He and other New York City residents can earn money for reporting vehicles that violate anti-idling laws.
Yale Climate Connections - December 12, 2018
Reporting credit: ChavoBart Digital Media
Photo credit: Ruben de Rijcke
In 2006, New Yorker George Pakenham was walking home, when he noticed a limo idling at the curb, with only the driver inside.
It upset him to see fuel being wasted. This was during the Iraq war, which he believed was about oil, and his brother had recently been diagnosed with lung cancer. So Pakenham resented the air pollution. He rapped on the driver’s window:
Pakenham: “We had a very civil conversation about his behavior and what he was doing, and after about ten minutes I just said, ‘well, you know, all things considered, why not just shut the engine off?’ and he goes, ‘ok,’ and he did … and it was an emotional moment for me.”
So for six years, Pakenham kept asking idling drivers to turn off their cars – with surprising success.
It upset him to see fuel being wasted, and he resented the air pollution.
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Pakenham: “The results were eighty-percent! If I were a baseball player, I’d be in the Hall of Fame.”
Now he has a new motivation: New York City recently passed a law that allows citizens to provide proof that someone is breaking idling laws …
Pakenham: “… and be awarded a twenty-five percent bounty on a three-hundred-fifty dollar fine.”
Pakenham has already earned thousands. He says the fines motivate companies to instruct their drivers to avoid idling, and the money gives concerned citizens another reason to get involved.
Pakenham: “If you see ecological injustice, for goodness sakes, speak out.”