unlike the posting below, is not an exported list of facts that has no empirical basis.
Why have a curbside recycling program in Saint Petersburg?
A. Almost all the cities in Pinellas County, with the exception of Saint Petersburg, have curbside recycling programs. However, we are the most densely populated city and account for the majority of the waste entering the Bridgeway Acres Landfill.
B. 70% of the waste entering the landfill can be recycled. Currently the zero emissions waste to energy plant processes 3,150 tons of solid waste or day or approximately 75% of total waste. The other 15% is buried in the Bridgeway Acres Landfill. Do the math, if Saint Petersburg, the largest contributor to the landfill, reduced total solid waste through recycling by just a small percentage, we would have no need to bury waste ever again!! A curbside recycling program would produce these results.
C. So what happens if Saint Petersburg doesn’t adopt a curbside recycling program? At present this means we would soon be shipping our solid waste to Lake Okeechobee. What will this mean for you?
a. Higher garbage collection fees (currently 37.5 a ton). This number would increase at least three fold to account for the greater distance. In fact probably much more then that based on the rise in fuel costs.
b. More greenhouse gases and air pollution in the atmosphere. This will warm the ocean, creating more hurricanes, and also contribute to the rise in asthma and lung cancer.
D. Of course if all of this is not convincing and you don’t believe in lung cancer or climate change, perhaps you will go with the economic growth incentive. If there was a greater volume of recyclables in Pinellas County, small recycling businesses would flourish. This would add a new dynamic to the local economy and support small business development. Believe it or not, trash is quite a lucrative business.
Curbside recycling is about protecting the future of our planet and children. The cost-benefit analysis favors a curbside program without doubt. There really is no room for pointless argument. If Mayor Baker was honest he would say we don’t have a program because we don’t want to put in the initial capital to make it a success. He would admit that the reason is based on fear and uncertainty and not on the future economic and social viability of Saint Petersburg. He would admit that it is easier to waste now then take a small risk and work towards a better future.
I totally did not get that letter.
[...] link to a form letter you can use to write Mayor Rick Baker urging him to adopt curbside recycling. Today, they’ve added a scathing response to a form letter they received after e-mailing Mayor [...]
In my household, Baker is referred to as “Mayor Pencilneck”.
I absolutely, postively know it doesnt work…but it does make more money for someone.
When they pick mine up, they just throw the recycling stuff in with the same trash so, unless someone is hand sorting it at the other end, Baker is blowing air up my skirt again and telling me its the Gulf breeze
RSS feed for comments on this post · TrackBack URI
Leave a reply