tourists – Michmutters
Categories
Australia

K’gari (Fraser Island) awash with rubbish left behind from tourists

K’gari (Fraser Island) is Queensland’s small slice of paradise with a massive problem.

The heritage-listed island threatens to become a victim of its own success as millions of tourists are lured across the water each year.

But they’re leaving piles of rubbish in their wake, and overflowing waste stations on the island need urgent upgrades.

“People go over there with cheap camping gear, and when they finish with their holiday, they just throw it in the tip,” Fraser Coast councillor Darren Everard said.

“It is a fragile location, and it needs to be respected.”

Clearing the mess does not come cheap either.

It costs more than $400,000 a year to cart rubbish from tourists and locals off the island via a barge to the mainland, prompting the Fraser Coast Regional Council to plead with the public to follow a “pack in, pack out” rule.

“If you’re taking a product onto the island, you should be taking it off with you as you go… that is best practice,” Mr Everard said.

Landfill and large tip bins surrounded by green trees and shrubs.
A Wongari or dingo fence is all that separates the dump site from the surrounding bush.(ABC Wide Bay: Lucy Loram)

Not a Happy Valley with dump nearby

In the tiny township of Happy Valley on the eastern side of K’gari, a dump site lies just a stone’s throw from the nearest home.

“It is 50 meters from a house. It’s about 20m from a recreation reserve where there’s a picnic table, so it is not ideal,” said Scott Bell, who has lived at Happy Valley for 36 years.

With just a dingo fence separating the landfill from the forest, Mr Bell said the Happy Valley station was a major concern for locals.

“Properties that are very close have got to contend with the smell coming from the tip — and the flies,” he said.

“The blowflies have become quite horrendous in town … I think everyone recognizes it’s not an ideal situation to have that rubbish tip so close to the township.”

An elderly man in a blue shirt and a broncos cap smiles.
Mr Bell says it is more than just a little township’s problem.(ABC Wide Bay: Lucy Loram)

The station is one of three landfill sites on the island, including Eurong and Orchid Beach, comprised of tip bins that collect rubbish not just from the townships but from K’gari’s mass tourist population.

“We get things like commercial kitchens being dumped there, national parks have to dump a lot of rubbish just left at camp sites, so it really is more than just a little township’s problem,” Mr Bell said.

Beautiful place facing challenges

The Happy Valley Community Association is working with the Fraser Coast Regional Council to identify alternative sites for the dump, but it could take some time before the month is addressed.

A line of tip bins in an open forest area.
The landfill is removed from the island in tip bins that are transported to the mainland via a barge.(ABC Wide Bay: Lucy Loram)

Mr Everard said waste transfer on K’gari was a work in progress that would begin with a 10-year waste management and resource recovery strategy.

“The island is a beautiful place and has a number of challenges, so we want to try to ensure that we get that waste removal more workable and less invasive on the island,” he said.

“We have got a bit of work to do, so we’re going to start with the Eurong Transfer Station, and then we’ll move to improve the facilities at Happy Valley and Orchid Beach.”

The upgraded station at Eurong will be capped to mitigate legacy waste and will feature new bays for stainless steel waste and recycling bulk bins when completed in 2024.

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Categories
US

LA bank exec ID’ed as third killed by lightning strike near White House

A young California bank executive has been identified as the third person killed in a freak caught-on-camera lightning strike near the White House last week.

Brooks Lambertson, a 29-year-old Los Angeles-based vice president at City National Bank, was identified by DC police as the third fatality from Thursday night’s strike that also left a fourth person in critical condition.

He was killed alongside James Mueller, 76, and Donna Mueller, 75, childhood sweethearts from Wisconsin who were in the capital celebrating their 56th wedding anniversary.

All four had been in Lafayette Park — yards from the White House fence — when cameras caught a huge bolt striking a tree they were near.

City National Bank said Sunday that it was “devastated to learn of the sudden death of one of our colleagues.”

“Brooks was an incredible young man who will be remembered for his generosity, kindness and unwavering positivity,” the bank said.

“Our thoughts and condolences are with his loving family, his many friends and our colleagues. His joyful spirit will live on in our hearts, ”the bank said.

Brooks Lambertson, a 29-year-old bank executive from Los Angeles, was identified as the third person killing in a lightning strike near the White House last week.
Brooks Lambertson, a 29-year-old bank executive from Los Angeles, was identified as the third person killing in a lightning strike near the White House last week.
Facebook/KCRA
The lightning strike at Lafayette Park killed three people and left one other injured.
The lightning strike at Lafayette Park killed three people and left one other injured.
REUTERS

The news sparked tributes for Lambertson, who previously worked as a marketing manager for the LA Clippers and was in DC for business when he was struck.

“He was a joy to work with and a wonderful colleague!” one shocked staffer said, while another wrote about how they “loved working with him.”

Brooks always lit up the room with his million-dollar smile,” that colleague wrote, while another praised his “generosity” and “kindness and unwavering” positive energy.

The fourth person, an unidentified woman, was listed in critical condition on Friday, the police department said. There was no immediate update early Sunday.

Lambertson was in DC on a business trip.
Lambertson was in DC on a business trip.
@dcfireems via AP
Wisconsin couple James Mueller, 76, and Donna Mueller, 75, were also killed in the lightning strike.
Wisconsin couple James Mueller, 76, and Donna Mueller, 75, were also killed in the lightning strike.
Facebook/WISN 12 NEWS

Secret Service officers had been among the first to respond to the tragedy and offer first aid, officials announced last week.

White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said the administration was “saddened by the tragic loss of life.”

“This is the people’s house. It should be a place all can see,” she said.

With Post wires

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