by Keith_McClary » Tue 09 Aug 2005, 00:22:35
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Specop_007', '
')Your right. I really should get out and pick up all those bottles, needles, cans, papers and other trash littering our area.
The funny thing is? We keep our parks nicer then those other people keep their front lawn! Well....the front whatever it is.
Keep Kansas City Beautiful
Project Blue River Rescue: A Great American Cleanup Success Story
The Blue River, all 41 winding miles of it, flows through the second largest urban forest in the country and the city's urban core before spilling into the Missouri River. Walk its banks and you can see deer, beaver, turtles, hawks, and native wildflowers. You can also see beer cans, broken glass, discarded tires, disabled refrigerators, and an occasional abandoned car.
Revitalizing the river is what Project Blue River Rescue is about. Organized by The Friends of Lakeside Nature Center's Stream Team #175, the Rescue is now in its fifteenth year. Project Blue River Rescue is the largest one-day stream cleanup in Missouri.
During the 2004 Cleanup, 650 volunteers gave more than 3000 hours of their time to clean up 300,000 pounds of trash and 650 illegally dumped tires. This one day effort required a diverse crew including individuals, families, and civic and professional groups. Volunteers were assigned to teams and targeted particular areas, which they heroically and victoriously restored in a single day.
Volunteers cleaned 300,000 pounds of trash
during the Blue River Rescue in 2004.
Blue River Rescue
I guess you were busy that weekend.