Alaska is a huge state,
to say it simply. It is twice the size of Texas, and its Malaspina
Glacier is the size of Rhode Island. Denali National Park is the
size of Massachusetts. But there isnt much manufacturing.
In every city we visited,
I checked the telephone book for plating and painting shops. I found
two plating shops in Anchorage, the largest city in Alaska, and
one plating shop in Fairbanks. Neither had any paint or powder coating
shops listed. The one powder coating shop we saw, Advanced Powder
Coating, we simply passed on our way to Talkeetna. It looked like
a fairly new shop. Unfortunately, it was the weekend and no one
was there. I would have liked to have asked the proprietor what
type of parts the company powder coats and how much business it
does. Especially since the shop was nowhere near a relatively large
city with any type of industry that would use powder coating.
We also noticed that very
few cars had any type of rust on them, which surprised us because
the state is boggy and has nasty winters. Sure, there were plenty
of broken windshields (even paved highways often turn into gravel
roads in Alaska) but little rust, even on older cars and trucks.
The only thing we could figure was that the state and municipalities
do not use salt on the roads during the winter. Or, perhaps, very
few people use their cars during the rough winters and use their
ATVs and airplanes instead? (Airplanes have the right of way on
all roads in Alaska.)
Even though there is little
manufacturing, editorials in the paper complained about pollution.
What kind of pollution? People pollution: beer cans, plastics; ruts
throughout the forests and parks because of ATVs and dirt bikes.
People dont care about the environment. They see it as something
they can use at any time in any means for their recreation. These
polluters are not mainly tourists, but those living in the state.
Aldo Leopold, Father
of wildlife ecology, stated, We abuse land because we
regard it as a commodity belonging to us. When we see land as a
community to which we belong, we may begin to use it with love and
respect.
Pollution control begins
with the individual. The leading individuals in corporations and
manufacturing drive the environmental policy. If they do not have
respect for the environment, neither will the company. Fortunately,
this is not the case in most manufacturing. Most have been driven
by environmental legislation to keep their processes clean. But
do the companies and the individuals within the company really believe
in the importance of the regulations?
Yes, some regulations are
redundant and unreasonable. They are only proposed because industry
is an easy target. It is easily regulated.
So how do you show the regulators
and legislators that it is time to make the individual accountable
for his/her own pollution? Should we even leave it up to regulators
and legislators? How do you convince people to care about the land,
water and air? I hope we can figure it out before our last Great
Frontier is destroyed.