A nonprofitโs annual survey suggests Reno residents are littering more than ever before. The 2015 assessment from Keep Truckee Meadows Beautiful is more thorough than in years past, however, so it may be a better indicator of problem areas than any changing trends. KTMBโs survey, which will soon go public, gives our area a 2.1 on a best-to-worst scale of 1 to 4โmeaning, in short, that litter is here and in some cases a big cleanup is in order. Last yearโs score was 1.6, with 1 meaning no visible litter, 2 indicating the presence of trash, 3 calling for an organized cleanup, and 4 accounting for illegal dumping.
Far more survey participants worked on foot this time, combing highways, individual City Council wards, Washoe County Commission districts, and other public areas. Because many previous tallies were conducted by car, โthey havenโt truly accounted for all the different areas in our communityโour parks, our open-space areas, the river, all of that,โ said KTMB program manager Jaime Souza.
Last yearโs worst offender, for example, was I-80 East around Lockwood in Washoe County. This year, itโs open space controlled by the Bureau of Land Management in Cold Springs, Golden Valley, Eagle Canyon, Hidden Valley, Swan Lake and Sun Valley, which scored a collective 3.4. The cleanest zones were in Southeast Reno, Galena and Pleasant Valley, and District 2, where apparently no litter could be found.
โThere are definitely spots weโre concerned about more than others,โ said BLM spokeswoman Lisa Ross, who described everything from shell casings to dumped electronics and yard waste.
The latter is a big one these days, Souza said. So is construction debris.
โYou might see yard waste, branches, cement, asphaltโlike chipped-off blocksโyou might see leftover sod,โ she said. โYes, itโs true that branches are โnatural;โ they will decompose, but not very quickly. We live in a high-desert environment.โ
Then thereโs the Truckee River corridor, which is about as varied as can be, litter-wise.
Just ask Verdi retiree Ted Louvier, who drives his scooter down to Barbara Bennett Park nearly every day. Once there, he settles himself onto a retaining wall and relaxes in front of the water.
โThereโs a little bit [of litter] here and there, like this,โ he said, gesturing toward errant bits of paper and cellophane, โbut as far as a real mess, I havenโt seen any.โ The park is full of trashcans, he added, pointing to at least three in view.
Head northeast along the water, though, and youโll see garbage at public spaces such as Fishermanโs Park, where KTMB and the Truckee Meadows Water Authority organized a cleanup effort on Aug. 14.
โI did go down there,โ Louvier said of Fishermanโs. โBut itโs too undone.โ
KTMB employees hope park users like Louvier will take part in next yearโs surveyโone apt to be โmore of a citizen-science kind of project,โ Souza said. โWhen people are out on their walks, when theyโre out on their hikes, when theyโre recreating by the river, they can then post their scores on social media. Weโre wanting to get anyone and everyone involved.โ
