Many onlookers were surprised recently to see the DCC
recycling penguin walking down George St with some passionate
youth. Instead of running away from a giant fake penguin and
a mob of teenagers, the Dunedin public were very supportive
of their efforts. A group of teenagers and passionate
students set-up four stalls in the centre of town to raise
awareness about the affect of plastic bags on NZ.
"Plastic bags aren't free day" was the culmination of months
of planning from the students of DSSCF 09.
The Dunedin Secondary Schools Climate Forum (DSSCF) this year
was held at John McGlashan College and the group decided to
take some action about a very small thing with a major effect
on the New Zealand Environment.
"Plastic bags cost New Zealanders an average of 25 million
dollars a year in hidden costs on shopping bills, but if that
doesn't make you doubt the use of plastic bags, more than
100,000 turtles and mammals are killed every year due to
plastic bag related injuries.", group member Tim Shiels said.
So Dunedin Secondary students decided to take action: setting
up stalls, on August 15th, and handing out information about
the use of plastic bags worldwide.
The group also swapped plastic bags for reusable bags (kindly
donated by DCC waste and water services and Progressive
Enterprises).
The plastic bags made a line of over 70 metres which was
taken to the Octagon to show Dunedin that if this was just
the tip of the iceberg the problem was huge, "onlookers were
just astonished by the chain...The truly sobering thing is
that this was only a small percentage of bags given out in
just 5 hours in a fairly small city like Dunedin",
co-organiser Celia Neilson said after the event.
Dunedin shops were invited to join the cause and charge 10c
for plastic bags for one day only, "Disappointingly, we only
knew of two stores that bravely took part- Stirling Sports
and The Athletes' Foot", Paul Young, the other organiser
said.
Bookmark/Search this post with:
A name, residential address, and (preferably residential) telephone number is required from readers who comment on ODT Online. These details will not be visible to site visitors.