Wish you would take your trash with you.
By Colleen Cronin / ecoRI News staff
Hundreds of umbrellas and folding chairs made the sand at Misquamicut
State Beach hard to see from the pavilion above Rhode Island’s biggest and most
popular beach.
As
beachgoers traversed the entrances in the dunes to the beach, they passed
something unique to Rhode Island state beaches: dumpsters.
Misquamicut
is the only state beach that makes dumpsters available. Beachgoers at Roger
Wheeler or Scarborough, where there is a carry-in, carry-out policy, have to
take their trash with them when they leave.
At
Misquamicut, seven dumpsters and one recycling bin line the entrances to more
than half a mile of beach. The dumpster pilot program, which started four years
ago, was meant to curb the beach’s trash issues. Still, piles of trash end up
on the sand, in the parking lot, next to the dumpsters, in port-a-potties, and
eventually into wildlife habitat.
By
mid-day, a dumpster near the pavilion was bursting with bags of trash, looking
like an overstuffed suitcase. Further down the beach, another dumpster wasn’t
yet full, but already held the remnants of several broken beach chairs and the
skeleton of an umbrella had been discarded behind it.
Although
beachgoers, local business owners, and even those who run the beach agree that
it’s a problem, working toward a solution is a complicated process, interviews
with those stakeholders and public records reviewed by ecoRI News show.
The
dumpster pilot program started at Misquamicut in 2018 as a collaboration
between the Rhode Island State Parks & Recreation Division of the
Department of Environmental Management (DEM), which runs all state beaches and
parks, the town of Westerly, and the Misquamicut Business Association (MBA).
The
program diverged from the carry-in, carry-out policy started in 1992 at state
beaches after local business owners led a public campaign to add dumpsters at
Misquamicut, arguing the unique circumstances and environment around the beach
called for a different set of rules.
EDITOR'S NOTE: Trash at our beaches is just one part of the overall trash problem caused by our "summer people," whether they're day-trippers, vacationers or part-time owners. Virtually every dumpster and trash can and long stretches of road side are packed with garbage. Part of the problem is the lack of adequate trash disposal, part is due to town restrictions on use of local transfer stations by part-time residents, part is lack of enforcement of local littering laws and part of it is the piggish attitude displayed by many summer visitors. There are common sense solutions to each of the parts of the problem I mention but coastal towns would have to WANT to engage.
Instead, towns consider the summer people to be a valuable resource. In 1986, Charlestown sought to be exempt from the state's then new Flow Control Law. Here's the reasoning:
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Extract from letter by Charlestown Public Works Director Alan Arsensault, Oct. 3, 1986 to the RI League of Cities and Towns. Arsenault is still Charlestown's DPW Director.
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Those circumstances and that town attitude are little changed since that letter was written 36 years ago. - Will Collette