ALBANY - Volunteers will patrol the banks of the Flint River this month in hopes the trash will disappear and the birds will fly again. <br>
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The Flint River project is part of Rivers Alive, a privately funded volunteer effort to clean up rivers throughout the state. This year's event is scheduled to coincide with Make A Difference Day on October 26th. <br>
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The president of the Albany Audubon Society, Don Cook, said ``It's just so depressing to see the trash, to see people not caring. If we can just get it cleaned up, maybe people will stop polluting.'' <br>
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Last year, the Albany Audubon Society collected enough trash from the riverbank to fill 80 30-gallon garbage bags. <br>
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Cook said he wants to protect the river and help the bird population. <br>
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A spokeswoman for Georgia's Adopt-A-Stream, Kim Morris-Zarneke, said volunteers are needed for such a large project as cleaning the state's 70,000 miles of rivers and streams. <br>
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She said about 18,000 volunteers cleared more than 120,000 pounds of trash from hundreds of miles of Georgia waterways last year, she said. <br>
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Morris-Zarneke said those numbers should climb this year, with more than 125 statewide cleanups scheduled in October alone.
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