In January of 1970 a
small group of students from Western Washington State College,
under the guidance of Dr. Robert H. Keller,
set out to eliminate littering in the adjacent park of Sehome Hill.
The efforts of the group did not achieve the
desired results but it did inspire a drive to organize a
state-wide
initiative campaign with the goal of instituting a deposit
system for all bottles and cans sold in the State of Washington. It
was hoped that a legally mandated return to deposits on beverage
containers might end casual littering and initiate citizen
involvement in recycling. Initiative 256 was born of this effort and represented a
grassroots campaign to stimulate public awareness and provoke
debate over environmental reform. In the end local
beverage producers, the container industry, and grocery
retailers rallied to defeat Initiative 256 by portraying it as a
misguided idea which would eliminate jobs and increase the cost of living for every
citizen throughout the state. By introducing a counter-initiative and hiring one of the most prestigious political
advertising firms in Seattle at the time, opponents
effectively maligned the Initiative 256 campaign in the eyes of
voters. While Initiative 256 proponents were disheartened
by this turn of events they felt victorious in their goal of
elevating the visibility of environmental issues within the political system as
well as stimulating citizen participation in state politics. |