by Newsday Inc.
Island Press, 1989
Paper: 978-1-55963-000-9 | Cloth: 978-1-55963-001-6 | eISBN: 978-1-61091-320-1
Library of Congress Classification TD796.R86 1989
Dewey Decimal Classification 363.7280973

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ABOUT THIS BOOK

One day in March 1987, a barge from Islip, Long Island was evicted from Morehead City, North Carolina, after trying to unload the mountains of trash on its decks. More than five months from the time it began its trip, the unwelcome barge, and it's 3,186 tons of commercial garbage, became the cornerstone of an astonishing news investigation that revealed a country unable to cope with its mounting garbage crisis.


Newsday reporters were the first to locate the barge, the Mobro 4000 as it drifted aimlessly off the shore of Long Island. They were also first to explore and explain the problems and issues that barge had come to symbolize. The results of their investigation are presented in this book. Winner of the Worth Bingham Award, the Page One Award for Crusading Journalism, and the New York State Associated Press Award for In-Depth Reporting, Rush to Burn explains the reasons why we, as a throw-away society, are suffocating in our own trash. It also explains why communities, in desperation, are turning to incineration, the riskiest form of garbage disposal yet developed.



See other books on: Burn | Environmental | Incineration | Refuse and refuse disposal | Rush
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