23 in 23: Difference between revisions

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'''23 in 23:Public Works’ Plan to Clean Up 23 Communities in 23 Days''' is a neighborhood clean-up program instituted by newly-elected [[Mayor of Birmingham]] [[Larry Langford]] in November [[2007]] and carried out by the [[Birmingham Department of Public Works]]. The number "23" refers to the number of communities in [[Birmingham]]'s [[Community Participation Program]].
[[Image:23 in 23.png|right|133px]]
'''23 in 23: Public Works’ Plan to Clean Up 23 Communities in 23 Days''' is a neighborhood clean-up program instituted by newly-elected [[Mayor of Birmingham]] [[Larry Langford]] in November [[2007]] and carried out by the [[Birmingham Department of Public Works]]. The number "23" refers to the number of communities in [[Birmingham]]'s [[Community Participation Program]].


As presented, the program involves three waves of work crews spending one day working in each community. The first wave includes 24 limb loaders and 8 pickers removing trash and debris. The second wave includes 30 horticulture crews to cut and clean [[List of Birmingham parks|parks]], rights-of-way, alleys, ditches and vacant lots. The third wave involves smaller trash and brush crews picking up debris from the second wave.
As presented, the program involves three waves of work crews spending one day working in each community. The first wave includes 24 limb loaders and 8 pickers removing trash and debris. The second wave includes 30 horticulture crews to cut and clean [[List of Birmingham parks|parks]], rights-of-way, alleys, ditches and vacant lots. The third wave involves smaller trash and brush crews picking up debris from the second wave.


The program utilizes no additional personnel or equipment. It has been praised by City Councilor [[Miriam Witherspoon]] for making the best use of existing resources.
==Progress==
During the first 23 day campaign crews picked up 17,369 tons of trash and debris (755 tons per day), cut 1,134 overgrown lots (49 per day), and placed notices on 656 abandoned cars (28.5 per day), of which 188 were hauled off (8 per day). This was accomplished with 72,400 staff hours (362 workers x 200 hours each)
Between January and June [[2008]] the program reported 100,142 tons of trash collected and hauled away along with 2,311 overgrown lots mowed, 256 houses demolished, 607 ditches cleaned, 642 blocks of alleys cleared, 2,115 cars tagged, 835 cars towed, and 20,302 potholes patched.
==Sequence==
The order in which communities are serviced was determined by geography:
The order in which communities are serviced was determined by geography:
# [[Five Points West community]]
# [[Five Points West community]]
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# [[Cahaba community]]
# [[Cahaba community]]


==Progress==
==Response==
After the first wave, all 23 communities had been served by the program. In that time crews picked up more than 7,000 tons of trash and debris, cut more than 1,000 overgrown lots, and placed notices on more than 350 abandoned cars, of which more than 100 were hauled off.
Langford made a presentation after the completion of the first 23-day campaign, during the the [[January 2]], [[2008]] [[Birmingham City Council|City Council]] meeting. After the meeting, rap duo [[Over C's]] performed "Don't Trash My Hood", a rap song inspired by the campaign. Birmingham Public Works director [[Rickey Kennedy]] credited the program with raising morale among public works employees.
 
==See Also==
* [[Operation Green Wave]], a similar initiative established by [[William Bell]]


==References==
==References==
* Coman, Victoria L. (December 11, 2007) "At halfway point, some Birmingham residents pleased with citywide cleanup; others have concerns." ''Birmingham News''.
* Coman, Victoria L. (December 11, 2007) "At halfway point, some Birmingham residents pleased with citywide cleanup; others have concerns." {{BN}}
* Coman, Victoria L. (Deecember 29, 2007) "Birmingham cleanup harvests tons of trash, cars." ''Birmingham News''.
* Coman, Victoria L. (Deecember 29, 2007) "Birmingham cleanup harvests tons of trash, cars." {{BN}}
* Bryant, Joseph (January 3, 2008) "23-in-23 cleanup campaign touted after City Council meeting." {{BN}}
* Hippensteel, Jena (July 22, 2008) "Birmingham crews collect 100,000 tons of trash in cleanup campaign." {{BBJ}}
* Bryant, Joseph D. (July 22, 2008) "Birmingham citywide cleanup initiative yields 200 million pounds of rubbish." {{BN}}


==External links==
==External links==
* [http://www.informationbirmingham.com/newsroom/nov07/fullplan.pdf 23 in 23] presentation at informationbirmingham.com
* [http://www.birminghamal.gov/23in23.aspx 23 in 23] at [[birminghamal.gov]]


[[Category:Birmingham communities]]
[[Category: Birmingham communities]]
[[Category:Birmingham Department of Public Works]]
[[Category: Birmingham Department of Public Works]]
[[Category:2007 events]]
[[Category: 2007 events]]

Latest revision as of 14:41, 8 April 2024

23 in 23.png

23 in 23: Public Works’ Plan to Clean Up 23 Communities in 23 Days is a neighborhood clean-up program instituted by newly-elected Mayor of Birmingham Larry Langford in November 2007 and carried out by the Birmingham Department of Public Works. The number "23" refers to the number of communities in Birmingham's Community Participation Program.

As presented, the program involves three waves of work crews spending one day working in each community. The first wave includes 24 limb loaders and 8 pickers removing trash and debris. The second wave includes 30 horticulture crews to cut and clean parks, rights-of-way, alleys, ditches and vacant lots. The third wave involves smaller trash and brush crews picking up debris from the second wave.

The program utilizes no additional personnel or equipment. It has been praised by City Councilor Miriam Witherspoon for making the best use of existing resources.

Progress

During the first 23 day campaign crews picked up 17,369 tons of trash and debris (755 tons per day), cut 1,134 overgrown lots (49 per day), and placed notices on 656 abandoned cars (28.5 per day), of which 188 were hauled off (8 per day). This was accomplished with 72,400 staff hours (362 workers x 200 hours each)

Between January and June 2008 the program reported 100,142 tons of trash collected and hauled away along with 2,311 overgrown lots mowed, 256 houses demolished, 607 ditches cleaned, 642 blocks of alleys cleared, 2,115 cars tagged, 835 cars towed, and 20,302 potholes patched.

Sequence

The order in which communities are serviced was determined by geography:

  1. Five Points West community
  2. West End community
  3. Grasselli community
  4. Brownville community
  5. Southwest community
  6. Titusville community
  7. Smithfield community
  8. Ensley community
  9. Pratt community
  10. North Birmingham community
  11. Northside community
  12. Southside community
  13. Red Mountain community
  14. Crestline community
  15. Crestwood community
  16. Woodlawn community
  17. East Birmingham community
  18. East Lake community
  19. Airport Hills community
  20. Roebuck-South East Lake community
  21. East Pinson Valley community
  22. Huffman community
  23. Cahaba community

Response

Langford made a presentation after the completion of the first 23-day campaign, during the the January 2, 2008 City Council meeting. After the meeting, rap duo Over C's performed "Don't Trash My Hood", a rap song inspired by the campaign. Birmingham Public Works director Rickey Kennedy credited the program with raising morale among public works employees.

See Also

References

  • Coman, Victoria L. (December 11, 2007) "At halfway point, some Birmingham residents pleased with citywide cleanup; others have concerns." The Birmingham News
  • Coman, Victoria L. (Deecember 29, 2007) "Birmingham cleanup harvests tons of trash, cars." The Birmingham News
  • Bryant, Joseph (January 3, 2008) "23-in-23 cleanup campaign touted after City Council meeting." The Birmingham News
  • Hippensteel, Jena (July 22, 2008) "Birmingham crews collect 100,000 tons of trash in cleanup campaign." Birmingham Business Journal
  • Bryant, Joseph D. (July 22, 2008) "Birmingham citywide cleanup initiative yields 200 million pounds of rubbish." The Birmingham News

External links