April 06, 2008
THE GREEN WORLD IS ENDING, I HOPE!

In another confirmation that the Everett Herald (a Washington Post newspaper) has gone off the deep end and dropped all pretext to any relevancy to life in Snohomish County comes this Sunday Editorial:


Published: Sunday, April 6, 2008
Gentle nudge toward making 'green' choice
In theory, a "green" ethic isn't a hard sell in these parts. A sense of environmental stewardship is stamped on the consciousness of people who have lived in the Northwest most of their lives, and it's part of the draw for more recent arrivals.
In practice, sometimes we need a little nudge. Curbside recycling is a good example -- most of us wanted to do the right thing by recycling paper, cardboard, aluminum and glass containers, etc. But until most of us were forced to pay for it, reality didn't match those good intentions.
So we applaud Seattle Mayor Greg Nickels and Seattle City Council President Richard Conlin for last week's proposal to charge consumers a 20-cent fee on disposable bags at grocery, drug and convenience store checkout stands, and to ban so-called Styrofoam containers at food-service establishments. If the City Council goes along, Seattle would be the first U.S. city to adopt a bag fee, and among the first to ban foam food containers. If they prove effective, the rules should be considered statewide.
Disposable grocery bags, plastic and paper, are extremely hard on the environment. Their production, shipping and disposal cause significant air and water pollution, greenhouse gas emissions and litter. Plastic bags that aren't recycled pile up in landfills, along roadways or in local waters, and don't break down over time. Paper bags carry their own, and in many ways higher, environmental costs. Reusable cloth bags are a viable alternative, and are growing in popularity.
Seattle is estimated to use 360 million disposable bags per year. That's nearly 600 bags per person. Nickels and Conlin hope the green fee would reduce that use by at least 70 percent. In Ireland, such a fee reduced use by 90 percent, according to Seattle officials. We particularly like that this plan, by encouraging consumers to play an active role in reducing waste, creates a shared responsibility between consumers and retailers. Everyone does their part.
We also appreciate that part of the revenue raised would go to provide reusable bags to low-income households, easing their burden. Stores would keep 25 percent of the fee to cover administrative costs, and smaller operators, whose costs are usually higher, would keep the entire fee.
This is a sensible, fair, balanced solution to a serious and worsening problem. When practical, cost-effective alternatives to plastics are available, we're confident that consumers will want to make the "green" choice.

What the morons who run the editorial page of this underfunded and poorly manned newspaper won't say in this piece is the NO NO phrase now in the County: GLOBAL WARMING CAUSED BY CO2! It is obvious that even the far left crackpot Editorial page editor Bob Bolarjack is now hesitant to mention this absolute nonsense for fear of being laughed at!
GREEN IS ON ITS WAY OUT! Too much crackpotism and too many people who, based on their comments, must be smoking Delta 9 Tetrahydrocannabinol.

Posted by LeCerveau at April 06, 2008 08:04 PM | Email This
Comments
1. I sent this letter to the editor in on this editorial to Bob Bolarjack at the Herald:
After reading your editorial, Bob, I have come to the conclusion that one immediate step we can take here in Snohomish County to help with our fight against Global Warming is to do away with the Everett Herald!
Just look at the damage that the Washington Post is doing to the environment. Many hundreds of carbon emission sources in the form of trucks, cars and other vehicles use those awful petroleum products to transport the Herald to our homes every single day. Look at the millions of trees being cut down and processed through CO2 belching machines to produce the newsprint that is used for the paper. Note the millions of tons of soy and vegetable oil used to produce the ink stamped on your newspapers. That materiel could be used to make bio diesel instead.
Then look at the problem of the discarded copies of the Everett Herald. In many cases they are being used to start fires in fireplaces and stoves all over the county sending up a monstrous cloud of smoke and ash into the atmosphere poisoning our Mother Earth. A very low percentage of the newsprint ever makes it into the recycle bins.
All of this, of course, is above and beyond the VERY RELEVANCE of the newspaper and its editorial policy that refuses to tackle the real issues in the county: traffic, bloated county government, corruption, environmental extremism, the three stooges on the county council, Boss Reardon and on and on. Instead of concentrating on Styrofoam and plastic bags the Herald should focus on its own destruction as an obsolete, out of date, out of touch media dinosaur.
Oh, and please don't move it to the Internet. Massive servers and routers are energy hogs eating up far too much of the PUD's non-renewable electricity.

Posted by: Bob Clark on April 7, 2008 06:03 AM
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