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Agenda - 10-07-2008 - 7a
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Agenda - 10-07-2008 - 7a
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4/23/2013 10:37:48 AM
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10/7/2008 12:22:34 PM
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BOCC
Date
10/7/2008
Meeting Type
Regular Meeting
Document Type
Agenda
Agenda Item
7a
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Minutes - 20081007
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\Board of County Commissioners\Minutes - Approved\2000's\2008
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2.0 Future Orange County Waste Disposal Needs <br />Based on current data, the County (exduding recycled material from the University of North Carolina (UN[)) generated approximately 116,000 tons of waste in FY <br />2006-07 or about 318 tons per day (TPD). Of that material, approximately 15,600 <br />tons or 42 TPD were captured recyda b| es. Approximately 16,500 tons of material <br />were buried ina construction and demolition waste (C&D) landfill located inOrange <br />County and 8,700 tons of C&D were shipped for disposal out of the County. Tires, <br />clean wood, brush, appliances and scrap rnete| totaling 12,300 were also recycled in <br />2006-2007' That leaves approximately 62,900 tons of waste or 172 TPD from <br />Orange County di sposed in landfills both inside and outside the County ' This <br />tonnage could tle further reduced with additional diversion programs. <br />The County is examining ways to achieve its goal of 61 percent waste reduction.- As <br />part of this solid waste planning process update, the County has developed a series <br />of reports evaluating current collection programs, looking at ways to increase <br />diversion and deliver services more efficiently and effectively. These reports will be <br />followed by technical reports on integrating the desired actions into the County's <br />system and financing, which will result in a draft plan for the next three year <br />planning cycle. <br />The County's y4SVV landfill is now projected to close in early 2O11. The County has <br />decided to manage its future »4SVV using a transfer station and contracting for <br />disposal in an out-of-County landfill. A County-wide search is underway for a <br />suitable site to situate the transfer station with site selection expected by the end of <br />2008' Following site selection, the County will design, permit, finance, and construct <br />the transfer station, ideally before landfill closure. If the transfer station is not <br />completed by the time the landfill is closed, managing »4SVV during that time period <br />will be expensive and operationally challenging. <br />The projected landfill closure date may be impacted by new rules governing what <br />was formerly considered C&D. This material must now be disposed of in lined landfill <br />space. As of April 2000, stricter enforcement of the rules governing C&D landfills <br />require the County to deposit furniture and other bulky ibamno in the lined MSVV <br />landfill. This may result in a shift of as much as 8,000 tons of waste a year from <br />C&[} landfills to MSVV landfills, shortening the life expectancy of the County's y4BVV <br />landfill byas much as five months. <br />As it is/ the County-generated 172 TPD is probably too snna|| to make an alternative <br />waste processing technology economically viable. However, the Durham <br />Metropolitan Statistical Area, which includes Chatham, Durham, Orange, and Person <br />Counties, had a population of 465,745 people who generated 476,710 tons of <br />municipal solid waste from July 2006 -]une 2007, according to the FY 2006-2007 <br />North Carolina Department of Environment and Natural Resources Solid Waste <br />Annual Report' Of that 476,710 tons of waste, an estimated 90,575 tons or 19 <br />percent? constitutes nacyc|ab|es. The resulting 386,135 of MSVV could translate into <br />2 Simmons, Phil; Goldstein, Nora; Kaufman, Scott M.; Thuma|ks, Nickolas ].; and Thompson, <br />]c,]ames. "The State of Garbage inAnerica." 8iooyde, April 2OO6:Z5 <br />«http://wwwjgpneas.comn/anchivea/_free/000848.htm|>. <br />3 August 15 2008 <br />G8B/CO8O27-01 , <br />
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