I guess it makes sense. When you start with a river that caught on fire 3 times and clean it up to the point where it doesn’t catch on fire that’s a huge improvement.
there not saying cleaner like theres no garbage, there saying we were horrid and are now much better through the cleanup programs. its not like there driving around the eastside checking shit out they are looking at paperwork and buffalo has done alot to clean up
I’d believe that if improvement counts. This place practically glowed at night thanks to all the nuclear waste not too long ago. Huge chemical industry + manhattan project = lots of scary waste. Lets just say Praxair will not be able to sell this site for, oh, the next 10,000 years. :ohnoes:
you can thank POOPRAs company for cleaning all that ish up.
:tup: to buffalo. reader’s digest obviously wouldn’t make it up. in comparison to other cities of our size, industry, etc., we’re cleaner. positive national attention is a good thing.
About 4-5 years ago when a friend of mine came home on leave (RIP) he brought this southern girl up with him. We were hanging out at his rents house the one night drinking and I asked her what she had thought of Buffalo since she went sight seeing the day before.
she replied " it’s uhhh… dirtier than I thought it would be"
Something I learned about in a history of NY class I took in college. Not finding a whole lot about it online.
Mentioned here but only one sentence:
Nor was the Cuyahoga River the only fire to burn during that era. Pollutants fueled fires on a river into the Baltimore Harbor, the Buffalo River in upstate New York and the Rouge River in Michigan.
But basically the polution was so bad that 3 times the river was actually on fire. Obviously it was all the polution floating on top burning, but that’s pretty serious polution when it’s so bad you can set a river on fire.
I’m not surprised to see San Jose as #2 and Portland as #1, but I’m very surprised San Diego is not #1 or #2 or #3.
The smog is not as intense there as there is really no industry, all commercial. Furthermore when I lived there graffiti of any kind was always painted over/cleaned in a matter of days. It’s so clean there I can’t even believe it. Oh well, San Jose is good too.
Again, it’s not cleanest in respect to zero trash/white glove sort of test. It’s cleanest when taking into account what it was like in the past. So if you city has always been clean and it still clean today you probably lose to a place like Buffalo that isn’t spotless today but used to be an absolute cesspool.
Buffalo really has come a long way in terms of cleanup.