
1. Save green by going green
We all want to save a little money here and there. There are a number of
ways you can reduce your expenses without much hassle or inconvenience. It
can be as easy as using your oven more efficiently, lowering the temperature
of your water heater slightly, turning off your lights when you leave a room or
leaving your vehicle at home and taking METRO Transit.
2. Protect our streams
Fertilizers, swimming pool chemicals, pesticides and garbage dumped near streams
can contaminate Oklahoma City’s rivers and lakes. Did you know that water
that flows into your neighborhood storm drains ends up in the North Canadian River,
South Canadian River, Deer Creek and Deep Fork basins?
3. Reduce use of our landfills
Every time we throw something away it heads for one of four landfills that the City contracts with.
The more we throw away, the more landfill space we take up. When a landfill gets full,
taxpayers have to build a new one and trash collection rates increase. Nobody wants a
landfill near their neighborhood.
4. Keep our air clean
The air we breathe in Oklahoma City is exposed to pollution at levels proven to be harmful
to our health. Smog is created when vehicular and industrial emissions combine with warm
temperatures, calm winds and cloudless days. The fact is that 60 percent of Oklahoma City’s
ozone is created by vehicles. Exposure to these pollutants can cause lung disease and
other respiratory problems. To receive air quality health advisories from
the Oklahoma Department of Environmental Quality
visit
their Web site.To check out current levels of ozone or carbon monoxide
in Oklahoma City, log on to
DEQ’s Web site.
5. Conserve our water
The average Oklahoma City household uses 250 gallons of water per day – that’s enough to fill
a brush pumper truck used by the Fire Department. About 58 percent of our treated
water is used outside. Conserving water saves you money, reduces wear and tear
on the City’s water and wastewater treatment plants and can postpone or eliminate
the need to build new reservoirs. About 70 percent of the Earth’s surface is water,
but only 1 percent is available for human use. That’s why it’s important to practice
water conservation year round, not just during times of drought.