Two Camas women are on a campaign to raise awareness about a common source of environmental pollution: the ubiquitous plastic drinking straw.
“We are trying to start a dialogue about plastic straws,” says Alicia King. “How can we use less, eliminate them and come up with other options?”
King, founder of the nonprofit video blog (vlog) Just a Girl in Camas, is working with Geri Rubano, a paraeducator at Helen Baller Elementary School and local environmental activist, to bring awareness about plastic straws’ detrimental impact on the environment — particularly on oceans and marine life — to the greater Camas-Washougal community.
In between work and parenting, the two women have carved out time to walk through downtown Camas and talk to restaurant and cafe owners about plastic straws.
What they tell them is this: In the United States alone, there are 500 million single-use plastic straws being used and discarded daily. Laid end to end, that’s enough straws to circle the Earth two and a half times. Americans are adding 175 billion straws to landfills every year. According to StrawlessOcean.org, the majority of plastic straws eventually end up in our oceans, polluting the water and killing marine life — more than 70 percent of seabirds and 30 percent of sea turtles having been found to have ingested plastic, a cause of early mortality in marine animals.