Earth Day Events in R.I. ‘Reek of Blatant Deception’
By Victor Martelle
Prime example |
For Rhode Islanders at least, it feels like a kick in the teeth: many of these same officials, at best, are stagnant when it comes to environmental initiatives, while some take staunch anti-environmental actions the rest of the 364 days out of the year.
Yet, when Earth Day rolls around,
they all equally come out of the woodwork to show their support, likely for a
piece of that sweet green media pie — yuck!
It’s been said that Rhode Island’s environmental track record is notoriously slow-moving, where laws and regulations are hardly enforced, its own DEM is inept, and the top officials hardly care.
This
extends down to the state’s municipalities, where we’ve seen recent backward
peddling examples in Pawtucket, Providence, Lincoln, and
nearly every other city and town should you look further. It doesn’t help that
these mayors and council members prop this up, all the while, strutting their
stuff on Earth Day, claiming that we need to be more environmentally conscious.
None of this feels right; in fact, it reeks of blatant deception. We don’t even need to look that far to notice either.
The notion of having to volunteer highlights the fact that there are ongoing, unaddressed problems: Why do we need to clean up that area? Why does this street require the planting of trees and shrubbery? Why are we creating cutouts of animals and insects — shouldn’t we be able to see them regularly?
Better yet, why do we
continually let these things fall into these conditions, and why don’t we have adequate laws encouraging and
enforcing even the most basic green initiatives?
Suffice it to say, there’s nothing wrong about taking time to focus on something, but we must examine why we need to do so in the first place and look at who is involved and what they’re doing.
This extends to
not just municipal officials either, but to businesses and leaders within our
communities. Are they behaving like they genuinely care, or for a PR push or
business bump? Additionally, as a side, what can we locals do to push them in a
better direction?
Let’s not kid ourselves, either; if we want more permanent fixes, it won’t be easy. Given that we live on the coast, and with landscapes ranging from city to rural, long-term solutions will vary and may very well be complex. However, it doesn’t feel like we’ve taken the first steps.
We need better oversight from the state, followed by initiatives,
ordinances, and encouragement by the towns and cities therein. Until we attempt
to crawl, we can’t even think about walking. With that, let’s stop kidding ourselves
and hope that one day in the future, there won’t need to be an Earth Day.