Volunteers at a recent trash cleanup event in Grand Traverse County addressed this long-time illegal dump site at the bottom of a steep ravine. (DNR photos) |
“Well, I wanted to get a workout today,” said Laplaca, an engineering consultant from Traverse City. “I thought it would be on a bicycle, but this will suffice.”
Laplaca is one of 17 volunteers who gave up their ordinary Saturday morning routines in order to help clean up illegal dump sites in Grand Traverse County.
An avid trail user who skis, hikes and mountain bikes, Laplaca has been volunteering on local trail improvement projects for more than a decade. He’s worked on widening trails, controlling erosion, and removing deadfalls. But this Saturday morning marked the first time he enlisted in an Adopt-a -Forest project to clean up the woods.
Although illegal dumping is a problem occurring on public land in many parts of Michigan, Grand Traverse County, until recently, was home to more illegal dump sites than any other county in the state, with 45 known sites on public land in the county.
Now, thanks to the combined efforts of volunteers and the Adopt-a-Forest program – a joint effort involving several agencies and administered by the Department of Natural Resources – 25 of these sites were cleaned up over the past six months and additional work is planned to address the remaining 20 before the snow flies, squarely knocking the county from the top of that illustrious list within a matter of months.
Volunteers recently partnered with Adopt-a-Forest to clean up three illegal dump sites in Grand Traverse County. Pictured, left to right, are Becky Beach, Craig Leppien and Pete Laplaca. |
And cleaning up three of the dump sites is exactly what Laplaca and his fellow volunteers set out to do on a beautiful Saturday in early October.
To accomplish their task, the volunteers initially split into separate crews to tackle two smaller sites – consisting of mostly scrap construction materials, along with some old furniture, bedding, appliances and household refuse – found near popular trails.
Following those efforts, they regrouped at a county-owned parcel that has seen illegal dumping for many years.
On an old well pad, illegal dumpers would back up to the adjacent ravine and throw the trash over the side, leaving the trash out of sight – until you walked up to the edge of the river and looked down.
Getting the stuff out of there would prove to be a Herculean task. But with a DNR fire truck, complete with a winch, the volunteers and DNR staff were able to lower a trailer down the slope, fill it with refuse, and have it winched back up.
When the cleanup was completed, DNR forest fire officer Dwayne Morse took the fire truck back to its base in Kalkaska and returned with a bulldozer to cut furrows in the pad site, making it impossible for anyone to drive up the edge of the ravine to dump trash ever again.
Craig Leppien (left) and Pete Laplaca (right) work together to load rubbish into a trailer provided by Leppien at a recent Adopt-a-Forest cleanup event in Grand Traverse County. |
The event was an unqualified success, said Jim Heffner, a retired engineer/real estate appraiser who brought the day’s event to fruition.
“It’s hard to get volunteers on a beautiful fall day, but we were able to come up with 17 people who were willing to come out and pick up rubbish,” he said.
The volunteers ranged from young professionals to retirees, including a financial planner and a former community college teacher.
“I enjoy being outdoors, but when I was working full-time, I didn’t have time to dedicate for volunteering,” said Paul Bolhuis, a former freight dispatcher who moved to Williamsburg from Holland after retiring. “So now it’s my chance to pay back and make it enjoyable for others.”
Craig Leppien, who brought his flat-bed trailer to the cleanup event, said he didn’t think any of the volunteers knew how big of a job they would be undertaking.
“I heard about it and I knew they were cleaning up basically my backyard so I wanted to help,” he said.
The Adopt-a-Forest program was launched in Roscommon County in 1989 by a pair of DNR employees from the former Waste Management Division (now part of the Department of Environmental Quality); the program then expanded statewide in 1991, immediately attracting partners from local, state and federal agencies, and continues today with a focus on cleaning up illegal dump sites on public land across Michigan.
“We estimate at least 200 sites are cleaned up annually, but that’s a low-ball estimate,” explained Ada Takacs, who manages the program for the DNR’s Forest Resources Division. “Sometimes the local community groups – such as Scout troops and hunting, ORV and ski clubs – just take it upon themselves to join in the effort and take care of organizing and funding an event without getting the DNR involved, which is great.”
“Annually we spend about $15,000 statewide on disposal costs related to these clean-up events. It can cost up to $1,400 to rent a dumpster,” she said. “But it’s worth every penny, since the in-kind services – equipment donations, free landfill space and volunteer labor – are worth much more than what we spend.”
Takacs said illegal dumping became a problem when state landfill requirements changed in the mid-to-late 1980s and townships had to close local dumps and begin routing trash to lined landfills. Citizens who were accustomed to the previous way of doing things and didn’t want to pay for the use of improved landfills began dumping illegally at a noticeably higher rate.
“Years ago when we started this program, you couldn’t drive through the woods without finding miles and miles of trash. Major, major trash piles,” Takacs said. “Now, dumping does still occur, but the piles are smaller and less frequent.”
In addition to the creation of the Adopt-a-Forest program, other changes have been made to curb the illegal dumping problem. Legislation raising the penalties for illegal dumping – up to $10,000 in fines and/or five years of incarceration – provided an incentive for paying for trash service or driving to a designated landfill. And most young adults today grew up with recycling as a societal norm.Volunteers clean up trash in Grand Traverse County.
Volunteers Craig Leppien (left) and Paul Bolhuis (right) work to clean up an illegal dump site in Grand Traverse County. |
Through the combined effect of changes in regulations and the marketplace, along with the increased efforts of volunteers like the citizens who helped with the recent Grand Traverse County clean-up, the outlook for illegal dumping in Michigan is certainly improving, but Takacs said there is still much work to be done in many counties across the state.
Anyone interested in supporting Adopt-a-Forest and being part of the solution can find more information, including a calendar of scheduled cleanup events, online at www.cleanforests.org.
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