Last week’s Earth Day engaged more than a billion people in 192 countries. It took a spark to begin the Earth Day movement, when Ohio’s heavily-polluted Cuyahoga River caught fire in 1969.
It was actually the 13th time parts of the river had burned since 1868 due to the waste, sewage and pollution that factories dumped into the river. Time magazine featured photos from the fire, which became iconic images about the danger humans posed to our environment, and helped organizers launch the first Earth Day in 1970. At the time, Lake Erie was dying and sewage plants, refineries, steel plants and paper mills threatened to choke off all the other Great Lakes. The first Earth Day attracted an estimated 20 million to celebrate and dedicate our nation to conservation and environmental protection. Back then, dirty air, foul water and landscapes cluttered with trash made most Americans realize public health, and the quality of life their children would inherit, was in serious jeopardy.
A variety of environmental laws made their way out of Congress in 1970 following the first Earth Day: The Clean Air Act, Water Quality Improvement Act, Resource Conservation and Recovery Act, Toxic Substances Control Act, Occupational Safety and Health Act, Endangered Species Act, Safe Drinking Water Act and the National Environmental Policy Act.
During the last 45 years, the nation has gradually learned that protecting public health and the environment reduces disease and improves quality of life. Thanks to this effort, the United States is a far better country to live in.
We’ve learned that polluting industries can clean up their own pollution in a cost-effective way and that protecting the environment doesn’t mean sacrificing the country’s economic progress. On the contrary, economic progress may actually depend on the clean environment our laws now mandate. A healthy population wastes less on short-term and long-term medical treatment and contributes more to nationwide workforce.
Most businesses want to be green. Integrating environmental protection into business plans from the outset pays dividends, especially in terms of energy cost savings, but also in terms of the goodwill such policies generate with customers. Business adapt to what customers want, be it healthier foods, greener products or locally produced items with smaller carbon footprint. The strength of the green movement isn’t just in protests, activism and legislation, but in the small green paper rectangles we trade for goods and services.
For more than 25 years, Larson Newspapers has used recycled paper in nearly all of our newspaper publications and biodegradable soy-based ink rather than synthetics in the printing process. Additionally, we recycle our wasted newsprint and old newspapers through bins provided by Sedona Recycles at our newsroom in Uptown. These sustainable practices reduce the volume of paper materials going into landfills and keep toxic chemicals out of air and groundwater of our state and hometown.
This week, we also include our annual Green publication, which highlights environmental sustainability green and alternative-energy businesses and those companies working to make the Verde Valley and the world healthier and cleaner for us all. We hope you enjoy and patronize those local businesses that work so hard to make our lives better.