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- <text id=94TT0853>
- <title>
- Jul. 04, 1994: Environment:The Backyard Besieged
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Jul. 04, 1994 When Violence Hits Home
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ENVIRONMENT, Page 62
- The Backyard Besieged
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> Environmentalists and regulators want to stifle that suburban
- icon, the noisy, air-fouling lawn mower
- </p>
- <p>By Marguerite Johnson--Reported by Victoria Balfour/New York, J. Howard Green/San Francisco
- and Jay Peterzell/Washington
- </p>
- <p> Ah, the joys of summer. The scent of fresh-cut grass. Water
- sprinklers spraying. Flowers flourishing by the porch. Neatly
- trimmed hedges. The American suburban dream in full bloom.
- </p>
- <p> But wait! There's trouble in paradise. You can hear it on most
- summer mornings and evenings, and sometimes all day long, in
- the distance or as close as your next-door neighbor's: the whine
- and roar of power lawn mowers, leaf blowers, chain saws and
- other unbelievably grating gizmos, grinding away to keep that
- cherished patch of lawn tidy and green.
- </p>
- <p> And the noise is the least of it. It turns out that America's
- 89 million small garden engines are fouling the very land they
- tend. Gas-guzzling lawn mowers, leaf blowers, weed cutters and
- the like produce 5% of U.S. air pollution overall, and a good
- deal more in many metropolitan areas. A dirty, inefficient 3.5-hp.
- gas mower emits the same amount of hydrocarbons in one hour
- as does a new car driven 340 miles. A chain saw operated for
- two hours produces hydrocarbons equivalent to those emitted
- by a new car driven 3,000 miles. Furthermore, the Environmental
- Protection Agency estimates that 17 million gal. of fuel are
- spilled each year just refueling such equipment--more than
- the amount spilled by the Exxon Valdez in the Gulf of Alaska
- in 1989.
- </p>
- <p> It's enough to start a grass-roots rebellion--and it has.
- Across the nation from Greenwich, Connecticut, to Palo Alto,
- California, environmentalists and their allies are taking aim
- at the noisy machines that rule the neighborhood from May to
- October. In Takoma Park, Maryland, for instance, free-lance
- writer Mike Tidwell founded Citizens Against Lawn Mower Madness,
- a group seeking to limit use of gas mowers in the town. Says
- Tidwell: "I'm committed to spreading the gospel of power-mower
- reform."
- </p>
- <p> So is the Federal Government. Last month the EPA proposed the
- first nationwide emissions standards for mowers, garden tractors
- and other gas-powered garden machinery. The regulations go into
- effect next year, and by 2003 they are expected to reduce hydrocarbon
- emissions produced by such equipment 32% and carbon-monoxide
- emissions 14%.
- </p>
- <p> California is moving even faster and further. The Golden State,
- which in 1963 became the first to regulate automobile emissions,
- last year became the first to set strict standards for garden
- machinery: "the single largest unregulated source of carbon-monoxide
- and hydrocarbon emissions," according to the California Air
- Resource Board. Under the new regulations, emissions must be
- reduced 45% by 1995 and an additional 55% by 1999. The board
- estimates that annual pollution from small engines in the state
- is equivalent to 3.5 million new cars running a distance of
- 16,000 miles each.
- </p>
- <p> The new regulations have sent the power-mower industry scrambling
- to redesign engines. Conservation-minded consumers are already
- turning to alternatives, including the old-fashioned, human-powered
- reel mower. No longer the cumbersome clunks common in the '40s,
- new models are lighter and quieter, with a tempered blade that
- stays sharp longer. They require no gas and, at $100 and under,
- cost far less than most power mowers--besides providing a
- good aerobic workout. Indiana-based American Lawn Mower Co.,
- the leading manufacturer of reel mowers, reports its sales have
- risen 135% in the past five years. "After World War II," says
- Teri McClaine, a sales administrator with the company, "to buy
- a power mower was kind of a status symbol. In a lot of areas,
- some people have turned around now and said, `Hey, wait a minute!
- Technology is not necessarily better.'"
- </p>
- <p> Another option: electric mowers. Until recently, most required
- unwieldy and potentially dangerous cords, but the newer models
- are cordless and rechargeable. They need no gas, oil, starter
- rope or tune-ups, and they start with the touch of a button.
- Typical electricity use for a quarter-acre lawn mowed once a
- week for six months, says Joel Makower, editor of the Green
- Business Letter in Washington, is about the same as that for
- a toaster. Not surprisingly, a national consortium of 25 electric
- utilities has formed the CLEANER Lawn-Care Project, and in selected
- cities is offering to take gas-powered mowers from 1,000 customers
- in exchange for new, cordless electric mowers.
- </p>
- <p> The best solution, ecologically speaking, is for homeowners
- to rethink the entire notion of the Great American Lawn--and
- its ordeal of care. "People are almost brainwashed into thinking
- they must have a lawn. But it's outrageous how much goes into
- keeping one up," says D. Arvid Adams, whose company, Urban Earthworks,
- has been designing yards for San Francisco Bay residents for
- eight years. Adams suggests low-growing ground covers like chamomile
- and dichondra, which require little water and no mowing at all.
- "You don't need to have a lawn to showcase your house," he says.
- And just consider the peace and quiet.
- </p>
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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