English, asked by amafaaf, 9 months ago

Letter to the editor of the magzine about the use of polybags

Answers

Answered by Keya200
1

Answer:

Kalingpong,

Siliguri.

16 th July,2019

To

The Editor

The Telegraph,

Siliguri

Dear Sir,

Subject:

I write to your esteemed self to express my deep concern on the menace of plastic bags. Plastic bags have wreaked catastrophic havoc in our country. The water bodies and the aquatic flora and fauna have been affected the most. A walk along any river, lake, and beach is sufficient to know the consequences of this ubiquitous ugliness floating. Scientists in their recent research have found plastic to be much more toxic than previously expected. Plastic is making our environment highly toxic.

The state of the water bodies in the city is pathetic. The aquatic life has been choked to death. These water bodies have become the stinking, rotting places which are the breeding grounds of many diseases. Through the columns of your reputed daily I appeal to the people and concerned authorities to look into the matter and ban plastic bags in the city. The need of the hour is to replace plastic with environmental friendly materials. All of us need to join our hands to fight this menace and preserve our beautiful environment. We must stop using plastic altogether.

Thanking you.

Yours Sincerely,

Keya Roy

(KEYA ROY)

Answered by Anonymous
0

To the editor:  

I support the initiative to ban single-use plastic bags in Gloucester.  

Some may argue that bags are reused for trash and dog waste but if so, the bags still end in the waste stream after only two uses. I suspect the majority of bags end as trash after one use, and a portion end up as litter.  

I hope this ban is the first step in which Gloucester shows vision and leadership in the region and perhaps in the nation by taking bold actions to reduce waste and litter and improve natural resources. This would be appropriate for a city with such great natural resources of woods, rocks and ocean.

People did fine before plastic bags, and will do so again.  

Without easy access to free bags, one quickly becomes accustomed to their own reusable bags. Banning smoking from bars and restaurants was met with an uproar several years ago, and now it almost seems outrageous that this was ever allowed. Single-use water bottles should come next.  All of this would be accompanied by a massive education campaign, and constant enforcement. It's disgusting that the people of Gloucester foul their own beaches, as I witnessed the piles of trash last week. Some outsiders may have added to it, but every time I walk by Good Harbor Beach I see nips bottles, lottery tickets, food containers and dog waste in bags strewn and I doubt it's from outsiders. Come on, city leaders, get with the program. Ban, education, enforce. Now.  

Laurie Hagar

Gloucester  

Similar questions