“Trashtopia” Is a Symptom
Floatopia Brings an Excess of Garbage and a Lack of Accountability
Wednesday, April 15, 2009
There are certain things that could only happen in I.V. Floatopia is one of them. About 12,000 people packed the beach April 4 for the celebration. Students holding kayaks held together with wooden boards, kiddie pools, and just about any floatation device you can imagine headed down to the beach between Devereux and Campus Point to get their party on. I.V. was a scene with cars parked every which way, and throngs of people dragging their coolers of beer down toward the beach. Try having a 12,000-strong spontaneous party at East Beach - I don’t think so.
Cat Neushul
Overall, it seemed fairly calm. Surfers and beach goers one hundred yards down the beach could see, but not even hear, the revelry. Heading downtown in the evening, I watched as the partiers dragged their deflated boats, and inebriated selves, back to their apartments. It appeared peaceful. The news reports, however, tell a different story. It’s clear that there were problems including injuries, crime, ocean rescues, and trash - lots of it.
This event set a spotlight on two of the main problems I.V. faces: trash and accountability. After the thousands left the beach, their bottles and other refuse remained. Some organizations went down to the beach afterward for a cleanup. They took away a lot of the trash, but could only begin to solve the problem.
I.V. is not set up to properly dispose of trash. There are trash cans in the parks and other public areas, but there aren’t recycling bins, and there is nowhere along the beach to throw anything away. This means that you have to take up from the beach whatever you take down. Overall, not such a hard thing to do, but when you’re talking about thousands of people with their beer bottles, empty chip bags, and Ding Dong wrappers, one little trash can at the top of the stairs just isn’t going to cut it, even if everyone packed up their trash. In this case, a row of dumpsters would have been more appropriate.
The main issue, however, is whether all the people at Floatopia would choose to carry their trash up the stairs and dispose of it properly. I think they would if they thought that this wasn’t simply something nice to do, but mandatory. The pervading spirit in I.V. is that there is a freedom to trash. If you visit areas around other college communities, like UCLA, Harvard, or even Santa Barbara City College, you won’t have to drive over trash in the street or step over broken bottles along a dirt path. You might ask why students from other colleges don’t drop their wrappers wherever they want, or leave tipped-over trash cans where they fall. It’s the expectation of the community. In the City of Santa Barbara trash is not tolerated, and litterers are fined. For some reason, I.V. residents get carte blanche. They move here, see that landlords and neighbors don’t care what they do, and they start the trashing. And here comes the next problem - accountability.
A resident suggested holding a freshman orientation session on the proper disposal of trash. Sounds good, right? But who would pay for it? The I.V. Recreation and Park District (IVRPD)? UCSB? There’s always someone who shoots down the idea with the ubiquitous “They should do it.” In I.V. it’s always someone else who needs to pony up and take the hit. Well, here’s a suggestion: Why doesn’t the IVRPD or Santa Barbara County hire a person just to clean up I.V.? This “trash cop” could start by fining the landlords with trash outside their buildings. The landlords would pass on the pain to their tenants, and probably start to include detailed “no littering” clauses in their rental agreements. The trash cop could also ticket individuals for infractions. In this way, one of these organizations could make some extra cash by enforcing the existing ordinances. This money could then be used to educate and train incoming students to recycle and discard their trash properly. The trash cycle would be broken.
There were also other types of ickiness at Floatopia that couldn’t be put in a trash bag and dragged away. The thousands of students who thronged to the beaches had nowhere to go to the bathroom, unless they were willing to climb the steep steps up from the beach and head home. I’m thinking that not that many made the trek. Yuck! One I.V. resident pointed out that the problem would have been solved by having a row of porta-potties on Del Playa. That would be great, but again who would pay for it? The UCSB Excursion Club was the group that advertised Floatopia. Were they responsible for providing porta-potties or trash cans? Nope. Was Santa Barbara County? Nope. IVRPD? Ditto. With no one taking responsibility, there was no one to organize the event or blame for its shortcomings. Unlike with the trash problem, I don’t have an easy answer.
Maybe a committee of I.V. residents, county representatives, and IVRPD board members should be convened to address how to handle events of this nature. I’m not sure that events like Floatopia shouldn’t happen. If I was a student, I would have gone. What we don’t want in our community is any more events, like Halloween, that are marked by destruction, trash, and crime. It’s just no fun, and it’s not safe. It’s time for I.V. residents to take responsibility. The solution is up to us.
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Comments
Nicely balanced article, Cat. One thing you might have done is investigate the `Adopt-a-Block' program of the IVRPD. A lot of trash *does* get picked up! I find the place way, way more clean today than 20 years ago.
There is always what I might call, say, a Cornish stand-off in IV. Anyone who stands up and takes responsibility immediately gets a gun pointed at their head by the authorities ("You are enabling Halloween, Floatopia, whatever. We'll send you the Deputies' overtime bill"). But all the young people who naturally want a good time have their own gun pointed back at the authorities ("You gonna declare martial law and restrict mobility because of inflatable kiddy pools?").
The deputies, BTW, dump tons of horse manure on Halloween on the streets of IV, and they never clean it up. A statement of sorts. It washes into the ocean, but no-one seems to complain about that.
pardallchewinggumspot (anonymous profile)
April 15, 2009 at 11:59 a.m. (Suggest removal)
Oh gosh you just don't quit huh? Here finaly there is an article detailing the problems with IV, very serious problems and you continue your postings from a different article... Don't at me look over there!!!! Get over yourself.
InTheKnow (anonymous profile)
April 15, 2009 at 2:56 p.m. (Suggest removal)
Rock festivals left the same kind of destruction...most people talk the talk, but can't walk the walk...wasted people leave their waste. Lets face it, you have a bunch of spoiled kids who are on their own for the first time and don't have anyone telling them to clean up after themselves. Class, study, test, get wasted, repeat. Hopefully at the next event mother nature will fight back. 60 knot winds, rain, earthquake, tar, sharks, jellyfish, stingrays, 15ft swell, 9ft high tide, landslide, 100k seagulls, sand fleas and ELF.
lordleadbetter (anonymous profile)
April 15, 2009 at 6:02 p.m. (Suggest removal)
Well, an angry ocean is a mighty site; in the 1980's waves nearly crashed over Del Playa. If the ocean wants to take retribution, so be it.
Sure there are partiers, but there are lots and lots of volunteers who clean up IV trash as well as Floatopia. They walk the walk and walk the waste to the bins.
Too bad all this trash talk neglects them.
pardallchewinggumspot (anonymous profile)
April 16, 2009 at 6:15 a.m. (Suggest removal)
PCGG:"Sure there are partiers, but there are lots and lots of volunteers who clean up IV trash as well as Floatopia. They walk the walk and walk the waste to the bins."
You got it right, but you've just mentioned/nailed(unknowingly) the brunt of the problem: The generation of entitlement that makes up a large portion of I.V. creates a mess & it is left to those who actually give a crap to pick up after them.
As I personally see it, these wannabe ghetto lifers come to I.V. to rely on others to clean up their crap from their ghetto lifestyle. I see it w/ my neighbors & their friends who tool them.
Like I said, the way we deal w/ it is pick up their trash & dump it on THEIR front doorstep. If it's ghetto they want, ghetto they get, just keep it on THEIR side of the complex :) henry
hank (anonymous profile)
April 16, 2009 at 4:49 p.m. (Suggest removal)
It' actually pretty simple. Someone has to pick up other people's trash. That's the way it works at Fiesta, Solstice, etc. and that's the way it probably works at your house.
If no one put out trash cans, emptied the cans, and picked up after Fiesta, downtown would look exactly like IV. It's not about "trashy people" just a question of scale and how a repeated simple, single, small act (littering) scales up to a big problem in the aggregate. Therefore it requires an appropriately scaled solution to the size of the problem.
Trashing the people reveals more about the commenter than the issue.
wingnut (anonymous profile)
April 16, 2009 at 5:51 p.m. (Suggest removal)
I find IV pretty clean lately. Way cleaner than the 1980's when it seemed to me cups were everywhere. Way cleaner than the 1970's when Teepee Village, campers, and dogs were all over.
pardallchewinggumspot (anonymous profile)
April 16, 2009 at 9:13 p.m. (Suggest removal)
I hear that! I.V. didn't start a recycle program up until the mid to late 90's, I had many an article in the Daily Nexus about why there was no such program, they finally implemented it. The Adopt A Block programs do seem to be keeping the mess to a minimum.
EAB always has some sort of beach cleanup going on as well.
But herein lies the problem: If I showed up to YOUR house repeatedly, w/ a bunch of my a-hole friends, thrashed your place & left it a mess only to come back & do it again, numerous times, wouldn't YOU be a little ticked off?
Also, after repeated cleanups, you'd be getting tired of it & would show less enthusiasm in said cleranup process.
To compare floatopia to Fiesta is really not apples to apples. During Fiesta there's places to put your trash, plenty of folks there to help you should an emergency arise, sufficient bathroom facilities.
All floatopia had was a bunch of problems that carried over to the environment.
Look, I don't consider myself an "environmentalist" by any means. But I do try to live like my dearly departed mom taught me: Do the right thing.
To many @ floatopia the "right thing" was making a mess for others to clean up after them w/out a care in the world.
Yet many consider themselves "environmentally concerned" for all extensive purposes. Go figure :) henry
hank (anonymous profile)
April 17, 2009 at 1:05 p.m. (Suggest removal)
Here is a link to a picture of the 1973 Recycling Program in IV (and generally a cool site with pictures of IV circa 1973)... Henry, recylcing got going 25 years before you thought it did.
http://people.virginia.edu/~ds8s/mpw/...
At Fiesta or Solstice or July 4 there is civic cooperation between the organizers, the City of Santa Barbara, and local business.
In IV, the 20-somethings don't know how to work with the County, the County hates IV, and local business is utterly disorganized.
Curious quote from Gene Lucas in the Nexus, BTW...
http://www.dailynexus.com/article.php...
``Executive Vice Chancellor Gene Lucas said although the university's aim is not to encroach on the tradition, this year's Floatopia, as well as its upcoming reincarnation, damage the image of the university.
"At a time when we are in dialogue with our community about our Long Range Development Plan and reminding the community of all the good things that UCSB does for it, this event has really hurt our reputation and done a great disservice to all of the students that do care," Lucas said in a prepared statement.''
Boy is he out of touch. UCSB's utter impotence and lack of understanding of IV is exactly why locals oppose more UCSB expansion.
Had UCSB stepped to the forefront years ago and helped turned Halloween and/or Floatopia into well-run festivals, maybe the LRDP would have not been DOA.
Instead, the admins in Cheadle do the Ostrich and keep their heads in the sand.
pardallchewinggumspot (anonymous profile)
April 19, 2009 at 12:42 a.m. (Suggest removal)
Given these issues, the need to fund better trash clean up, accountability, and education/outreach, and given that people in IV are likely going to want to continue to have spontaneous, facebook-publicized, "no one actually organized it" parties, rather than "well-run festivals," why not just levy an additional property tax on all IV residences? The funds from that could go toward increased IVFP, safety, and clean-up measures. It's clear that discussions about respect and responsibility will fall on deaf ears with people like PCGS, who will continue to throw out red herrings and rationalizations, rather than making changes or taking any personal responsibility. If people in IV want to make a mess and leave the clean up and costs to others, the county should just step in and ensure that they're paying for it.
UCCU (anonymous profile)
April 24, 2009 at 11:12 a.m. (Suggest removal)
For all those organization and individuals who clean up after themselves and others, THANK YOU! It does seem, however, a little like trying to mop up the bathroom floor from a sink overflow without shutting off the faucet. Thank you Cat for suggesting ideas to stop the problem. Images of the Floatopia carnage found here:
http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid...
RodTucknott (anonymous profile)
April 25, 2009 at 8:41 a.m. (Suggest removal)