Don't dump on me.Rusted rust n. 1. Any of various powdery or scaly reddish-brown or reddish-yellow hydrated ferric oxides formed on iron and iron-containing materials by low-temperature oxidation in the presence of water. 2. tin cans tin cans put on car of newlyweds leaving ceremony. [Am. Cult.: Misc.] See : Marriage , rotting carpets, refrigerators, a playground set, coffee makers, toilet seats, paint cans, deer carcasses stuffed into garbage cans, tons of household garbage, thousands of tires--the list reads like a cross between a town dump inventory and a tag sale tag sale yard sale of used items, usually at very low prices. [Pop. Culture: Misc.] See : Inexpensiveness . But instead, these items were hauled from culverts, quarries, riverbanks, roadside turnarounds and other illegal dumps DUMPS a lethal inherited disorder of Holstein cattle that causes infertility. The name is an acronym of Deficiency of Uridine MonoPhosphate S throughout central Vermont. Now, through a program that personalizes the problem, some communities have reason to believe they've cleaned them up for the last time. Vermont's Adopt-A-Site is making a difference, one site at a time. "Every time we put up a sign, the community is saying it's not OK to dump here anymore," said Monica Mac, Adopt-A-Site coordinator for the Central Vermont Solid Waste Management District. With 18 sites clean and staying that way, people seem to be listening. Along steep drop-offs and back roads, illegal dumps dot the rural landscape. Such areas offer both easy access and anonymity. Add in the high legal disposal costs dumpers would face and the distance to landfills, and you have all the ingredients for a bad habit--one which grows potentially more dangerous all the time. Illegal dumps can provide a breeding ground for rodents, disturb wildlife habitat and contaminate con·tam·i·nate v. 1. To make impure or unclean by contact or mixture. 2. To expose to or permeate with radioactivity. con·tam·i·nant n. the soil and groundwater supply. Dumps near streams and rivers may be especially harmful, sending mercury from leaking batteries, pesticides from lawn products and other chemicals far downstream. Experience has shown that just removing the garbage won't stop people from dumping again. In response, Adopt-A-Site teams post and actively monitor them as well, "showing that someone cares about the sites on an on-going basis," Mac says. PA CleanWays, a nonprofit organization Nonprofit Organization An association that is given tax-free status. Donations to a non-profit organization are often tax deductible as well. Notes: Examples of non-profit organizations are charities, hospitals and schools. fighting illegal dumping and littering in Pennsylvania, follows a similar clean-and-monitor strategy. Its nine chapters have cleaned 85 illegal dumps and adopted 78 locally maintained roads in the past 10 years, removing 1,900 tons of trash--enough to fill 600 truckloads or a line of trucks three miles long. The Environmental Protection Agency Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), independent agency of the U.S. government, with headquarters in Washington, D.C. It was established in 1970 to reduce and control air and water pollution, noise pollution, and radiation and to ensure the safe handling and reports that "illegal dumping is becoming a major problem in many communities in the U.S.," so much so that cleaning them up could be an endless job--and isn't the whole answer. "While cleaning sites is a priority, preventing further dumping is the higher priority" says Liz Helrich, assistant Adopt-A-Site coordinator in Vermont. To deter future dumpers, Sue Wiseman, PA CleanWays director, sees "public awareness, education and stewardship as the long-term solutions." The three-year-old Vermont Adopt-A-Site program is beginning to reap the results of just such an approach. "The only thing we found at one location this spring was a Christmas tree Christmas tree Evergreen tree, usually decorated with lights and ornaments, to celebrate the Christmas season. The use of evergreen trees, wreaths, and garlands as symbols of eternal life was common among the ancient Egyptians, Chinese, and Hebrews. ," says Theresa Lambert, an Adopt-A-Site monitor. "It seems like it's no longer a site for dumping." CONTACT: Central Vermont Solid Waste Management District, 266 North Main Street, Barre Barre (bă`rē), city (1990 pop. 9,482), Washington co., central Vt., SE of Montpelier; settled late 18th cent., inc. 1894. Granite quarrying, which began in the region in the early 19th cent., is still important. , VT 05641/(802)479-4363; PA CleanWays, 105 West 4th Street, Greensburg, PA 15601/(724) 836-4121. |
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