Philadelphians are tired of littered streets. Plus, it’s not cheap: Philadelphia spends close to $50 million annually to deal with litter and illegal dumping.
With a primary election in the future, environmental advocates are asking the next mayor to do something about it.
Waste Free Philly, a coalition of six sustainability and anti-litter advocates, announced a 5-point Mayoral Agenda for a Clean and Waste-Free Future for Philadelphia this morning during a press conference at Girard College.
Coalition members that are working to reduce waste, eliminate litter, end illegal dumping, and move Philadelphia to a circular economy include Circular Philadelphia, Clean Air Council, Clean Water Action, Plastic Reduction Task Force of Weavers Way, Philadelphia Neighborhood Networks and Clean Philadelphia Now: A collaboration between Trash Academy and Clean Water Action.
In the last eight years, recycling has dropped from 22 to 8 percent, and waste collection has never been so inefficient,” said Maurice Sampson in a press release. Sampson is the Eastern Pennsylvania Director for Clean Water Action, who served as the city’s first recycling coordinator in 1985 under Mayor Wilson Goode. “This will only change if the next Mayor is firmly committed to changing the culture from waste collection for incineration to collection for recovery for the circular economy.”
Littered sidewalks not only affect the streets but also our waterways.
Read the coalition’s full Mayoral Agenda on their website.
Cover photo: Steve Weinik
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