• HonoraryMancunian@lemmy.world
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    8 hours ago

    You can’t hand out food to the homeless without getting arrested, nor can you leave water for people in the desert without facing decades in prison.

    As heinous as those laws are, they’re from a totally different country

  • skisnow@lemmy.ca
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    12 hours ago

    I know nobody ever reads the article but it still makes me despair every time.

    For that transgression, the environmental regulator sent Powlesland a notice informing him that he’s been placed under investigation for “permitting and waste offences.”

    He was given a notice. Not only has he NOT been sentenced to 2 years, he hasn’t even been charged. He’s been told he broke a law, for which the maximum penalty that a judge is permitted to give is listed as 2 years.

    • luciferofastora@feddit.org
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      5 hours ago

      To further clarify: the transgression, according to the Guardian, wasn’t just removing waste, but the fact that “Powesland […] organised a team of volunteers to tackle the removal of litter, weed and silt from a section of the River Roding”, and they collectively “removed 200 bags of rubbish, branches and silt”, which goes beyond just picking up trash.

      The EA [Environmental Agency] alleges dredging has been carried out and waste has been left on site within the flood plain, constituting a flood risk activity under the regulations that would have required an environmental permit.

      Dredging is the act of removing material from the water environment, here presumably from the riverbed, which is a tad more involved than just picking up pieces of trash and might have ecological knock-on effects. I find it perfectly justified that the Environmental Agency would want to be involved in the decision to take such steps.

      The only real scandal is this guy having petitioned the Agency about the trash problem for years without success. That they’d now get pissed when someone takes the matter into his own hands is understandable, but might just be the only way to get them to care about the issue.

      • Bluewing@lemmy.world
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        51 minutes ago

        Careful now, you are going to harsh the righteous indignation with your facts and context.

        • luciferofastora@feddit.org
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          1 hour ago

          Yeah, that’s where you go from helpful volunteers to reckless vigilantes. Shame that they couldn’t leave it at cleaning up.

          Also, shame that these articles bury the lede of “dug up the riverbed” for the sake of outrage.

          And of course, shame that it came to this at all.

      • TheEighthDoctor@lemmy.zip
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        5 hours ago

        Removing silt can be pretty bad in some cases, heavy metals sink to the bottom and will not cause problems if left undisturbed, if you start removing silt you will make those pollutants bioavailable again.

        • Bluewing@lemmy.world
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          46 minutes ago

          Even removing the branches and larger tree limbs can cause issues with removing habitat for aquatic critters and changes the currents and flow of the river.

          Cleaning the trash by hand and hauling it away is one thing. They went beyond that.

        • teyrnon@sh.itjust.works
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          49 minutes ago

          In this case the silt is a good share shit overflows from sewage releases though, which go unpunished I would add.

        • luciferofastora@feddit.org
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          4 hours ago

          I wasn’t aware of that. I suspect the guy in question didn’t either. That’s why experts should make those decisions who do know that stuff.

          • teyrnon@sh.itjust.works
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            48 minutes ago

            Do you think the government environmental agency is trustworthy? You do realize the neoliberals are in bed with big money.

            There is zero fucking chance of “experts” working in the public interest at the EA. 0%.

            • stickly@lemmy.world
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              2 minutes ago

              You don’t have to work for a three letter agency to be an expert. I guarantee you that if they took the time to consult anyone remotely connected to ecological science they would have said no to hacking up the river bed without a proper survey and sampling.

  • Baguette@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    13 hours ago

    Working over ten days, they hired an excavator costing roughly £1,000 and cleared a heavily polluted 250 metre stretch of Alders Brook, a tributary of the River Roding in Barking, East London.

    https://www.indiatimes.com/trending/who-is-paul-powlesland-uk-lawyer-who-removed-200-bags-of-river-waste-now-faces-up-to-2-years-in-prison-over-permit-dispute/articleshow/131881504.html

    The main issue is that he used heavy machinery for cleanup. If it was by hand it probably wouldn’t have resulted in any legal matter

    Is 2 years ridiculous? Probably. But using an excavator for cleaning is definitely not a smart move for someone who’s a lawyer

    For reference an excavator is one of the construction machine with the hydraulic hand that is used to dig or grab stuff

    • whyNotSquirrel@sh.itjust.works
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      5 hours ago

      In the same post they say he’s facing up to 2 years in jail and a image saying he’s jailed already for 2 years…

      edit: and if you end those permit law I think it might open ways for bad things mostly.

    • lividweasel@lemmy.world
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      12 hours ago

      The main issue is that he used heavy machinery for cleanup. If it was by hand it probably wouldn’t have resulted in any legal matter

      Yeah, he went way beyond simply removing trash:

      The team removed more than 200 bags of rubbish along with branches, thick layers of silt, weeds, discarded household appliances, used needles and even abandoned weapons. Their goal was to restore the natural flow of the water and remove years of accumulated waste.

      He basically dug up the entire riverbed. That isn’t something people should just be doing ad-hoc.

      • ghurab@lemmy.world
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        7 hours ago

        He basically dug up the entire riverbed. That isn’t something people should just be doing ad-hoc.

        Fully agree, but there seems to be no better alternative.

        Powlesland told the Guardian he’s asked the agency numerous times to clean the river, but it’s been ignoring him for years.

        • TriplePlaid@wetshav.ing
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          1 hour ago

          So it is a pretty different situation compared to if they had been removing trash by hand, which is much less likely to cause unforseen harm. The heavy machinery will compact soil, potentially leak oil/fuel. The mechanized digging of the stream bed could disturb benthic species and stir up silt that could have negative impacts further downstream.

          Without appropriate precautions, this fellow could easily cause more harm to the ecosystem, which is one of the reasons that this is not and should not be legal. It sounds like this group did do some background work to try to make sure they were doing the right thing, but I don’t think it should be open season for anyone with a backhoe to dredge a local body of water based on their own judgement.

    • jimmy90@lemmy.world
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      8 hours ago

      there you go you got a reply that makes sense

      now be nice and magnanimous and thank them or maybe give a friendly reply, maybe even start a discussion if you don’t understand

      go on it’s how to be a better lemming

    • Boomer Humor Doomergod@lemmy.world
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      17 hours ago

      People without training and coordination with a larger system can cause problems, especially if he encourages other untrained people to do it.

      It sucks but there’s billions of us so it’s gonna suck. At least that’s what my local councilman (and dad) said when I complained I needed to ask permission to change my deck.

      Two years in prison is stupid though. Make him work with the groups who have approved plans.

      And I hate that this is the answer I’m giving but honestly it’s the only thing keeping me from renting a bulldozer and making my neighborhood walkable.

      • Catoblepas@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        17 hours ago

        I feel like this is only justifiable if the officials aren’t given time to act. It would be one thing if he fired off an email and ran out and did this the next day, but according to the article he spent years contacting officials before doing it himself. If they want to live by perfect world rules where stuff like this is overseen and coordinated with experts then they need to do it in a timely manner. It’s unreasonable to expect people to live in an area full of garbage for years and just do nothing about it.

      • untorquer@quokk.au
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        9 hours ago

        Yeah you need to run an environmental impact study and a 6 month observational survey to determine the long term impacts of removing pollution from the environment.

        Your councilman is trash. I don’t want to encourage bulldozing a neighborhood but you’re right to feel that way. Then again, I do encourage making places walkable so you’d get critical support from me. Just get utilities marked so you don’t hit a gas line.

        • Soggy@lemmy.world
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          8 hours ago

          It’s not just “removing pollution” it’s dredging the entire riverbed. That releases silt, and anything contained in the silt, to flow downstream and collect elsewhere. It can smother fish eggs, it can clog infrastructure, it can kill plants and invertebrates .

          • untorquer@quokk.au
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            3 hours ago

            I don’t think this dredging means machine based digging on the riverbed in this case. 200bags over 10 days. That’s manual labor.

            If the city wasn’t even considering the residents requests then i don’t blame them. The city should do better if they’re concerned about flooding and fund a proper survey and cleanup plan to facilitate the citizen action.

      • flandish@lemmy.world
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        13 hours ago

        if they didnt want the hazmat to be a hazard they shouldn’t let it into the river; this way people won’t have to risk lives to clean it up. from this firefighters pov - i can understand how dangerous it is to work around rivers but imho i am happy to hope the damages to a person voluntarily working to clean up an organization’s messes will, after trial, be paid by the said org.

        i know that’s not gonna happen. i just… it fucking sucks this fucking country.

      • thisisbutaname@discuss.tchncs.de
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        16 hours ago

        This is sad, but also understandable.

        I totally agree that the punishment is unnecessarily harsh, but well meaning people can cause damage while trying to do good. The road to hell and all that.

        Those responsible for maintaining the area not doing their job is a separate, and I’d say more serious, matter.

    • iknewitwhenisawit@fedinsfw.app
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      17 hours ago

      It’s in the fine article:

      The EA’s main complaint seems to be that the dredging was significant enough that it constitutes a flood risk.

  • Catoblepas@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    17 hours ago

    Wow, this is a weird one. I thought for sure this was going to be someone being charged with mudlarking without a license (still outrageous but justifiable if they were also scooping up historical artifacts), but apparently it’s for creating a flood risk?? Brother, your flood protection shouldn’t be a mass of garbage. Someone make this charge make sense.

    • thebestaquaman@lemmy.world
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      17 hours ago

      I’m gonna lean on another commenter who made me realise the legitimate reasoning behind something like this (disregarding the fact that two years is absurdly high): If we permit anyone to do whatever “cleaning” they themselves deem reasonable without approval, we risk that unknowledgable people with good intentions cause serious damage. One reason could be that they create an acute flood risk (you’re right: garbage shouldn’t be flood protection, but the actual flood protection is built around existing circumstances, and if removing the garbage causes a major risk to people losing their homes, the correct approach is to first prepare the flood protection, then remove the garbage). Another is that people can unknowingly or unintentionally destroy habitats or otherwise damage the environment.

      The point is: We have some very competent people that are capable of assessing the impact of various cleaning operations. We need to let those people do their job. There can be very complex interactions in play, that turn your good intentions into catastrophic consequences. Therefore, we cannot allow laymen to judge how large cleaning operations should be conducted.

      Full disclaimer: While I think the above reasoning is sound, I think we should be very careful regarding how unauthorised cleaning operations are punished. For example, it seems absurd to me to give jail time for it. When the person in question is obviously acting with good intentions, it’s much more reasonable to sentence them to take some course where they can learn about why what they were doing was potentially harmful, and perhaps sentence them to community service working on some authorised project. That way, you help them learn, let them work on something they want to contribute to, and get more resources for the authorised projects.

      • Catoblepas@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        16 hours ago

        If people were doing this for clout/ad revenue or on a whim without trying to engage with the proper channels first I would agree, but it just isn’t reasonable to tell people to accept living in an environment full of garbage while their local government does nothing about it for literal years. If you walked along a river in your neighborhood with your pets and/or children how long would you accept seeing it choked with trash and sewage? Would you be okay with teaching them, through inaction, that this is fine? I’m not asking for you to answer, I just think all those things deserve as much consideration as ‘could this cause a flood if XYZ happens?’ Because of this has already caused a flood we clearly would have heard about it.

        To me, this was a good faith effort made in the absence of any other resources. If this was load bearing garbage (!) then that needs to be communicated in their refusals/delays, along with a specific timeline for addressing it. That’s also assuming they have detected a real risk of significant flooding, which I’m skeptical of.

      • grue@lemmy.world
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        13 hours ago

        Full disclaimer: While I think the above reasoning is sound, I think we should be very careful regarding how unauthorised cleaning operations are punished. For example, it seems absurd to me to give jail time for it. When the person in question is obviously acting with good intentions, it’s much more reasonable to sentence them to take some course where they can learn about why what they were doing was potentially harmful, and perhaps sentence them to community service working on some authorised project. That way, you help them learn, let them work on something they want to contribute to, and get more resources for the authorised projects.

        I feel like the punishment should depend on whether they did it competently or not. You should definitely get punished for screwing up even with good intentions, but if you actually are good enough to know what you’re doing, you should get away with a relative slap on the wrist.

  • i_stole_ur_taco@lemmy.ca
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    17 hours ago

    Powlesland and his team pulled 200 bags of garbage and organic debris out of a creek

    Emphasis mine. I feel like that’s at the crux of the whole issue and the article doesn’t attempt to dig in.

    What did they remove? I find it hard to believe that even the pettiest of bureaucrats would take issue with someone picking up actual trash.

  • MrSulu@lemmy.ml
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    17 hours ago

    He took the shit out and now they are trying to bury him in it. Absolute wankers

  • Eternal192@anarchist.nexus
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    11 hours ago

    Of course it’s the fucking UK, just recently watched a documentary about volunteers facing charges because they were tired of the city taking way too long to clean a river so he took matters into his own hands and got other people to help and now i’m reading about him here.

    The UK is so shit, Clarkson showed how the farmers were constantly battling idiots to get anything done, hope he will be successful in getting rid of these environmental agency idiots.

    • Phoenixz@lemmy.ca
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      10 hours ago

      Little detail that the headline “accidentally” missed is that the side used an excavator and dug up half the river bed

      Still this is kind of extreme, but at the same time,.it’s not about a normal guy picking up some garbage, this is much more

      • Eternal192@anarchist.nexus
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        9 hours ago

        If i remember correctly the agency had years to do something about it and they did nothing no plans just warnings for anyone that was interested in doing something and constant licensing and no interest in communicating with anyone.

        This agency brought this on themselves with inaction and ineptitude.