When Gottfried Mayer of Germany moved to Peitou District two years ago, he thought that its clean air and beautiful green mountain would help him concentrate on his research and teaching.
But ironically, what he found was a remote area that provides an ideal place for his neighbors to burn their garbage.
PHOTO: GOTTFRIED MAYER
"Instead of taking the trash to the garbage truck, they pile it up for two weeks or so and start to burn it," Mayer said, pointing to the freshly scorched pile outside his apartment building.
With the help of his landlord and friends who speak Chinese, Mayer says he has contacted the police, the environmental auditor and written to the mayor's office.
"One time they even sent a big fire engine to douse the fire. That was just a waste of taxpayers' money," he said. "Anyway, the cycle started anew in two weeks' time after the authorities left."
On March 20, Mayer got into a verbal dispute with one of his neighbors who had tried to burn garbage near his house.
"After failing to douse the fire with a water hose myself, I called the police. They took down the person's name and address and told me that they would write a report about the case," he said.
It turned out that the police failed to report the case or to pass information about the matter to the environmental protection bureau.
"I trusted them to take care of the case seriously, but they just threw the case into the garbage bin," he said. "If they were not authorized to take care of the matter, they should've told me in the first place instead of lying to me in front of my face."
Mayer said that he has also started to take pictures of those who burn garbage in his neighborhood. His aggressive efforts, however, have gotten him into trouble.
The most recent problem was on the night of June 4 when a gang of some 20 local residents gathered outside his apartment building, complaining about his attempt to photograph a 60-year-old woman who was burning her trash.
According to Mayer's landlord, who refused to be identified, the group and the police finally came to an agreement that no garbage burning would be allowed in the future, although a bit of grass burning would be tolerated.
"I feel so ashamed to see our own people care so little about our land. I'm also very disappointed with the city government and the way it handled the matter," the landlord said.
Although Wang Ta-chun (王大鈞), first division chief of the environmental protection bureau, said that there is little the bureau can do but to issue tickets to offenders and to conduct more aggressive patrols, he promised to send some people to take care of Mayer's problem.
Air pollution law stipulates that burning garbage outdoors carries a fine of between NT$5,000 and NT$100,000. The fine increases to NT$10,000 for second offenders and NT$15,000 for third offenders.
CLOSURES: Several forest recreation areas have been closed as a precaution, while some ferry and flight services have been suspended or rescheduled A land warning for Tropical Storm Danas was issued last night at 8:30pm, as the storm’s outer bands began bringing heavy rain to southeastern regions, including Hualien and Taitung counties, and the Hengchun Peninsula (恆春半島), according to the Central Weather Administration (CWA). As of 9:15pm, the storm was approximately 330km west-southwest of Oluanpi (鵝鑾鼻), Taiwan proper’s southernmost tip, moving north-northeast at 10-20kph, the CWA reported. A sea warning had already been issued at 8:30am yesterday. The storm had maximum sustained winds near its center of 83kph, with gusts of up to 108kph, according to the CWA. As of 9:30pm last night, Kaohsiung, Tainan,
POWERFUL DETERRENT: Precision fire and dispersed deployment of units would allow Taiwanese artillery to inflict heavy casualties in an invasion, a researcher said The nation’s military has boosted its self-defense capability with the establishment of a new company equipped with the US-supplied High Mobility Artillery Rocket System (HIMARS). The company, part of the army’s 58th Artillery Command, is Taiwan’s first HIMARS unit. Minister of National Defense Wellington Koo (顧立雄), who presided over the formation ceremony in Taichung on Friday, called the unit a significant addition to the nation’s defensive strength, saying it would help deter adversaries from starting a war. The unit is made up of top-performing soldiers who received training in the US, according to the Ministry of National Defense. The HIMARS can be equipped with
UNILATERAL: The move from China’s aviation authority comes despite a previous 2015 agreement that any changes to flight paths would be done by consensus The Mainland Affairs Council (MAC) yesterday slammed Beijing for arbitrarily opening the M503 flight route’s W121 connecting path, saying that such unilateral conduct disrespected the consensus between both sides and could destabilize the Taiwan Strait and the wider region. The condemnation came after the Civil Aviation Administration of China (CAAC) earlier yesterday announced it “has activated the W121 connecting path of the M503 flight route,” meaning that west-to-east flights are now permitted along the path. The newly activated west-to-east route is intended to “alleviate the pressure caused by the increase of flights,” China’s state-run Xinhua news agency quoted China’s Taiwan Affairs Office
STRONG WINDS: Without the Central Mountain Range as a shield, people should be ready for high-speed winds, CWA weather forecaster Liu Yu-chi said Danas was yesterday upgraded to a typhoon and could grow stronger as it moves closely along the nation’s west coastline, the Central Weather Administration (CWA) said. Hsinchu and Chiayi cities, Taichung, Tainan and Kaohsiung, as well as Hsinchu, Miaoli, Changhua, Yunlin, Nantou, Chiayi, Penghu and Pingtung counties have canceled work and school today. Work and school in Keelung, Taipei, New Taipei City and Taoyuan, and Yilan, Taitung, Hualien, Kinmen and Lienchiang (Matsu) counties would continue as usual, although offices and schools would be closed in Taoyuan’s Luju (蘆竹), Dayuan (大園), Guangyin (觀音) and Sinwu (新屋) districts. As of 5pm yesterday, the typhoon’s