Inside the fight to force makers of plastic trash to clean up their mess

The moment may be at hand for Californians to turn the tide on a sea of plastic waste that environmentalists say is destroying life in the ocean, contaminating drinking water and stuffing state landfills.
Already qualified for the November ballot, the California Recycling and Plastic Pollution Reduction Act would force the petrochemical-based plastics industry to make all single-use plastic packaging and foodware items reusable, recyclable or compostable by 2030, while reducing production of them by 25%. 

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 Northern California recycling and waste management giant Recology Inc. put up $3.85 million to get the measure on the ballot. The Corn Refiners Association contributed $250,000 more. The Conservation Action Fund, supported by a half-million-dollar contribution from the Nature Conservancy, is bankrolling the ongoing campaign. And a who’s who of prominent environmental organizations in the state has lent lobbyists and message masters to lead the attack on plastic.
The measure’s supporters describe a frightening scenario of a world overwhelmed by plastic waste — food cups, clamshell containers, straws, bottle-cap sealants and dozens of other single-use items. Plastic trash, the advocates say, now floods the oceans with some 14 billion tons of waste a year that ravages fish and other sea life. On land, plastic refuse breaks down into microscopic particles that are being found pretty much everywhere.
“This isn’t just about marine life,” said Nick Lapis, a lobbyist for Californians Against Waste. “This is being ingested by humans, and we don’t know what the effects of that are. This year, research has come out that showed for the first time that there’s plastic in human blood and human lungs, and there was a study that tested the first bowel movement of newborns, and they had plastic in them. … Babies are literally being born with it in their bodies.”
*   *   *
Under the terms of the measure, the plastics industry — attached at the hip with the fossil fuels industry, a relationship now under investigation by the California attorney general — would be required to pay a one cent fee for each piece of single-use plastic such as a plastic lid, straw and cup sold.
Most of this money would go into a new California Plastic Pollution Reduction Fund that would “support local public works infrastructure and litter abatement activities, composting, recycling, reuse, and environmental restoration,” according to the initiative. The measure also bans polystyrene foam containers widely used in food services.
Opponents of the initiative say it would cost consumers and state and local governments billions of dollars and lead to tens of thousands of workers losing their jobs. They say that the initiative’s wording does allow producers to pass along costs to consumers, only that they can’t itemize it in a receipt or invoice. 

Opposition spokesman Michael Bustamante said the initiative will cost consumers $4.3 billion a year on the penny-per-plastic-item tax.

 The California Business Roundtable ($350,000) and the American Chemistry Council ($250,000) are the biggest funders of the opposition campaign, Stop the Tax on Working Families. The Dart Container Corp., of Mason, Michigan, has contributed $256,000 in a donation it made through the Business Roundtable. Dart produces polystyrene foam cups and other food service delivery products; in 2012, it acquired the highly visible Solo Cup franchise, famous to Pong players everywhere. The California Retailers Association, the California Manufacturers & Technology Association and the California Taxpayers Association have signed on with the Roundtable and the chemistry council as sponsors of the opposition committee.
Michael Bustamante, the opposition spokesman, said the initiative will cost consumers $4.3 billion a year on the penny-per-plastic-item tax, or $901 a year for a family of four. He says the state will pay an additional $4.1 billion for expanded recycling and related costs, and that the initiative will require another $500 million to replace “noncomplying materials,” for a total cost of $8.9 billion. Moreover, Bustamante said 40,000 workers will lose their jobs, more than half of whom are Latino.
Bustamante obtained the data from a report put out earlier this year by the Center for Jobs and the Economy, the California Business Roundtable’s research arm. The report, however, said that the initiative would only “affect” the jobs, not eliminate them. The report attributed the figures to 2019 state Employment Development Department data for California packaging employment. Among the 40,159 jobs that the report said would be affected, 7,327 of them are actually in the paperboard and paper bag industry.
In an interview, Bustamante said that “ambiguities” in the wording of the initiative might also expose cardboard, glass, paper and aluminum products to the requirements of the initiative, especially if those materials are intermixed with plastic products.
Bustamante also attacked the initiative’s foremost financial backer, Recology Inc., as “corrupt” and “rotten from the core.” He cited the company’s admission to wrongdoing in two long-running bribery cases that were resolved last year with the company paying $136 million in criminal penalties and rate reimbursements. Bustamante charged that Recology launched the initiative primarily as a result of a decision by the Chinese government in 2017 to stop recycling the world’s plastic waste, including the tonnage it had been importing from Recology.
“You know that these guys were shipping their plastics to China,” Bustamante said. “China was accepting them for free, but when China closed its doors in 2017 and said, ‘We’re not accepting any more,’ Recology needed to find a Plan B, and their Plan B was this initiative.”
An employee-owned company that has collected San Francisco’s trash since 1935, Recology now recycles more than 600 million pounds of materials every year along with some 1 billion pounds of compostable food scraps and yard waste in 127 communities in Northern California, Oregon, Washington state and Nevada. 

A Recology spokesman said that the plastics industry “has cynically and dishonestly tried to make Recology the focus” of the campaign “to divert attention away from what is truly at stake.”

 “We are not out to destroy the plastics industry, but we must embrace change,” former Recology CEO and President Michael Sangiacomo wrote in a San Francisco Chronicle op-ed when the company launched the initiative drive in 2018.
Company spokesman Robert Reed, in a statement to Capital & Main, said that Recology has “long grappled with the challenges put out by plastic waste” and that it “proudly put up the seed money” for the initiative. Reed said that the plastics industry “has cynically and dishonestly tried to make Recology the focus” of the campaign “to divert attention away from what is truly at stake: voters’ interest in addressing the dangerous proliferation in our environment, our lands and seas, our flora and fauna, and our own bodies.” Reed asserted that the measure “earmarks no money — zero dollars — to Recology.”
Last Sept. 9 Recology admitted to fraud in a complaint filed by the U.S. Attorney’s Office in San Francisco. In a plea deal, the company agreed to pay $36 million in criminal penalties. Also last year, Recology on March 4 settled a case brought by the San Francisco City Attorney’s Office related to the bribery scheme and agreed to pay more than $100 million in rate reimbursements to the city’s residential customers.
According to court documents, the bribery scheme involved two Recology officials who delivered more than $1.1 million in payments to San Francisco’s former public works director, Mohammed Nuru, in exchange for rate increases going as far back as 2013.
Acting U.S. Attorney Stephanie M. Hinds said in a press release that the company is “committed to full cooperation” in the government’s ongoing investigation.
Despite the bad publicity out of San Francisco, initiative supporters have not backed away from Recology. Lapis, the lobbyist for Californians Against Waste, said it has been “a good partner” and called the industry attack on Recology, which is no longer involved in the campaign, “a miscalculation on who they think is driving the ship here.”
*   *   *
As for the opponents’ allegation that the initiative will cost consumers $4.3 billion, the measure’s supporters are using the figure to bash the plastics industry. They say that the number represents an admission on the industry’s part of the Mt. Everest-sized plastics problem, as well as an acknowledgment that producers have no intention of reducing the amount of nonrecyclable waste that they are pumping out.
At the rate of a penny a piece, the proponents say, the figure suggests the industry is producing and California consumers are throwing away some 430 billion pieces of single-use plastic a year.
“I think what the opposition here is saying with these inflated cost estimates and claims is that they are basically owning up to having no intention of changing their ways or taking responsibility for their products,” said Dr. Anja Brandon, the U.S. plastics policy analyst at the Ocean Conservancy. “They plan to continue business as usual while pushing costs on to consumers, which the ballot measure explicitly prohibits.”
Dart Container Corp. and the American Chemistry Council both promote reuse and recycling on their websites. Brooke Armour Spiegel, vice president of the California Business Roundtable, said in an interview, “The business community is not opposed to recycling and reducing plastic waste. In fact we strongly support it.” Nobody from either Dart or the chemistry council responded to requests for comments. (Dart’s chairman, Kenneth Dart, who is believed to be worth $6.6 billion as of 2013, renounced his U.S. citizenship in favor of Belize to avoid paying taxes, as did his brother, Dart Chief Executive Officer Robert C. Dart.) 

“The truth is: The vast majority of plastic cannot be recycled and the recycling rate has never surpassed 9%.”
~ California Attorney General Rob Bonta

 Brandon surmised that neither Dart nor the American Chemistry Council are serious about growing what environmentalists call the “circular economy” that other firms, especially those in corn refining, seem poised to pursue. She notes that the plastics industry is deeply connected to the oil industry and views the continued use of petroleum-based single-use plastic as a pathway to profits.
“They see the public’s growing awareness and frustration with single-use plastic pollution as [an] existential [threat] to their business,” Brandon said. “Because, ultimately, getting to a circular economy means not using fossil fuels anymore.”
In April, California Attorney General Rob Bonta’s office served a subpoena on ExxonMobil, the first move in what he said will be an investigation into the petrochemical industry’s alleged misleading of the public about single-use plastic producers’ ability to recycle its products.
“Enough is enough,” Bonta said in a press release announcing the subpoena and the investigation. “For more than half a century, the plastics industry has engaged in an aggressive campaign to deceive the public, perpetuating a myth that recycling can solve the plastics crisis. The truth is: The vast majority of plastic cannot be recycled and the recycling rate has never surpassed 9%.”
*   *   *
With polls showing state residents overwhelmingly concerned about plastic pollution and ready to do something about it, business groups have recently gone to the table to negotiate their possible legislative accession to a significant plastic waste reduction bill. Talks are underway in Sacramento among business groups, environmentalists and lawmakers, and they must reach an agreement, sources said, or the initiative will go to the voters.
State Sen. Ben Allen (D-Santa Monica), the author of SB 54, a plastic source-reduction measure that has been pending since December 2020, is mediating the talks. Any likely deal would require the industry committing to and financially supporting a significant level of source reduction, a move to replace more plastics with compostable products and increasing the state’s plastics recycling rate to well beyond its current 9% level. In return, the business side wants more certainty regarding what the state’s recycling agency, CalRecycle, can and cannot order, the source said.
On June 14, 21 environmental groups sent a letter to Allen saying that they could not support a compromise proposal that made it into a bill that is now in print. They contended that the revised SB 54 takes away too much of CalRecycle’s authority to develop the initiative’s reduction and recycling programs and gives it to the producers “who have created the problem,” the letter said.
The initiative’s proposed polystyrene ban and its effect on Dart Container Corp. also has emerged as a major issue in the talks, another source said. Although Dart, the big-time polystyrene producer, is not directly participating in the negotiations, the company, besides its $256,000 contribution to defeat the initiative, has, since 2019, contributed $496,000 to 85 lawmakers in the Assembly who ultimately would have to approve any legislative deal, according to initiative proponents.
Neither side is predicting whether a legislative compromise can be achieved. In anticipation of the possibility that there will not be a deal, proponents announced on June 13 that they had retained one of the country’s leading Democratic campaign organizations, Bryson Gillette, to run the fall campaign, if there is one. June 30 is the deadline for the two sides to reach a deal if they want to remove the measure from the Nov. 8 ballot.    

 Copyright 2022 Capital & Main.
An earlier version of this story identified the California Recycling and Plastic Pollution Reduction Act by an alternative title, the California Plastic Waste Reduction Regulations Initiative.

Newcastle dad creates socks that cut your carbon footprint after fearing for daughters' future

A Newcastle dad has unveiled his new eco-friendly clothing business that aims to cut your carbon footprint. Launched by father-of-two Marc Bucci this weekend, Social Socks offers environmentally-friendly socks which, Marc hopes, will help reduce the impact of the clothing industry on the planet. Marc started the business after becoming worried that his daughters might …

Newcastle dad creates socks that cut your carbon footprint after fearing for daughters' future

A Newcastle dad has unveiled his new eco-friendly clothing business that aims to cut your carbon footprint. Launched by father-of-two Marc Bucci this weekend, Social Socks offers environmentally-friendly socks which, Marc hopes, will help reduce the impact of the clothing industry on the planet. Marc started the business after becoming worried that his daughters might …

As Wegmans ends use of plastic bags at Virginia Beach store, city considers 5-cent bag tax

VIRGINIA BEACH — With Wegmans announcing this week that plastic bags would no longer be available at its Virginia Beach location beginning July 1, regional environmental activists see an opportunity to spread the word about the harm plastic bags do to local waterways.Some are now lobbying Virginia Beach to pass a measure that would impose a tax on disposable plastic bags. The city could vote as soon as next month on such a proposal — a move advocates say could dramatically reduce the amount of debris in local waterways.AdvertisementFrom 2015-20, plastic bags were the fourth most common type of litter found during the International Coastal Cleanup, conducted by Ocean Conservancy.“I think the largest benefit (from a national chain like Wegmans ending the use of plastic bags) is the awareness of the public to the dangers of plastic bags, whether that’s to tourism, to habitats, to sea creatures all the way down to microplastics,” said Lisa Jennings, Hampton Roads grassroots coordinator for the Chesapeake Bay Foundation.Advertisement[ Wegmans plans to remove plastic bags from Virginia Beach store beginning July 1 ]Consideration of a bag “tax” in Virginia Beach comes after the Virginia General Assembly passed House Bill 534 in 2020 which allowed any county or city to charge a 5-cent fee for each disposable plastic bag that certain retailers provide.Local governments began discussing the ordinance in earnest in May 2021, and since then, eight communities have approved it: Alexandria, Albemarle County, Arlington County, Fairfax County, Falls Church, Fredericksburg, Loudon County and Roanoke.A draft ordinance under consideration by the Virginia Beach City Council would impose a 5-cent fee for each “disposable plastic bag provided to a consumer of tangible personal property by retailers in grocery stores, convenience stores, or drugstores.”Retailers will keep 1 cent, and the other 4 collected by the Department of Taxation must be spent on environmental cleanup, educational programs aimed at reducing pollution, mitigating pollution and litter or providing reusable bags to recipients of SNAP and WIC benefits.Jim Deppe, advocacy coordinator for Lynnhaven River NOW, provided an overview of the bag tax issue to the City Council earlier this month ― describing the 5-cent charge as more of a fee than a tax because it can be avoided by using reusable bags.The council will hold a meeting to hear public comment on the matter on Tuesday and is expected to vote July 5.If approved, the ordinance would go into effect on Jan. 1.If Virginia Beach were to adopt the bag tax, Deppe said in an email that he would expect the city to see a 70-80% drop in plastic bag debris in its waterways in the first year. He based the estimate on similar results reported by an environmental group that has monitored Fairfax County’s waterways since its ordinance went into effect in January.A seagull bites a plastic Walmart bag trapped in a puddle, while looking for food at Deep Creek Marina in Newport News in 2018. (Aileen Devlin/Daily Press/Daily Press)Environmental activists list multiple benefits to reducing plastic bag debris. Turtles have long been known to ingest plastic bags after mistaking them for jellyfish, and swimming into a floating plastic bag could make a tourist not want to return to city beaches, Jennings said. Plastic bags also get stuck in storm drains and complicate Hampton Roads’ flooding problem, she said.AdvertisementFees for plastic bags have led to a dramatic reduction in their use and in pollution where they’ve been implemented. Washington saw a 72% reduction in the amount of plastic bags found in waterways during cleanups in the first 10 years since implementing a 5-cent fee. The city also collected $19 million in revenue during that timeframe, which was used to install traps that helped remove bags and other debris from waterways and to create environmental education programs for students, Deppe said.“Around here there are so many watersheds that need to be freed up of plastic bags that we feel it’s very important to move on and follow the lead of the other communities in Virginia that have implemented this,” Deppe told the Virginia Beach council June 7.At the meeting, council member Guy Tower expressed gratitude to the activists who have pushed the plastic bag fee and said test cases show clear benefits.“This is a community-wide effort,” Tower said. “It makes so much sense to me that I can’t imagine anybody not supporting it.”Restaurants, food banks, farmers markets and food trucks would not be affected. The draft ordinance also would not apply to plastic wraps on food to keep it from spoiling or being contaminated, durable plastic bags designed to be reused, plastic bags used to carry dry cleaning or prescription drugs and plastic bags for garbage and pet waste.Today’s Top StoriesDailyStart your morning in-the-know with the day’s top stories.Jennings said the 5-cent fee is a “nominal” amount, which would cost the average family an estimated $5 per year if they were to pay for the plastic bags each time they went shopping. But she said it could cause shoppers to think twice before choosing plastic.Advertisement“It’s the thought process of, ‘Oh, I have to pay for this object, and what is the object’s value when I’m just using it for the couple of minutes that I’m going to use it?’” she said.Wegmans will offer paper bags for 5 cents each, but its goal is to encourage customers to switch to reusable bags, which it calls “the best option to solve the environmental challenge of single-use grocery bags.” The store will donate the money from paper bag charges to a local food bank, according to a news release.Aldi, Lidl and Trader Joe’s are other large grocery store chains that have moved away from plastic bags.Wegmans said that in stores that already have eliminated plastic bags, paper bags have been used for 20-25% of transactions, while reusable bags were used for the remaining transactions.Virginia Beach residents who would like to provide public comment on the proposed ordinance can email the City Council at citycouncil@vbgov.com.Gavin Stone, gavin.stone@virginiamedia.com

Viral video showing Guatemala coastline covered in plastic garbage

A TikTok video has gone viral of a beach in Guatemala completely overwhelmed with plastic garbage from water bottles and old shoes. @4ocean What if we told you this was what Guatemala’s coastlines look like right now… #plasticpollution #trash #ocean #beachcleanup #guatemala ♬ original sound – 4ocean The video posted by 4ocean has now been …

Viral video showing Guatemala coastline covered in plastic garbage

A TikTok video has gone viral of a beach in Guatemala completely overwhelmed with plastic garbage from water bottles and old shoes. @4ocean What if we told you this was what Guatemala’s coastlines look like right now… #plasticpollution #trash #ocean #beachcleanup #guatemala ♬ original sound – 4ocean The video posted by 4ocean has now been …

Toxic tiles

When Brittany Goldwyn Merth ripped up the carpets in her Maryland home in March 2019 and laid down vinyl tile, she meticulously documented the process. Merth is a do-it-yourself influencer, part of a growing group of well-coiffed women who track their home improvement projects online through sleek videos and posts studded with affiliate links. To her 46,000 …

Sea turtles along Pakistan coast face host of threats

KARACHI:

Sea turtles along the coast are facing a welter of anthropogenic threats, including habitat degradation, plastic pollution, and entanglement in fishing gears, according to the World Wildlife Fund (WWF).
As a result of the construction of huts along beaches in Karachi and Balochistan, major nesting grounds of sea turtles are adversely affected, the study said on the eve of World Sea Turtle Day.
Since 2000, World Sea Turtle Day is observed every year on June 16 to raise awareness about the dwindling population of sea turtles and their diminishing habitat.
According to Muhammad Moazzam Khan, the technical adviser to WWF-Pakistan, plastic waste, collapsing huts, and rubble pose a serious threat to nesting females and juveniles along Pakistan’s coastal areas.
In Pakistan, sea turtles are known to nest on a number of beaches, including Sandspit, Hawke’s Bay, and Cape Monz along the Sindh coast, as well as Taq (Ormara), Astola Island, Gwadar Headland, and Daran along the Balochistan coast.
Thousands of female turtles visit these beaches to nest and lay eggs.
Also read: WATCH: Wildlife team cradles green turtles babies from beach to sea in Karachi
To collect data on the entanglement of turtles, the WWF-Pakistan initiated a study in 2012, which revealed that 30,000 sea turtles were annually caught in tuna gillnet fisheries of the country.
This included roughly 25,500 Olive Ridley and 4,500 Green turtles in the offshore waters of Pakistan.
Entanglement in fishing nets is the most serious threat to marine turtles.
It was estimated that about 3 per cent of entangled turtles were dying due to drowning or mishandling onboard fishing vessels.
Protecting endangered species
To protect the endangered species, the organisation has trained some 100 “skippers and crew members” to safely release the entangled sea turtles and developed a modification in the operation of the gillnets.
This, the study said, has reduced the entanglement of sea turtles by 85 per cent.
Pollution is also another major threat to the sea turtle population in Pakistani waters. Popular beaches are littered with garbage, dominated by single-use and micro-plastics.
The study has also reported on the impact of diesel and petrol on the population of turtles, stating that exposure to these fuels results in deformation in hatchlings and so, poses a serious threat to their survival.
Government agencies have taken several steps in recent years for the protection of sea turtles along the coasts.
“Through the efforts of WWF-Pakistan, fisheries-related legislations of both maritime provinces have been amended and sea turtles, as well as freshwater turtles, are declared protected,” the study added.
According to Khan, the declaration of Astola Island as a marine protected area, actions taken by the wildlife departments of Sindh and Balochistan, as well as awareness programs initiated by non-governmental wildlife organisations, have collectively increased the turtle population along the coastal regions.
Also read: Turtle species face extinction threat due to illegal fuel trade
However, he added that there is a need to declare all turtle beaches along the coast of Sindh and Balochistan marine protected areas.
Rab Nawaz, the senior director of WWF-Pakistan’s Conservation Biodiversity, for his part, called for “better protection and conservation” of sea turtles in the country.
He said these unique and iconic animals have been in existence for more than 100 million years but are under “serious” threat.
Human activities such as the destruction of nesting sites and unplanned development, as well as climate change, are pushing turtles closer to extinction, which calls for immediate steps for their conservation, he stressed.
Major species
Experts believe that the country has lost 25-30 per cent of the nesting ground for Green turtles over the past decade.
Female turtles lay their eggs on beaches between October and February, and the eggs hatch in about 60 days.
Five species of marine turtles are reported from Pakistan, with Green turtles (Chelonia mydas) the most dominant one, while another important sea turtle is the Olive Ridley (Lepidochelys olivacea) which used to nest along the coast.
However, no nest of this turtle species has been reported since 2001, the study said.
The other three species, including loggerhead turtle (Caretta caretta), hawksbill turtle (Eretmochelys imbricata), and leatherback turtle (Dermochelys coriacea) are reported from Pakistan and only a few authentic records are made by WWF-Pakistan.
Although turtles are not commercially harvested for food, however, poaching of turtle eggs has been reported.
Turtle hatchlings are also illegally removed from their nests and sold in aquarium shops.
“Although the government takes action against poachers, this illegal trade still continues and needs to be curbed,” it concluded.

Saving a Texan bayou, ‘16 bottles’ at a time

Bayou Dave, a modern-day Sisyphus, has spent the last dozen years ridding a trash-choked Houston waterway of plastic and Styrofoam. No matter how much Bayou Dave hunts, his quarry never goes away. He finds it each time he sets out on Buffalo Bayou, a slow moving river that wends through the country’s fourth largest city and out to its port. And so it was one recent sweltering morning when he and his longtime deckhand, Trey Dennis, headed on a small barge to a floating boom they’d set out on the water the day before.“Ah, isn’t that sweet,” said Bayou Dave, whose real name is David Rivers, as the boom swung into view.Cradled in the boom’s massive embrace was what they were looking for, and knew they’d find: a vast whorling jumble of trash.There was a toy airplane, a yellow football, a foam egg carton and a nail salon pink flip-flop. There were takeout containers, disposable dental picks and foam cups from 7-11 and Chick-fil-A. More than anything else, there was plastic — bottles that once held water, Coca-Cola, Gatorade, Sprite, Armor All multipurpose car cleaner and Fireball cinnamon whiskey.Mr. Rivers maneuvered the barge over to the island of garbage — as big as a tennis court, it represented a fraction of the trash that flows through the bayou each day — and he and Mr. Dennis got to work.More than 200 square miles of Houston’s sprawling urban streets drain into Buffalo Bayou and one of its tributaries, White Oak Bayou, with the runoff from every storm and rainfall carrying all manner of tossed and lost debris to the waters.Mr. Rivers and Mr. Dennis are among the handful of people who regularly intercept the garbage before it finds its way to the Gulf of Mexico.Using a jury-rigged suction device crafted with the help of duct tape, they haul the equivalent of about 250 full garbage bags out of the Bayou and its nearby waterways each week.Trey Dennis, Mr. Rivers’s deckhand, guided the suction device to suck up trash from the bayou and on to the craft.Michael Starghill Jr. for The New York TimesDowntown Houston seen from the bayou system on a recent morning.Michael Starghill Jr. for The New York TimesMaia Corbitt, president of Texans for Clean Water, described the pair as “our last line of defense” before the trash flows through two ecologically sensitive estuaries and into Galveston Bay. Robby Robinson, the field operations manager for Buffalo Bayou Partnership, the pair’s employer, described their work as “endless, thankless, no reward.”“You just gotta be a special person,” Mr. Robinson said.For Mr. Rivers, working on the Bayou is a calling. He’s been cleaning up its waterways pretty much every weekday for the past dozen years. Few people are more attuned to its inhabitants and its health.Earlier this year Mr. Rivers spotted, to his delight and relief, the first snakes he’s seen on the bayou since Hurricane Harvey wiped out much of its wildlife in 2017. He revels in the riotous colors that crowd the bayou’s banks each spring and fall, waxes rapturous about its assorted birds, rescues baby turtles from rafts of trash, and mourns the fish killed by periodic algal blooms.“It’s the whole ecosystem I’m concerned about,” said Mr. Rivers, 51. “The animals aren’t responsible for the pollution. But they’re directly affected by it.”Growing up in South Acres, a hard bitten Houston neighborhood, Mr. Rivers was a devotee of the nature show “Mutual of Omaha’s Wild Kingdom” and, later, “The Crocodile Hunter.”He worked a series of jobs — stocking shelves at Target, mending railroad tracks, working as a security guard, landscaper and cleaning up toxic spills after Hurricane Katrina — before getting hired to work on the bayou in 2010.A rotating cast served as deckhands on Bayou Dave’s barge until 2015, when Mr. Dennis came aboard. A former high school football player who grew up in Mississippi, Mr. Dennis adored the physicality of the job. “I’m saving the world one bottle, OK, by 16 bottles, at a time,” said Mr. Dennis, 30, who Mr. Rivers nicknamed Country Slim. “This is the best way for our children in the long run to stay healthy too.”Mr. Rivers said he’s been delighted and relieved to see the snakes slowly return to the river since Hurricane Harvey swept through in 2017.Michael Starghill Jr. for The New York TimesOpening the top hatch of the barge to reveal a brimming trash container.Michael Starghill Jr. for The New York TimesBuffalo Bayou is about 18,000 years old, and was saved from being artificially rerouted more than half a century ago, when environmentalists enlisted the help of George H.W. Bush, then a new congressman. In the 1980s, the nonprofit Buffalo Bayou Partnership was formed to maintain and create green spaces and hiking and biking trails along 10 miles of the roughly 52-mile bayou. About two decades later, a board member, Mike Garver, introduced a barge that suctioned up floating garbage, which Mr. Rivers later helped redesign after he became its captain.Mr. Rivers and Mr. Dennis have bayou trash retrieval down to an art.Their bayou-saving chariot is a 30-foot barge mottled with rust. A hardtop bimini shades its helm, a lone concession to human comfort, for the barge has no seats. A foot-wide vacuum hose rests on its bow, fastened with duct tape to another massive hose that feeds a containment area below deck.Understand the Latest News on Climate ChangeCard 1 of 5Great Salt Lake.

Saving a Texan bayou, ‘16 bottles’ at a time

Bayou Dave, a modern-day Sisyphus, has spent the last dozen years ridding a trash-choked Houston waterway of plastic and Styrofoam. No matter how much Bayou Dave hunts, his quarry never goes away. He finds it each time he sets out on Buffalo Bayou, a slow moving river that wends through the country’s fourth largest city and out to its port. And so it was one recent sweltering morning when he and his longtime deckhand, Trey Dennis, headed on a small barge to a floating boom they’d set out on the water the day before.“Ah, isn’t that sweet,” said Bayou Dave, whose real name is David Rivers, as the boom swung into view.Cradled in the boom’s massive embrace was what they were looking for, and knew they’d find: a vast whorling jumble of trash.There was a toy airplane, a yellow football, a foam egg carton and a nail salon pink flip-flop. There were takeout containers, disposable dental picks and foam cups from 7-11 and Chick-fil-A. More than anything else, there was plastic — bottles that once held water, Coca-Cola, Gatorade, Sprite, Armor All multipurpose car cleaner and Fireball cinnamon whiskey.Mr. Rivers maneuvered the barge over to the island of garbage — as big as a tennis court, it represented a fraction of the trash that flows through the bayou each day — and he and Mr. Dennis got to work.More than 200 square miles of Houston’s sprawling urban streets drain into Buffalo Bayou and one of its tributaries, White Oak Bayou, with the runoff from every storm and rainfall carrying all manner of tossed and lost debris to the waters.Mr. Rivers and Mr. Dennis are among the handful of people who regularly intercept the garbage before it finds its way to the Gulf of Mexico.Using a jury-rigged suction device crafted with the help of duct tape, they haul the equivalent of about 250 full garbage bags out of the Bayou and its nearby waterways each week.Trey Dennis, Mr. Rivers’s deckhand, guided the suction device to suck up trash from the bayou and on to the craft.Michael Starghill Jr. for The New York TimesDowntown Houston seen from the bayou system on a recent morning.Michael Starghill Jr. for The New York TimesMaia Corbitt, president of Texans for Clean Water, described the pair as “our last line of defense” before the trash flows through two ecologically sensitive estuaries and into Galveston Bay. Robby Robinson, the field operations manager for Buffalo Bayou Partnership, the pair’s employer, described their work as “endless, thankless, no reward.”“You just gotta be a special person,” Mr. Robinson said.For Mr. Rivers, working on the Bayou is a calling. He’s been cleaning up its waterways pretty much every weekday for the past dozen years. Few people are more attuned to its inhabitants and its health.Earlier this year Mr. Rivers spotted, to his delight and relief, the first snakes he’s seen on the bayou since Hurricane Harvey wiped out much of its wildlife in 2017. He revels in the riotous colors that crowd the bayou’s banks each spring and fall, waxes rapturous about its assorted birds, rescues baby turtles from rafts of trash, and mourns the fish killed by periodic algal blooms.“It’s the whole ecosystem I’m concerned about,” said Mr. Rivers, 51. “The animals aren’t responsible for the pollution. But they’re directly affected by it.”Growing up in South Acres, a hard bitten Houston neighborhood, Mr. Rivers was a devotee of the nature show “Mutual of Omaha’s Wild Kingdom” and, later, “The Crocodile Hunter.”He worked a series of jobs — stocking shelves at Target, mending railroad tracks, working as a security guard, landscaper and cleaning up toxic spills after Hurricane Katrina — before getting hired to work on the bayou in 2010.A rotating cast served as deckhands on Bayou Dave’s barge until 2015, when Mr. Dennis came aboard. A former high school football player who grew up in Mississippi, Mr. Dennis adored the physicality of the job. “I’m saving the world one bottle, OK, by 16 bottles, at a time,” said Mr. Dennis, 30, who Mr. Rivers nicknamed Country Slim. “This is the best way for our children in the long run to stay healthy too.”Mr. Rivers said he’s been delighted and relieved to see the snakes slowly return to the river since Hurricane Harvey swept through in 2017.Michael Starghill Jr. for The New York TimesOpening the top hatch of the barge to reveal a brimming trash container.Michael Starghill Jr. for The New York TimesBuffalo Bayou is about 18,000 years old, and was saved from being artificially rerouted more than half a century ago, when environmentalists enlisted the help of George H.W. Bush, then a new congressman. In the 1980s, the nonprofit Buffalo Bayou Partnership was formed to maintain and create green spaces and hiking and biking trails along 10 miles of the roughly 52-mile bayou. About two decades later, a board member, Mike Garver, introduced a barge that suctioned up floating garbage, which Mr. Rivers later helped redesign after he became its captain.Mr. Rivers and Mr. Dennis have bayou trash retrieval down to an art.Their bayou-saving chariot is a 30-foot barge mottled with rust. A hardtop bimini shades its helm, a lone concession to human comfort, for the barge has no seats. A foot-wide vacuum hose rests on its bow, fastened with duct tape to another massive hose that feeds a containment area below deck.Understand the Latest News on Climate ChangeCard 1 of 5Great Salt Lake.

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