Anonymous wrote:Thank God MoCo pols are worried about gas leafblowers and banning the use of roundup to help control weeds. Meanwhile crime is out of control, the local economy has stagnated for decades, schools keep declining and they keep raising taxes for the privilege of all of this.
Amazing priorities.
Anonymous wrote:Thank God MoCo pols are worried about gas leafblowers and banning the use of roundup to help control weeds. Meanwhile crime is out of control, the local economy has stagnated for decades, schools keep declining and they keep raising taxes for the privilege of all of this.
Amazing priorities.
Anonymous wrote:Thank God MoCo pols are worried about gas leafblowers and banning the use of roundup to help control weeds. Meanwhile crime is out of control, the local economy has stagnated for decades, schools keep declining and they keep raising taxes for the privilege of all of this.
Amazing priorities.
Anonymous wrote:Are they going to ban the electric ones too? Because they are just as loud and annoying.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Ugh. White people with nothing to do are annoying. Who gives a crap about gas leaf blowers? Get a life and stop caring about trivialities.
-1. They are so loud. You can hear them from blocks away. Have you ever been on a call when they turn them on? Or put a baby down to nap? They are just so loud and they stink.
But all lawn mowing equipment is loud. Why leaf blowers and not mowers? They are loud and use gas.
+1 This ban is completely unscientific and myopic. In the US, gasoline powered lawn equipment accounts for around 0.3% of total CO2 emissions, less than 0.7% of total PM2.5 emissions and 4% of Total VOC emissions. Leaf blowers account for less than 10% of total emissions for gasoline powered lawn and garden equipment. Under the most optimistic assumptions this leaf blower ban will reduce emissions (in MOCO) of PM2.5 by 0.1%, and VOC emissions by 0.5%. THIS IS A VERY COSTLY POLICY, that provides basically no health benefits to county residents while burdening business owners.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We just had four tall oak trees removed. All our neighbors are mad at us because they provided some much shade and we told them the men that cuts our lawn told us they may double or triple the price of a leaf clean up so we decided to just have the trees removed.
That was probably the pragmatic thing to do. I think lots of people will be removing trees in the future when faced with the added costs of leaf clean up without gas blowers. It’s a matter of economics. If trees cost too much to keep around, people are going to remove them.
I seriously doubt this logic. Tree removal costs thousands per tree.
Anonymous wrote:I think some homes already caught fire and burnt down. Expensive homes too. Think about the amount of batteries that get thrown away with the weekly trash. They only last one or two years.
Anonymous wrote:I know people pay a fortune for two or three leaf cleanups on half acre and acre lots every year. They have five guys with walk behind blowers and back pack blowers. They have a large vacuum truck that sucks them up at the end of the day. I'm thinking they pay between 1200 and 1500 for an all day cleanup.
Most are citizens.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm seeing gas blower use everywhere in the county. Must be a relaxed law.
I'm so surprised. I thought hispanic people (most of our landscapers) were playing it super safe.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We just had four tall oak trees removed. All our neighbors are mad at us because they provided some much shade and we told them the men that cuts our lawn told us they may double or triple the price of a leaf clean up so we decided to just have the trees removed.
That was probably the pragmatic thing to do. I think lots of people will be removing trees in the future when faced with the added costs of leaf clean up without gas blowers. It’s a matter of economics. If trees cost too much to keep around, people are going to remove them.
Anonymous wrote:I'm seeing gas blower use everywhere in the county. Must be a relaxed law.