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Wednesday, July 29, 2015 • Lucknow Sentinel 3
Be a Beach Bum, not a Beach Butt!
Lake Huron Centre for Coastal
Conservation
Karen Alexander
Outreach and Education
Coordinator
Cigarette butts are one of
the most common litter items
found on Lake Huron public
beaches. Data from the Great
Canadian Shoreline Clean-
up shows cigarette butts and
related litter (cigar tips, light-
ers, and packaging) sum to
45% of all litter items
removed from the Lake
Huron shoreline in 2014.
While cigarette butts lit-
tered across beaches are def-
initely unsightly, they also
introduce a number of seri-
ous environmental threats.
The "Butt Free Beach" cam-
paign of the Lake Huron
Centre for Coastal Conserva-
tion (the Coastal Centre), is
designed to raise awareness
of the environmental
impacts of butt litter on
beaches, while providing an
opportunity for smoking
beach goers to responsibly
dispose their cigarette filters.
Cigarette butts are made
of cellulose acetate, a
fibrous plastic that never
biodegrades. Just like all
plastic, a littered butt will
breakdown over time into
microscopic pieces of plas-
tic. Microplastic pollution in
the Great Lakes is an emerg-
ing threat that the Coastal
Centre has been working on
with research and awareness
initiatives. "Cigarette butt lit-
ter is just another piece of
the bigger plastic pollution
problem" said Karen Alexan-
der, Outreach and Education
Coordinator for the Coastal
Centre. Contrary to popular
belief, cigarette butts are not
made of cotton and they do
not biodegrade. Each littered
cigarette filter can contain
up to 160 toxic chemicals
and 60 of those are known
carcinogens. Furthermore,
once the filter gets wet those
toxic chemicals leach into
the surrounding environ-
ment. At the beach this
means those toxins may be
lingering around in the sand
where children play and
wildlife forage.
Cigarette butts are not just
harmful to the environment,
as a litter item they require
significant costs to cleanup.
Municipal staff and residents
describe the problem as "dis-
gusting'; particularly after a
long weekend when it can
take hours to remove litter
items from the beach. Many
public beaches hire staff to
remove litter but cigarette
butts are small and are often
missed by clean-up crews. If
staffs were required to spend
the time needed to remove all
littered butts it would be
quite costly for the local tax-
payers. Butt Free Beach is a
campaign that aims to reduce
butt litter at the source,
instead of accepting the costs
to clean-up what someone
else thoughtlessly discarded.
The Butt Free Beach pro-
gram originally launched in
Grand Bend and Kincar-
dine's Station Beach in 2013
and has since expanded
along the Lake Huron shore
to include Canatara Park in
Sarnia, Goderich Waterfront,
Inverhuron Beach, and Sau-
ble Beach.
The Butt Free Beach cam-
paign uses education signs to
describe the problem and
gain attention to the issue.
One of the signs appears as a
speech bubble saying "I am a
beach, not an ashtray! Please
don't bury your butts in me!"
The campaign also provides
reusable and/or recyclable
personal beach ashtrays to
smoking beach goers so they
can responsibly dispose of
their cigarette butts.
Using beach clean-ups the
Coastal Centre can evaluate
the impact of the program.
"We aim for zero butts left on
the beach, but realistically
any significant drop in butt
pollution is an indication
that the campaign is work-
ing," says Alexander.
Data from Australia sug-
gests that most smokers vol-
untarily obliged with respon-
sible cigarette butt disposal
once they become aware of
the impacts butt litter can
have on the environment.
"We just want to get the word
out and ask the beach -going
public to "Be a Beach Bum,
not a Beach Butt" by respon-
sibly disposing their butts
while visiting Lake Huron's
world-class beaches:'
The 2015 Butt Free Beach
program was funded by the
Ontario Ministry of Environ-
ment and Climate Change. For
more information please visit
the Lake Huron Centre for
Coastal Conservation's web-
site at www.lakehuron.on.ca.
Valerie Gillies/Lucknow Sentinel
Youngest person at the
Lucknow Flower Show
Three generations accompany 4 day
old Andrew Miltenburg for his first time
attending the Lucknow Horticultural Society
Flower Show and Tea. From left: mother
Christina Miltenburg holding big brother
Jason, grandmother Olga Bajmak (Markham),
grandmother Cecilia Miltenburg holding
Andrew. July 22, 2015.