A shy homemaker battles pollution

A shy homemaker battles pollution

How a woman found her voice -- and raised it successfully -- against the contamination of a local wetland
Updated:
2009-09-18 12:12
Published:
2007-03-13 00:00
By 
Belinda Manning, as told to Eleanor Beaton

Pollution of a wetland: How the fight began

My name is Belinda Manning and I'm not your typical environmentalist. I compost in my backyard but I don't hug trees. I'm just a woman who wants to raise her family in a healthy place -- who knew it would transform me into an award-winning crusader?

The tragedy that forever changed me
For almost a decade I lived a quiet life here on South Bishop Road in Coldbrook, N.S. I spent my days caring for my daughter, Shauna, now 15, running the household and driving her to swimming lessons. I didn't bother anyone and no one bothered me.

But then in 1999 something happened that forever changed me. I was out in my front garden when a truck filled with greyish, foul-smelling sludge barrelled past and turned onto a dirt lane that leads to Baltzer's Bog, a nearby wetland. Within weeks, the trucks were sailing past on a daily basis, trucking in mounds of sludge and returning empty.Curiosity got the best of me. I decided to take a walk out to the bog to find out what was happening. As I drew nearer, I got a waft of one of the most unpleasant odours I've ever smelled -- a weird mix of rotting organic waste, manure and old socks. When the bog came into view, I almost gagged. Where once had been low lying shrubs, spongy green moss and wild cranberry bushes, was now giant trenches filled with skuzzy-looking grey water. Great big mounds of mud sat next to piles of stinking compost. A feeling of grief swept over me. That wetland was an important part of our community. Our children played there. They would tell us about the wildlife they saw -- ducks, deer, rabbits, even coyotes. I turned back home, holding back tears the entire way.

Working up the courage to fight
Before long, I heard about a meeting at our local community centre. I didn't socialize much back then, but my husband, Gary, encouraged me to go. I felt so nervous -- I didn't know anybody and I felt out of place. It hardly mattered though. Everyone was so fired up that the air felt almost electric. It took me almost an hour to work up the courage to raise my hand. But finally I did.

"A question from the back." The facilitator pointed to me. Legs shaking, I stood up. "What process do you use to compost the material you bring into the bog?" I asked. It was a simple question, but no one had thought to ask it. The owner of the composting company looked straight at me and said, "I turn it and turn it until it don't stink no more."

The room exploded into angry chatter. People were shaking their heads. I was shocked -- I didn't have a degree in environmental science, but I knew that commercial composting was a complicated process that required more than a couple of turns with a bulldozer. I went on to ask him a couple more questions. When the meeting was over a few people thanked me for coming out. I think I smiled the entire drive home.

I didn't miss a meeting after that night. No matter how scared I was, I'd make myself stand up and ask when I didn't understand something. I thought all those questions might have made me look a little foolish, but one day, to my surprise, I realized that people had started asking me the questions. My phone would ring with people looking for information, or even local media asking for my comments on the bog. I'd get caught up in engaging conversations and emerge a little wiser, and a lot more confident than I had ever been before.

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  • Rene Masters wrote:

    Sep 20, 2007

    2009-09-22 10:48 AM

    Thank you for this article. What an inspiration. We do need to have more people like her. With the incredible impetus to find a cure for cancer, I do believe that it will only be possible when we all stand up & say NO to the toxic chemicals that permeate our every day lives. Never ceases to boggle my mind ~how gullible we humans are, and how easily swayed by 'business interests' ~ what business will there be, when we've finally ruined these last precious natural areas?
  • Louise Graham wrote:

    Oct 07, 2007

    2009-09-22 10:49 AM

    The 'process' sounds all too similar to what the largest lumber companies do on the west coast. They clear-cut whenever they get the chance- leaving wildlife of all sizes without habitat and a scourge of wasteland in place of a vital ecosystem. Your valiant efforts paid off. Shame on the people who you brought this issue to initially and were dismissive. If the wildlife community around the bog could thank you, I'm sure they would.
  • mabel Willetts wrote:

    Jul 10, 2007

    2009-09-22 10:50 AM

    Three cheers for Belinda. It's amazing what's inside a shy person sometimes. We need more Belindas especially to stand up to Mayor Miller and his friends with their stupid tak suggestions. I wonder if he is going through a case of mid life crisis or Dementia??
  • Jenica wrote:

    Jul 26, 2007

    2009-11-18 3:02 PM

    I just wanted to say thanks for that article. I am in a situation a little like Belinda's. I am at a company where there is NO recycling. You'de think that by now recycling would be implemented in businesses, especially ones that are big time paper hogs. But nope.. not mine. People here throw stacks of paper straight into the bin. Now I have worked here for a year, and since then I have daily walked through the office collecting it all myself, loading up my tiny car, and recycling it in my home. Recently I started feeling really upset about it... here I am planning on gion to the beach to pick up the trash ( from the strike) after the fireworks on Sunday.... and these people are throwing away FULL STACKS of paper.... so I contacted the property management compant at this office builfing, and after a few nice emails.... sent a rather nasty one.... they ar now seeing into a contract. Anyhow, Belinda's story just kinda touched me because I am not a 'tree hugger' either, I just get a sick feeling when people can go to beautiful scenic locations and say, " wow..." but then they go home and add to the destruction of it all. Thanks Jen
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