Trash Pickup Can Transform a Community
At least once a week, I take my two dogs for a walk on the gravel roads near my house. Nothing
unique or exciting about that unless you factor in my 14-pound dog thinking it can take down a
passing motorist occasionally.
But every other month, I take along four or five plastic grocery bags and a pair of gloves on our
walk for the purpose of picking up trash along the mile and one-half stretch of road we cover.
By the time I return home, the bags are bursting at the seams with plastic cups from local fast
food restaurants, used containers of tobacco and most prevalent, empty beer cans.
While not a sexy subject, trash tells a lot about an area, about a community, about the people.
For example, I theorize that we have so many beer cans continuously on my road because my
family lives just outside of town and young people likely need to discard the “evidence” before
returning home for the evening.
Having found myself in the cleanup business a lot lately, I’m learning a lot about the community
through the trash.
Beautify McCook is a volunteer group which does small projects around the community
including the flowering planters downtown, the holiday lights on McCook’s skyline and the
initiatives in Norris Park such as additional electricity and cement pads.
Earlier this year, they added monthly cleanup dates to their list of projects, noting that making
something beautiful can be as simple as picking up litter. So once a month, the Beautify
McCook group, along with any volunteers who would like to join, descends upon downtown
McCook to simply pick up trash. (Follow them on Facebook or watch for the date in the
Gazette.)
Again, this project tells a lot about the community. There are a lot of leaves in the gutters
despite not having a tremendous amount of trees along Norris Avenue but the “tall” buildings
must funnel leaves from the rest of town down the bricks. But that doesn’t dissuade us from
wanting more trees and greenery in general downtown.
The downtown cleanup project tells us that you cannot have too many trashcans. While some
people may find garbage cans unsightly, people will hopefully use them if they have so two or
three on each block is not too many.
We have also learned that just because you have trashcans and multiple signs telling you to
clean up after your dog, people will still not be respectful.
I’m actually conducting a test: Our group cleaned up the small grassy area in front of the
Landmark Apartments that was literally covered in dog droppings, despite three signs, a trash
can and baggies provided.
As someone who walks by that raised yard on a daily basis, I couldn’t tolerate the mess any
longer. And while it wasn’t my dog or my mess, it was cleaned up during the May cleanup
session. The test is whether the residents of the apartment complex - yes, I’m calling them out -
maintain the area now that it has returned to a clean lawn. Time will tell.
But perhaps the most glaring observation during these monthly cleanups is the sheer amount of
cigarette butts. Unfortunately, the butts do not decompose and they are the perfect size to get
stuck in the crevasses of the beautiful downtown bricks. While the butts scatter around
everywhere, they are most prevalent in front of the restaurants where people have dinner and
then step outside for a smoke. That is their prerogative but both the smokers and the
restaurants need to address the fact and consider a smoking station outside.
I actually turned the smoking issue into a positive recently. McCook High School students
participated - willing or unwillingly - in an afternoon of volunteering. Our two dozen students
descended upon the bricks and spent an hour digging cigarette butts from among the bricks. I
told them this was our way of showing and telling them that smoking is a dirty habit - literally.
There were a lot of “butt” jokes and by the end, my group had such a distaste for the litter that
I’m assuming smoking is not in their future.
Picking up trash is never going to be a glamorous subject but it is one of the little things that
makes a difference in your community. It is something everyone can do, regardless of age or
even physical ability.
As you are walking down the street and see a candy bar wrapped floating along, grab it. If you
get out of your car and a plastic cup is wedged along a fence line, put it in the nearest
receptacle. If you are going out for a walk, consider taking a plastic grocery bag along (and
maybe a thin pair of gloves) so you can pick up garbage along your route
It may be easy to say it is someone else’s trash or someone else’s job, but if each of us just did
one little thing each day, consider how we could transform our hometowns. Beautify McCook’s
motto is to transform our community one project at a time but in this case, we can transform our
community one piece of litter at a time.











