USA TODAY US Edition

Bans could ground balloons

Environmen­tal concerns are floating around

- Jorge L. Ortiz

As part of a service for an infant last year, the Sproles Family Funeral Home in New Castle, Indiana, attached a card with informatio­n about the deceased child to balloons and unleashed them – asking those who found the remembranc­es to post comments on the company’s website.

Some of the responses came from strangers hundreds of miles away, offering comforting thoughts to the grieving family.

Balloon releases are a fairly common practice at funerals, especially when they’re conducted for children, funeral director Tom Sproles said.

“It’s obviously symbolic that as we’re releasing balloons to the sky, we’re also releasing our loved one as well to heaven,” he said.

But where some see a touching tribute, others spot a danger to birds and marine life.

Ted Siegler, who studies the amount of plastic waste that reaches marine settings as a partner at DSM Environmen­tal Services in Windsor, Vermont, believes helium-filled balloons should be banned because they often escape and end up in the ocean.

“It drives me nuts when I see them,” he said, “because inevitably they’ll bring them to children’s birthday parties, and it doesn’t take very long until someone loses the grasp and it winds up into the atmosphere and it disappears and you don’t know where it’s headed.”

Latex balloons, typically synonymous with festive occasions such as birthday parties and graduation­s, have landed in the cross hairs of the environmen­tal movement because of their potential to harm wildlife.

Balloons don’t present nearly as big a pollution problem as plastics, which are estimated to make up 85 percent of the world’s marine debris: Items like beverage bottles, bags, cutlery, plates, straws and balloon sticks litter beaches, seas and waterways far and wide.

But the inflatable party staples have drawn attention with the increased awareness of what happens to products released into the environmen­t.

“They’re one piece of the puzzle,” said Emma Tonge, communicat­ions and outreach specialist at the National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion. “They are a serious threat to wildlife simply because they are colorful and bright, so wildlife might mistake them for food, and the strings can wrap around their bodies and make it difficult for them to swim or breathe.”

The success in recent years of campaigns to ban or discourage the use of plastic bags and straws raises the question of whether the once-seemingly innocuous balloons may join the list of verboten articles.

Five states – California, Connecticu­t, Florida, Tennessee and Virginia – have forbidden mass balloon discharges, and several others have introduced bills aimed at limiting how many can be sent floating into the skies at once.

The Clemson Tigers, who won the college football national championsh­ip in 2016, this year discontinu­ed their decades-long tradition of unleashing 10,000 orange balloons as the players took the field in a nod to the university’s sustainabi­lity efforts.

Will future birthday celebrants have to settle for streamers and banners while forsaking the pleasure of chasing and popping balloons?

Likely not, but it’s best to keep them contained.

Dan Flynn, chairman of the Balloon Council, noted that the percentage of balloons let go in the environmen­t is minuscule compared to how many are sold. He also clarified that balloons

“They are a serious threat to wildlife simply because they are colorful and bright, so wildlife might mistake them for food.”

Emma Tonge Communicat­ions and outreach specialist, National Oceanic and Atmospheri­c Administra­tion

filled with air typically don’t rise high enough to present a problem.

The issue is with those inflated with helium or another gas lighter than air, whether they’re made from latex or the foil-and-polyester material commonly known as Mylar, because they can travel longer distances.

Mylar balloons, which conduct electricit­y, often get caught in power lines and have caused countless power outages – more than 1,000 last year in Southern California alone. The Balloon Council recommends they be sold only when tethered to a weight, following the requiremen­t of a 1990 California law.

While Flynn said trade research has found no evidence of latex balloons by themselves causing harm to marine life – usually the animals have ingested plastic products as well – the industry has tried to educate customers about the proper way to handle them.

“Our message to our retailers, to our users, is, ‘Don’t let go,’ ” Flynn said. “We recognize that, even though the product is biodegrada­ble, some people are going to consider releasing a balloon to be littering.”

There are varying estimates of how long balloons take to biodegrade, from six months to four years. They’re not among the 10 items the European Commission listed in May as targeted for bans or phasing out in an attempt to reduce marine debris.

That list is composed entirely of single-use plastics and it does include straws, which have been banned in Seattle, San Francisco and Vancouver, British Columbia. New York City is also pondering such a move.

The debate has become even more pressing in the United States now that China has tightened the rules on what it will purchase and has threatened a tariff on other reclaimed refuse as it engages in a trade war with the Trump administra­tion.

“Now more than ever, this stuff will go to landfill because the sort of contaminat­ed recyclable material that especially California used to send to China, well, China’s not taking this anymore, so there’s just no market for it,” said Roland Geyer, an assistant professor of environmen­tal science at the University of California-Santa Barbara.

Geyer was the lead author of a 2017 study that estimated only 9 percent of the 8.3 billion metric tons of plastic made since the 1950s has been recycled; nearly 80 percent ended up in landfills or somewhere in the environmen­t.

Experts see the next step toward sustainabi­lity in structural changes that would encourage producers and vendors to seek packaging alternativ­es that don’t rely on plastic.

Given the greater urgency of addressing the worldwide plastics crisis, the movement toward getting rid of balloons – or at least restrictin­g them – doesn’t figure to take off for a while.

But they could become subject to the kind of campaign that brings their use crashing down.

Sharon Dunwoody, a University of Wisconsin professor who studies the role of science, environmen­t and health messages in mass media, doesn’t see that prospect as far-fetched.

“Balloons are a uniformly cheery item. You would certainly engage in a rigorous effort to communicat­e about the downsides,” she said. “I do think in a case like that, people could readily change their behavior, because balloons are not a life-or-death issue.’’

 ?? JULIO CORTEZ/AP ?? Balloons may be festive, but they can end up in the ocean.
JULIO CORTEZ/AP Balloons may be festive, but they can end up in the ocean.
 ?? AP FILE PHOTO BY NATI HARNIK ?? Balloons are often released at college football games, such as this 2015 Southern Miss-Nebraska game in Lincoln, Neb.
AP FILE PHOTO BY NATI HARNIK Balloons are often released at college football games, such as this 2015 Southern Miss-Nebraska game in Lincoln, Neb.

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