Preventing Litter
Knowing more about litter is the first step to a cleaner community
Litter just doesn’t appear – it’s the result of careless attitudes and waste handling. Is there anything you can do? Knowing more about litter and where it comes from is a good place to start.
Why People Litter
Research by Keep
They believe someone else – a park maintenance or highway worker – will pick up after them Litter has already accumulated
Motorists and pedestrians are often blamed for litter. There are actually seven primary sources:
House hold trash handling and its placement at the curb for collection
Dumpsters used by businesses
Loading docks
Construction and demolition sites
Trucks with uncovered loads
Pedestrians
Motorists
Litter is blown about by wind and traffic or carried by water. It moves until trapped by a curb, building, or fence. Once litter has accumulated, it invites people to add more.
Litter and Your Taxes
Litter is a costly problem. Highway departments spend millions of tax dollars and many hours annually picking up litter – money and time needed for more important services. Local, state, and federal governments also spend money removing litter left by careless park visitors.
Clean communities also have a better chance of attracting new businesses than those where litter is common.
What Can I Do?
Set an example for others, especially children, by not littering.
Carry a litterbag in your car.
Make sure trash cans have lids that can be securely fastened.
If you have curbside trash collection, don’t put out loose trash in boxes.
Tie papers in a bundle before placing them in a curbside recycling bin.
If you own a business check dumpsters daily to see that the top and side doors are closed.
If you or a member of your family is involved in civic group, scouting, or recreational sports program, encourage the group to “adopt” a spot in your town and maintain it on a regular basis.
Make litterbags for your bicycle and give them to your friends too.
Report areas where people have illegally dumped garbage and debris to your local highway, public works, or conservation office, and ask that the material be removed. Volunteer to help organize and clean up
If you smoke carry a portable ashtray to dispose of cigarette butts properly
Can I do More?
Ask the organizers of a festival, fair, or other outdoor event in your community to make it a “litter-free” event. This can be done by giving out litterbags at entrances and making sure that everyone who attends knows that it is a “litter-free” day. Affiliates of Keep America Beautiful have organized litter-free concerts, fairs, and minor-league baseball games.
Cover open loads on all trucks.
If you are a contractor, ask your chapter of the National Association of Home Builders about the “Build America Beautiful” program
Encourage a school to start a “clean campus” program. This could include placement of trash receptacles, litter pick-ups, and projects in which students track litter’s origins
Ask marina operators if your Boy or Girl Scout troop or civic group could pass out litter bags to boaters. Public boat ramps are also good spots to give away litterbags.
CARROLL COUNTY'S Convenience Centers
Owned and operated by the Carroll County Board of Commissioners for the convenience of residents of Carroll County.
Bring One for the Chipper

Nowhere to take those old live christmas trees every year? Keep Carroll Beautiful recycles live trees every January after the Holiday season in Carrollton and Villa Rica.
City Of Carrollton's CURBSIDE RECYCLING PROGRAM
On the day of your regularly scheduled trash pick-up, please take your blue bin down to the curb by 7.00 a.m.

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