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By Dr. Gary C. April, program director for Project R.O.S.E.
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Dr. Gary C. April
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The latest casualty of the state’s financial shortfalls is the granddaddy of
all do-it-yourself used oil recycling programs – Project R.O.S.E. (Recycled
Oil Saves Energy). One of this nation’s oldest programs, Project R.O.S.E. was
recently notified its state funding was being eliminated after Sept. 30. Strategic
changes in direction for the Alabama Department of Economic and Community Affairs’ (ADECA)
Science, Technology and Energy Division was the stated reason for the cutback.
During the last two decades, Project R.O.S.E. affected, on average, the collection
of nearly four-million gallons per year of do-it-yourself motor oil in Alabama. That’s
80-million gallons of used oil not put into Alabama’s environment, ground water,
creeks, lakes, rivers and bays.
For more than 27 years, Project R.O.S.E. has educated the citizens of Alabama on
the value of used oil recycling and on the ever important theme of the program – that
one person indeed can make a difference in the quality of life for their family and
community. Project R.O.S.E. has proven that education is the key to sustaining an
oil recycling program.
Failing to educate citizens about proper disposal of used motor oil will adversely
impact every major industry in Alabama from timber, catfish, automotive and farming
to commercial and sport fishing, transportation and recreation. It took more than
a quarter of a century for our citizens to realize they can indeed make a difference
in protecting the environment and conserving our ever diminishing oil and gas resources – one
quart at a time.
ADECA insists that Project R.O.S.E. is an excellent program; however, interest by
the state agency to support other ways to attain energy efficiency within Alabama,
and the reduction in their budget, made it necessary to divert Project R.O.S.E.’s
annual funding to other efforts. Throughout the years, Project R.O.S.E. supplemented
its state budget by coordinating the annual Run for the Roses 5K race, proceeds from
which were used for oil collection tank placement in rural areas of Alabama. Since
the inaugural race in 1997, more than 100 runners participate in the race annually
and nearly 40 tanks have been placed throughout the state, as a result.
Last year Project R.O.S.E. celebrated the establishment of a used oil collection
site in each of Alabama’s 67 counties. In 2003, the program’s staff impacted
nearly one-half million Alabama citizens through participating as exhibitors or speakers
at conferences, conducting workshops in schools and for Girl Scouts groups, giving
radio and television interviews, and attending a host of other community environmental
programs.
Project R.O.S.E. also presents a series of activities for Junior Girl Scouts (4th-6th
grades) to earn their “Oil Up” badge. These education programs were beginning
to make inroads toward educating the next generation of Alabama concerned citizens.
Used oil programs in other states are funded through their state budgets to address
used oil collection, recycling, education, tank placement and liability issues. Several
efforts were attempted by Project R.O.S.E. to receive State Oil Inspection Fee funds
or revenue from proposed bills. Project R.O.S.E. annually competed for ADECA managed
funds derived from the Department of Energy State Oil Overcharge Fund.
It has been bittersweet for me to watch as neighboring states mimicked our efforts
but found ways to raise annual funds to develop, grow, and expand the fundamental
Project R.O.S.E. model.
I am hoping to find someone who is willing to continue funding this program even
if it means loss of identity of its registered trademark. The ideal situation would
be for some group to recognize the hard work invested in the program and continue
the energy conservation/environmental preservation program as it is presently constituted.
What happens if no one steps forward to keep this program going? Only time will tell
if used oil in Alabama will once again be discarded on Alabama The Beautiful. The
state savings for making Project R.O.S.E. disappear is less than two cents per citizen
per year. Is that a prudent decision on behalf of Alabama’s citizens? You be
the judge.
Dr. Gary C. April founded Project R.O.S.E. in 1977 and serves as
its director and is head of the chemical and biological engineering department at
The University of Alabama. For more information, contact April at 205/348-1734 or gcapril@coe.eng.ua.edu.
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