Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2009/10/15
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]John writes:"This goes back a few years, but I used to live on West 110th Street in NYC and we'd take walks down Riverside Park, which ran along the Hudson River.? At approximately 96th Street and 72nd Street there were huge-diameter discharge pipes from which untreated, unscreened waste flowed into the river.? It was obvious from the human and other products in the outflow that this was straight from the buildings nearby.? I understand that this has since changed, but the pictures in the blog (which are very striking) don't IMO point so much at China as at industrial society.? (No, I am not a card-carrying Green Party member...)" ---------- It does go back quite a few years, at least 20. Since the time of your observations NYC has closed the Great Kills landfill and spent mega millions on sewage treatment plants. The NY State Clean Waters act has prohibited sewage release into the Hudson (and incidentally has caused many companies to leave NYS for less restricted areas along the Mississippi River). The Westchester landfill at Croton Point has been closed and capped with earth to form a lovely green burial mound in the middle of one of the nicest county parks in the area. I can only wonder at the amazement of archeologists 1000 years from now digging into what they think to be a trove of Indian artifacts to discover rusting Buicks, moulding copies of the Sunday Times, and Leica M3s discarded in favor of digital P&S cameras. Now sewage is burned at a large plant run by Standard Resco in Buchanan (next to the Indian Point atomic energy facility). The heat turns turbines, generates electricity, frustrates Arab oil sheiks, and is sold to Con Edison at a nice profit. Trust to capitalism to solve the garbage problem. Larry Z