Pacific Island Times February 2019 Vol 3 No. 2 | Page 6
Insights
rom the
comment box
Take pride in our island – use less plastic
B
lown out zoris. Plastic motor
oil bottles. Plastic drinking
bottles of every shape and size.
A five-gallon plastic bucket partial-
ly filled with some water-logged
rust-colored paint. Colorful bits and
pieces of ocean-ravaged plastic from
all sorts of containers. The occasion-
al aluminum can. Beer bottles. A
woman’s high-wedge shoe. Mangled
remnants of a fishing net entangled in
two-foot long pieces of bamboo floats.
Oh, and a used plastic hypodermic
needle just waiting to pierce an unsus-
pecting foot.
Those are just some of
the items my son-in-law
and I picked up from
the shore of my family’s
beachfront property up
at Jinapsan on a recent
Saturday afternoon. The
nearly 40 pounds of
garbage that we collected
had washed in from our
sapphire waters because
some inconsiderate, un-
caring fishermen, ships,
or people from other
places saw fit to just toss
their trash into the ocean
or into a river that feeds
it, figuring that the currents would
carry their waste out of sight, out of
mind.
All of that plastic garbage doesn’t
just dissolve into the crystal deep of
the Marianas Trench. Plastic is one
of the banes of our existence right
now. We are in the midst of a global
plastic waste crisis. According to a
June 2018 National Geographic article
entitled “Planet or Plastic” by Laura
Parker, the world recycles less than
a fifth of all the plastic people use.
We are worse in the United States.
According to the article, we recycle
less than 10 percent. Parker’s article
states that Jenna Jambeck, a Univer-
sity of Georgia engineering professor,
estimated that between 5.3 million and
14 million tons of plastic each year
reached the oceans just from coastal
regions. “Most of it isn’t thrown off
ships, she and her colleagues say, but
6
is dumped carelessly on
land or in rivers, mostly
in Asia. It’s then blown
or washed into the sea,”
the article states.
On our tiny emerald
dot in the great blue
Pacific, we can attest to
this. At least I can. One
of the drink containers
I picked up yesterday
was a “Coolish” ice milk
container made by the
Japanese and Korean
multinational conglomer-
ate Lotte.
So what to do about all of this
plastic and the other trash that washes
up onto our shores from elsewhere?
Well, first, one would argue, we need
to clean up our own island. We need to
get some real island pride going. Pride
that makes it unacceptable to throw
trash in the boonies, or leave it at the
beach or on the roadside after you
have a party.
Pride that makes people want to re-
cycle. Pride that makes our Asian vis-
itors go back home and rethink what
they do with their garbage so that it
doesn’t end up on our sandy shores.
Pride and partnerships – with busi-
nesses and with the U.S. military bas-
es here, so that we can make recycling
large-scale and more economical.
Other things we can do:
• Carry and use those reusable
grocery bags (Si Yu’os Ma’ase to
Payless for its efforts to promote
the use of these bags and elimi-
nate plastic grocery bags).
• Stop buying cases of plastic water
bottles and sport reusable bottles
that we fill with tap water because
we have faith in Guam Water-
works and the people who work
there.
• When you have a party, use
5-gallon coolers and paper cups
for drinks. How many times have
you collected dozens of half-filled
plastic water bottles after a party
or event? What a waste.
Oh, and when you go to the beach,
bring a bag (it’s ironic that in this
case, it is usually a plastic garbage
bag) to collect trash when you see it.
If you have a water softener, though,
the salt bags make good trash collec-
tion bags. Also, if you buy dog food in
quantity, the large dog food bags make
good trash bags too.
Collectively, we need to change our
island mindset. Plastic is our enemy
out here. If we start at home, we can
make a difference here and, by setting
an example, for our Asian neighbors
who visit our island.
It is my hope that in five or 10 years,
when I walk along the beach with
my grandchildren, we just find pretty
shells.
Jayne Flores is a long-time jour-
nalist. She currently works at Guam
Community College. She can be
reached at [email protected].
Cockfighters get
sympathetic ears
from the 35th
Legislature
I was hoping this new
legislature would have focused
on more important matters for
public safety. The new senators
and old ones still are not making
it a priority to fix the roads and
flooding issues.
The pot holes are getting
bigger and the lanes still can’t
be seen. Streetlights are needed.
It is reported many times about
people getting hit and dying
while crossing the streets at
night. What has been done so
far? Talking about something
and actually doing something are
totally different.
There was a senator a couple
of years ago who was waiting
for a new administration to start
before he brought up solutions to
fix the roads.
Ok, there is a new
administration, same political
party as him, but he isn’t here
to do it. I say that, because that
is what he told me. He ran for
office and now he is the delegate
to congress. Changes to the
government was promised, sure
enough changes were made.
—Tomas Fejeran
China beefs up
ties with FSM via
science diplomacy
It’s absolutely a spy ship.
There is a multitude of things
this ship could monitor or
deploy in the water. Knowing
that a “Navy” ship would not
be allowed in the area, why
not send a “science” ship to
do the work. The U.S. military
uses a lot of science research
and development to give the
clandestine units operational
cover. Why would the Chinese
be any different?
—Brad Hewitt