SINGAPORE: Establishing a new social norm where people are not afraid to tell litter bugs off. That is what the Public Hygiene Council hopes to do in its upcoming outreach efforts to inculcate good hygiene practices.
According to a recent survey on littering, about six in 10 respondents say they "never litter".
But 36.2 per cent will do so if they don't get caught, and about one per cent say they litter "most of the time".
Liak
Teng Lit, Chairman of the Public Hygiene Council, said: "I call these
three groups of people the good, the bad and the ugly. The 60 over per
cent of people who are good, great. We hope they continue to do so, and
they probably will.
"But I think the good need to do a bit more.
They need to advocate for it. In other words, when they see somebody
litter, or when somebody make a mess in a public toilet, they should
show their displeasure and sometimes perhaps, stick their neck out.
"Take
a small risk, give a deep frown and say maybe that's not the right
thing to do and put some pressure on the other two groups not to do it."
What
saddens Mr Liak most is when people use planters to dispose of their
litter, even when a bin is just within reach. He said more enforcement
is needed in such places, but people's mindset about who is responsible
for cleanliness also needs to change.
He said: "They are blaming
the town council, they are blaming NParks (National Parks Board), not
the people who litter, which I find rather amusing. Because at the end
of the day, it's not about the cleaner. It is about who litters to begin
with. So I think that social norm needs to change."
Mr Liak hopes to recruit the help of those who feel strongly about public hygiene.
The
council has even contacted those who write regularly to forum pages to
tap on their ideas. It also wants to identify more role models who can
share their success story with others on how to keep their premises
clean and litter-free.
Mr Liak said: "The idea is to increase the
number of places that is of first-world standard. So that we can slowly
get more and more of them and then eventually, we join them all up and
then you will begin to see a much better place for all of us."
To
do that, the council plans to organise a series of public forums to
showcase these role models in the first quarter of this year. It also
plans to work with schools and organisations to spread the message of
good public hygiene to the community.
-CNA/ac
but im not 包租婆 leh........
It depends
I think plastic, carton etc should always be thrown in the convenient garbage bins but since I read an article about giving back to the earth I trow apples and such in the bushes for fertilizer/compost.
What if the litterbug weighs 100 kg with bulging muscles and dragon tattoos?