Orange County NC Website
2 <br />1 Commissioner Gordon arrived at 5:50 pm. <br />2 Commissioner Nelson asked about how a 90-day delay would affect the timeline. <br />3 The landfill will run out of space in two years. He said that there is a crisis with what to do <br />4 with waste. <br />5 Bob Sallach said that if a decision were made on the site on December 11`h, the <br />6 project could be implemented by May 2011. There would need to be some preliminary <br />7 site planning in conjunction with the site acquisition and permitting. The process would <br />8 have to be accelerated. A 90-day delay would prohibit the construction of the facility <br />9 before May 2011. <br />10 Commissioner Nelson asked about the possibility of shipping waste to Durham in <br />11 the short-term, as was suggested by some citizens. <br />12 Solid Waste Director Gayle Wilson said that he and the Manager met with Durham <br />13 officials and Durham was willing to receive waste from Orange County, but the excess <br />14 capacity was about a third of Orange County's waste volume, so it would not be able to <br />15 take all of Orange County's waste. Another issue is that the transfer station in Durham <br />16 had some issues when it was developed and it is not efficiently receiving processed <br />17 waste. There are frequently long lines. The economic analysis of hauling waste to <br />18 Durham indicates that it would significantly impact the collection services for Chapel Hill <br />19 and Carrboro. <br />20 Commissioner Nelson asked about the pros and cons of waste to energy. Bob <br />21 Sallach said that he was not going to comment on the technology, but there have been no <br />22 new waste to energy facilities developed in the United States in the last ten years. It <br />23 would be very expensive compared to a waste transfer station. <br />24 Chair Jacobs asked Planning Director Craig Benedict to talk about the limits of the <br />25 County Commissioners' jurisdiction in relation to areas in towns that may be industrial or <br />26 prime prospects for redevelopment. Craig Benedict said that this transfer station is a <br />27 government facility, so Orange County has a lot of flexibility in locating a transfer station. <br />28 In the industrial and commercial nodes, those are land use designations, and those are <br />29 located next to interstates. The present zoning of those areas are left as residential until <br />30 someone comes in and rezones them to an industrial or commercial category. Orange <br />31 County does not have jurisdiction of non-residential uses within Carrboro and Chapel Hill <br />32 planning areas, but there are transition areas. Orange County would have to be an <br />33 applicant going through the process if it considered a site within the town jurisdictions. <br />34 Discussion ensued about the economics of transferring waste outside the County. <br />35 Chair Jacobs asked how long it would take to execute the possibility of looking at <br />36 10+-acre sites. Bob Sallach said that 30 days should be sufficient for its GIS study. <br />37 Chair Jacobs pointed out that if there were a smaller site in Orange County's <br />38 jurisdiction, it would probably be an undeveloped area and would need a buffer, and <br />39 Hillsborough has said that it would annex the property to prevent it from being developed. <br />40 <br />41 3. Review Proposed Timeline for Making Site Selection Decision <br />42 Bob Sallach reviewed the timetable as proposed, which is shown below: <br />43 <br />44 <br />45 <br />46 <br />47 <br />48 <br />49 <br />50 <br />51 <br />