Strange travel news: Politeness at our borders, talking trash cans, trashy research

by Charlie Leocha on August 27, 2009

us-canada-border
A Canadian man was pepper sprayed because he wouldn’t turn his car off at the border when order to by a border guard. He wanted the guard to say please. The guard sprayed him. Finland has talking trashcans…what will they think of next. Finally, a Hawaiian hotel used trash to measure spending.

A Canadian traveler insisting on courtesy from a member of the Customs and Border Protection guards was pepper sprayed and held in custody for three hours. His only sin — asking the border guard to say “please” when he was asked to turn his car off during a search.

“I refused to turn off the car until he said please. He didn’t. And he has the gun, I guess, so he sprayed me,” said Desiderio Fortunato, a Coquitlam, B.C., resident who frequently crosses the border to visit his second home in the state of Washington. “Is that illegal in the United States, asking an officer to be polite?”

Mr. Fortunato said after he was sprayed he was forcefully taken into custody by several officers. He was held for three hours before he was released without being allowed entry into the United States. Mr. Fortunato says he was dismissed with a warning to be more cooperative in the future.

Finland’s talking trash cans

Finland has developed a series of talking trash cans to help keep their cities cleaner and make visitors more aware of carelessly tossing trash. The trash cans also have the added benefit of teaching visitors a bit of the Finnish language.

The talking trash bins greet passers-by and encourage them to throw their trash away. They are never at a loss for words, whether the subject is culture or politics. This summer tourists will be delighted to hear that the talking trash bins speak not only Finnish and Swedish, but also Japanese, English, German, Polish and Russian. Tourists can also learn the basics of the Finnish language, such as: “One of the sure signs of summer in Finland is that the trash bins start talking.”

Hawaiian hotel uses trash to measure the pulse of the economy

Federal agents have been know to do it, identity thieves do it and, now, Hawaiian hotels do it (well, at least one) — they dig through your trash to see what you are doing. In this case, the hotel uses the trash collected as a general gauge to the level of the economy. The less expensive the wrappers found in hotel trash cans, the worse the economy. Or, the more multi-kid families staying at the establishment.

When you see a lot more Burger King, Pizza Hut and McDonald’s wrappers, it’s clear tourists are cutting corners.

Orr’s unofficial trash-can index highlights the dual challenge facing the state’s No. 1 industry: it needs to get more tourists to come and to get the ones who do visit to spend more.

While visitor arrivals in the first half of this year are down about 10 percent from a year ago, spending is off 15 percent. That translates into $900 million less flowing into the state in six months.

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  • Plet39

    Sorry, Mr. Fortunato, but when CBP tells you to do something, just do it. I’ve had to answer some pretty silly (to me) questions when crossing the border in the other direction. Last time I got off the ferry in Yarmouth, Nova Scotia, the customs agent wasn’t buying the fact that, as a woman traveling alone, I wasn’t carrying “something” for protection. I just politely answered every question — don’t remember if he said “please,” though. While I agree that pepper-spraying Fortunato was over the top, his refusal to turn off his car when told to do so was just asking for trouble.

  • kelley

    Something I’ve always felt that was in my own best interests was, when unarmed and confronted by a group of people with guns, whether in uniform or not, it’s best to limit the demands I make of them. Just a thought…

  • Arizona Road Warrior

    Since the enginee was running, the car could be used as a ‘weapon’ so when Mr. Fortunato refused to turn it off, while it was extreme, I think that the pepper-spray was warranted.

  • Carrie Charney

    I think if a customs agent asked me that if, as a woman traveling alone, wasn’t I carrying “something” for protection, I would look very innocently embarrassed and ask, “Do you mean, like condoms?” and watch his or her reaction. Just musing.

  • Bill

    I believe they even have signs about turning the car off – probably because they don’t want to breathe in the exhaust.
    Although it is nice when people say please and thank you, the agent may have been upset that Mr. Fortunato did not show the courtesy of turning off the car due to exhaust gas.
    The major issue here is border safety, not seeing if you can get someone to say “please”.

    The Canadian and American customs/Border agents have always been polite in my experience. Sometimes, they get a bit stern when they are trying to note one’s reaction, it is just part of their job.

    Mr. Fortunado is very lucky he didn’t end up being charged with something and there is a saying “Pick your battles carefully” that he may wish to adhere to in the future.

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