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April Media Blitz reaches thousands
SEMASS funds SSRC outreach
New
Grinding, Screening contractors
McNabb,
Burnett step down , new members step up, and EBoard stays on
LOCAL
Marshfield hires PT Coordinator
Whitman Town Meeting votes
down PAYT
Competitors vie
for Rockland, Marshfield’s trash
Holbrook PAYT slashes trash
No more paint in Plymouth
Volunteer to help Marshfield Fair
recycle again!
Marine Shrink Wrap Recycling
Program enters third year
STATE
DEP needs fines for funds;
Steps up enforcement actions on town facilities
FY06 Recycling Budget still
gasping
SWAC/SWMP
Sullivan Runs for President
EVENTS
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April Media
Blitz reaches thousands
The SSRC put the Waste Reduction
word into the cars, kitchens and backyards of residents from Boston
to the Cape
for three weeks in April. SEMASS' MSP funded 140-one minute
radio ads on Hazardous Product Management, Waste Bans, and
Composting, which Abington Health Agent Michelle Roberts
and Executive Director Claire Sullivan recorded. They ran on
WPLM FM 99.1, WATD FM 95.9, and WJDA AM 1300 for the two
weeks until Earth Day. Live interviews included compost bin
giveaways with donations from Abington, Cohasset, Hull, Norwell,
Quincy and Weymouth. We hope that a lot of people got the message.
A grant from Mass. DEP covered most of the cost of
placing paid "info-torials" in twelve Mariners, the
Whitman Express, Duxbury Clipper and
Hull
Times on the
same three topics. One 12 inch ad ran each of the 3 weeks leading
up to Earth Day (April 22). The grant also included technical
assistance from Rosemary Nolan, who coordinated related
outreach and giveaways at live local events, including Sustainable
South Shore’s Climate InfoFest on 4/23 at Nantasket Beach,
and distributed related videos on our local cable stations.
The SSRC is embarking on a partnership with North and
South River Watershed Association, which is also doing an
outreach campaign for its Greenscapes program, which includes
home composting and pesticide reduction. The Board voted to
coordinate 85-30 second radio ads on WATD with them through
September.
To see the print ads online, go to the link to
SSRC in the News. Lift
whatever you want for any other publications that might be
interested! |
Rep.
Kathleen Teahan receives award
The
SSRC hosted a Legislative Breakfast at Cameron’s on the Green on
Earth Day, April 22. Senator
Robert Hedlund, Representatives Tom O’Brien and Kathleen Teahan, and
staff from Reps. Garrett Bradley’s and Robert Nyman’s offices met
with municipal solid waste managers from the South Shore, who shared their
concerns about budget and legislative issues that will impact local
recycling and waste reduction efforts.

SSRC Chairman Merle Brown opened the event, noting
that, “On Earth Day, we should remember the importance of conserving the
Earth’s resources for our own survival. Each tree that’s left in the
rainforest provides enough oxygen to support two human beings.”

He introduced esteemed guest speaker Senator Pamela Resor
of Acton, the Chairman of the Environment, Natural Resources and
Agriculture Committee, who shared the SSRC’s concerns about the deep cuts to
the State recycling and environmental budget, while noting the great strides
that have been made in the cleanliness of our rivers and recycling since the
first Earth Day in 1970.
South Shore Senator Robert Hedlund discussed his bill to
allow consumers to return unused non-latex paint to retailers, which would
save thousands in property tax dollars and municipal hazardous waste costs.
Sen. Hedlund also noted his support for an Electronic Waste takeback bill,
and for measures to reduce Lottery ticket litter and idling cars.
SSRC Executive Director Claire Sullivan touted the
Cooperative’s recent public outreach initiatives through paid ads on the
radio and in the local papers, noting the importance of even small State
grants for such efforts. She outlined the Cooperative’s legislative
priorities, including increases in the recycling and DEP state budgets,
updating the Bottle Bill and end of life product responsibility by
manufacturers.
SSRC Vice Chairman Steven Herrmann of Hanover quoted the proverb “We
don’t inherit the earth from our ancestors, we borrow it from our
grandchildren”. He then presented Rep. Kathleen Teahan with the
SSRC’s fourth “Environmental Hero” award for her support of legislation and
budget priorities and her personal commitment to waste reduction and
recycling. Rep. Teahan joins Rep. Tom O'Brien (D-Kingston), Rep. Robert
Koczera (D-New Bedford), and Rep. Mark Carron (D-Southbridge) who were
named the first, second and third "Environmental Heroes" since 2000.
In her acceptance speech, Teahan stated, "When my
daughter-in-law asked me to speak to her nursery school class about
recycling, I called Claire at the SSRC for materials. Teaching our children
about the need for conservation is critically important for their future.
And often the children teach their parents.”
Brown also recognized John McNabb of Cohasset for his
leadership in the formation of the SSRC in 1998, and his contributions ever
since.
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New Grinding,
Screening contractors
Four contractors submitted bids for brush
grinding, com-post screening and organics removal in
January. At our February Board meeting, Will Conrad,
Marketing Director for Sam White and Sons, who had
attended the opening but had not submitted a bid,
advised the board on technical aspects of the grinding and
screening bids, which were submitted by Big Bear
Recycling (aka Chiptech), current contractor J. M.
Cook and Co., Letourneau Products and Lion’s Head
Organics. He distributed spec sheets on the equipment
specified, pointing out that output is affected by
horsepower, engine size and design. In response to concerns
about the smaller loader size specified in one bid, he
advised that it should be able to keep up with both grinders
they specified.
Based on the parameters for award, and supported by
references and other relevant information, the Board awarded
both grinding con-tracts (medium and high volume) to
Letourneau Products (508-763-9737), which bid $3,000/day
for its 750 hp Morbark Tub Grinder, and $3,400/day for its
1000 hp Morbark Wood Hog, both with operator and
excavator. Price per cubic yard based on output is $1.25
and $1.06 respectively. The screening contract went to
Lion’s Head Organics (781-545-4645) to rent its
McCloskey 16‘ trommel screen with stacker, at $750/day. The
Board decided to leave compost and wood chip removal up to
the towns and did not award.
Contracts are available at the office,
508-785-8318.
The funds allocated
from each municipal ton of trash sent to SEMASS
for the Material Separation
Plan (MSP) has been hard at work for the SSRC. In addition
to the usual digital thermometers and Dunkin Donuts coupons
to inspire residents to purge their premises of mercury
thermometers and thermostats, new MSP Program Manager Dan
Peters has facilitated the funding of our 2005
Household Hazardous Product Collection (HHP) flyers,
three new sandwich board signs for use at our HHP
collections and over three hours of air time on three
radio stations (see related article on page 1)
The 4000 HHP flyers,
distributed to town halls, libraries and transfer stations,
instruct residents on what, when and where to dispose of
household hazardous products at our thirteen collections,
and includes prominent information on thermometer swaps and
the hazards of mercury contamination. The HHP signs include
one dedicated to the thermometer swaps at the collections,
as well as one on latex paint disposal and a sign directing
residents into the Collections. The radio ads include
information about alternatives to mercury products, and the
thermometer swaps.
The three new ads were
compiled with the five from last fall, and are available on
CD from Claire.
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McNabb, Burnett step
down
Founding SSRC member and
longtime Secretary John McNabb announced his
resignation from the Board in February, citing time
constraints. The Board recognized his long service with a
plaque at the Legislative Breakfast. McNabb had used his
political know-how and lobbying skills to enable the South Shore Recycling Cooperative to
become an independent political body in a budget rider
facilitated and often regaled by Rep. Tom. O’Brien.
He also wrote the Bylaws. McNabb, who lobbies for Clean
Water Action, is deeply involved in the Electronic Waste
Producer Responsibility bill filed by SSRC Environmental
Hero Rep. Mark Carron. McNabb’s political savvy has been a
tremendous benefit to the SSRC, and inspired our now
institutional Legislative Breakfasts.
Whitman’s hardworking Public Works Com-missioner Tom Burnett
also had to choose work over Board membership when
MassHighway reassigned him to East Bridgewater. Burnett
ledWhitman into the fold in 2001, and has been an active
Board member. He continues to
serve on Whit-man’s
Solid Waste Recycling Advisory Committee.
… new members
step up …
Fortunately,
those gaps and one other, have already been filled. We
welcomed Pattie Hainer, a new Norwell Recycling
Committee member and former Ledger reporter (!), and Loni
Bezanson of the Whitman DPW at the March meeting.
Hainer has already volunteered to represent the SSRC at the
North & South River Watershed Ass’ns Cleanup Day, is working
on an article about residential construction and demolition
waste (C&D), and accepted nomination to be our new
Secretary.
And I just learned that
Arthur Lehr, Cohasset Recycling Committee force
majeure and MassRecycle’s Recycler of the Year in 2000, was
just appointed to fill Cohasset’s vacant seat.
…and EBoard stays on
The
Board gladly accepted the three other veteran leaders’ offer
to stay on at the May meeting, with Merle Brown of
Cohasset continuing to serve as Chairman, Steve Herrmann
of Hanover as Vice Chairman, and Joanne Dirk of
Norwell as Treasurer.
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LOCAL |
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Marshfield hires PT
Coordinator
Yet another Sullivan has joined
the local recycling community with the recent hiring of Debbie
Sullivan as Marshfield’s half time Recycling Coordinator.
Debbie served on the Town’s Recycling Committee before heading to
Florida for a couple of years. She has her work cut out for her in
implementing DPW Director Jeb DeLoache’s ambitious waste
reduction ideas. Debbie is open to making her job full time by
filling a similar position in another town, an idea the Executive
Director has been encouraging for years. Savings in disposal costs
as a result of her work are bound to pay her salary and then some,
both for Marshfield and any other town that has the wisdom to create
such a position. |
Whitman Town Meeting
votes down PAYT
Since August, Whitman officials have
sought ways to reduce their high trash costs. Encouraged by the
success of PAYT programs in surrounding towns and the availability
of grant funding and assistance by Mass. DEP, DPW Director John
Petinelli applied for Technical Assistance and startup cost
grants. As required for the grants, Town Manager Frank Lynam
set up the Whitman Solid Waste/Recycling Committee, which has
been moderated by Municipal Assistance Coordinators Kathi Mirza
and Rosemary Nolan. SSRC Board Members Tom Burnett, Michelle
Roberts and Al Scoglio were all appointed.
Last month, the Committee presented
its re-commendation to the Boards of Selectmen and Health at a
public hearing to limit trash collec-tion to one-30 gallon barrel of
trash per week from households that pay the $175 annual fee (reduced
from this year’s $225 fee), with addi-tional bags costing $2. The
advice was well received at the hearing, but those who stayed late
through the second night of Town Meeting were persuaded by some
questionable infor-mation to keep the current fee based system. The
annual fee is expected to rise to $250.
Passage of the measure would have
resulted in a lower subsidy from the General Fund, and reduced trash
volume by and estimated 20-40. |
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Competitors vie for Rockland, Marshfield’s trash
It’s amazing what
a little competition can do. The new availability of the Bourne
Integrated Solid Waste Management Facility (ISWMF) for municipal
solid waste (MSW) gave Marshfield and Rockland
another option for disposal. SEMASS’ counter-bid bested Bourne’s
proposal for both five-year contracts, at $76.50/ton for FY06, which
will save the towns tens of thousands of dollars. Both towns’
disposal contracts expire this June. Seneca Meadows, NY also bid to
extend their disposal/hauling contract with Marshfield. |
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Holbrook PAYT
slashes
trash
Supervisor of Public Works Ken Brown reports that Holbrook’s
disposal rate continues to hover at about 60% of what it was before
the implementation of Pay as You Throw (PAYT) last October. This
40% reduction in waste generation is partially offset by a sharp
increase in the recycling rate, and is also attributable to some
households opting out of municipal collection service and hiring
private haulers.
PAYT was implemented to cover disposal costs after Town Meeting
approved the Finance Committee’s recommendation to reduce the
disposal budget by about half for FY05. Faced with the choice of
assessing a flat fee to all households or charging by the bag, the
Board of Selectmen voted to support the volume based system.
Despite the success of the new program, PAYT proponent and SSRC
Board member Jeff Lowe lost his bid for re-election to the
Board of Selectmen in a low turnout election to an opponent who
wished to return to a tax funded trash program. |
No more paint in Plymouth
After evaluating costs and options
and Ply-mouth Public Works Dept. decided to close its paint shed,
which was open one day a month at one of its transfer stations from
April - October. Costs include $350/cubic yard box for recycling
the paint, plus the staff time necessary to ensure that solvents and
pool chemicals aren’t left along with the paint, which happens too
often when nobody is paying attention. The cost to manage latex
paint this way exceeded the cost to dispose of it with conventional
trash, which is acceptable as long as it’s dry.
Although “swapping” was encouraged,
supply far exceeded demand. With more consumers preferring latex to
oil based paint, the amount of hazardous non-latex paint coming in
has diminished steadily (which is a good thing), to a point at which
it is more practical to just collect it at its semi-annual household
hazardous product collections.
Hanover has just added a spring HHP
collection to supplement the fall one, and is also evaluating the
efficiency of keeping its paint shed open each month. |
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Volunteer to help Marshfield
Fair recycle again!
Marshfield Fair's first recycling effort in 2004 was so successful
that Fair organizers Carleton Chandler and Roni LaHage
want to expand Fair recycling this year, which runs from Aug. 19
- Aug. 28, 2005.
DEP’s Ann McGovern, who organized the effort last year
through a Technical Assistance Grant to the SSRC, has volunteered to
put it together again this year with help from the Executive
Director. To do this, we need others to join in the fun again.
Opportunities include:
N
encouraging vendors and fairgoers to
recycle
N staffing the recycling-composting exhibit
N flattening boxes
N
collecting recyclables with the morning clean-up crew
Marshfield Fair is an agricultural fair attended by over 100,000
people, with all the traditional fun family attractions, rides,
music, animals, flower and vegetable contests, exhibits and
motocross events.
If you would like to add a new dimension to your county fair
experience by diverting massive amounts of cardboard, bottles and
cans, with the added bonus of free admission, mark the dates and
contact Ann McGovern at
617-292-5834 or
ann.mcgovern@state.ma.us.
Several of us veterans from last year already have! |
Marine Shrink Wrap Recycling
Program enters third year
This year, the Massachusetts Marine Shrink Wrap Recycling Program is
being coordinated again by R. Marc Fournier, through the
Boston-based environmental consulting firm Haley & Aldrich, with
support from the American Plastics Council and Westborough recycler
E. L. Harvey & Sons. Over twenty marinas on the Mass. coast are
collecting shrink wrap for recycling.
Approximately 35 tons of white marine shrink wrap from over 2,500
boats was collected and recycled each year in 2003 and 2004 through
this pioneering program coordinated by Fournier during his tenure at
WasteCap of Mass. Considering that an estimated 130 tons of shrink
wrap is sold along the Massachusetts coastline, the American
Plastics Council, marinas and others have identified marine shrink
as an excellent opportunity to recycle the film rather than dispose
of it. The marine shrink wrap collected in this year’s program will
likely be used in the manufacture of plastic lumber decking.
For more information, contact: R. Marc Fournier, Senior
Environmental Specialist, Haley & Aldrich, Inc., 617.886.7445,
MFournier@HaleyAldrich.com
or Judith Dunbar, American Plastics Council,
Judith_Dunbar@plastics.org. |
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STATE |
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DEP needs fines for funds
Steps up
enforcement actions on town facilities
No more Mr. Nice Guy. Due in
large measure to Governor Romney’s directive that avoid future
budget reductions on addition to the 30% slashed in the past 3
years, DEP needs to show increased revenue through fees and fines,
facility and waste ban inspectors are rooting out noncompliant
municipal and private operations with a vengeance. With budget cuts
forcing the department to focus more on enforcement and less on
assisting the regulated community with compliance, managers of
transfer stations, closed landfills, highway garages and even
compost sites should dig out their waste ban plans, permits and
other rules and regulations and make sure their ducks are in a row.
This is no small task with municipal staff turnover, budget and
staffing cuts, but the inspectors are giving little wiggle room to
facility managers to clean up their acts and avoid a fine.
Inspectors from the different regions in the state are under
increased pressure to meet their enforcement targets, and a couple
of knowledgeable sources even assert that competition among the
regions to levy fines is being
encouraged. Marshfield
recently fell victim to a
fine when large scale staff turnover resulted in their Waste Ban
Plan being forgotten. When it was discovered that the required
screening and documentation wasn’t happening, they received a swift
Administrative Consent Order with a $1,400 penalty and Notice of
Noncompliance (NON).
EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR’S EDITORIAL: The mission of the DEP
would be better served if the department were released from this
directive to self-fund, and went back to assisting our overburdened
and understaffed facility managers in complying with environmental
regulations. This approach is more like robbing poor Peter to pay
poor Paul. Fines should be reserved for those who fail to
demonstrate due diligence in correcting violations that have been
pointed out to them.
Less than 1% of our State budget is appropriated to environmental
protection. This gives our home state the dubious distinction
of ranking 48th out the 50 States in environmental
spending. we hope our leaders realize the value that investing
in environmental protection brings and restore the cuts the DEP has
suffered since 2002 before irreversible damage is done. |
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FY06 Recycling Budget
still gasping
As this goes online, the Senate is considering its Ways and Means
Committee’s FY06 budget proposal and filing amendments. Of
particular interest to solid waste managers is line item
2010-0100, Recycling Coordination, which keeps morphing into 2
line items, as the redemption center earmark has become the
redemption center line item, 2010-0200 (more on that later).
Also of increasing concern to us is the DEP budget, 2200-0100,
which has been slashed by 30% since FY02, to its current
level of $28M (see previous article).
In the” good old days”, back around FY01 and 02, the State
government appropriated about half the $30 million that was
“ear-marked” for recycling programs through the Clean Environment
Fund (CEF), into which the nickels from the 33% of unclaimed
bottle deposits went. But when the budget hit the skids, recycling
and other environmental pro-grams suffered disproportionate cuts.
Coupled with Governor Romney’s absorption of most dedicated funds
into the General Fund, including the CEF, the recycling line item
was gutted, and now stands at just over $2M. Thankfully is just
adequate to maintain the support staff ( Ann McGovern, Rosemary
Nolan, Lori Segall, Peggy Harlow…) on whom many of us rely for
support and guidance, but cannot sustain many valuable public and
private sector grant programs that had been helping to build
infra-structure and establish programs to change the way our
residents and businesses manage their waste to be more sustainable.
Even with heavy lobbying from the recycling and solid waste
community, both recycling and DEP’s budgets continue to scrape
bottom, even as the administration talks about surpluses and
refunds. This January, the Governor proposed level funding for
recycling, at $2.17M, retaining the House’s new FY05 line item
for a redemption center subsidy of $1.375M (which supports 60
redemption centers), which used to be an earmark within the
recycling line. Redemption centers had never been able to meet the
criteria to receive the full amount, so the earmark was never fully
expended, leaving revenue for other more far-reaching endeavors. To
guarantee their subsidy, a separate line item was cut out, leaving a
much smaller piece of the pie for all the 351 municipal programs and
numerous businesses and nonprofits to build the State’s recycling
infrastructure with assistance from the fund. In FY05 the two
lines ended up split, and combined added up to level funding of
$3.51M.
This year the Governor, the House and Senate Ways and Means kept the
split (which they hadn’t last year). The House nudged the recycling
appropriation from $2.17M to $2.34M in Rep. DeLeo’s consolidated
amendment, but SW&M stuck to the Governor’s request .
With new regulations and legislation in the pipeline that would
reduce costs for redemption centers, it would be prudent to
recombine the two line items and leave some flexibility to channel
those savings to do more education, municipal assistance, and reduce
some other bloated waste streams, such as food, wood and commercial
sector paper. The Executive Director had requested a meeting with
Ways and Means Chairman Sen. Therese Murray, whose district
includes Kingston and Plymouth, or her environmental budget staff
Faye Boardman, to explain how solid waste figures in the big picture
before the committee completes its budget, but was apparently too
far back in line. She will be requesting that our
South Shore legislators file an
amendment to recombine and increase the line. |
SWAC/SWMP
At DEP’s Solid Waste Advisory
Committee (SWAC) meeting on Tuesday March 24, John Fischer
presented draft revisions to the Beyond 2000 Solid Waste Master Plan
(SWMP). The SWAC had been providing input since last summer. Some
key features of their proposed revisions are:
Ä
add a 56% recycling goal to the difficult to understand 70% waste
reduction goal
Ä
add haulers and generators to facilities as waste ban enforcement
targets
Ä
focus on waste streams with greatest diversion potential:
residential and commercial paper, food and yard waste
Ä
emphasize regional coordination for residential access to haz prod
collections
Ä
explore PAYT as a Commonwealth Capital criterion; tighten DARP
criteria
Ä
add gypsum wallboard, asphalt shingles to C&D waste banned materials
Ä
develop markets for banned material
Ä
shift to a "No Net Export" goal instead of a policy with a target
date
Ä
maintain the combustion facility moratorium due to mercury
emissions;
Ä
base Reviews of Landfill expansion on site assignment and permit
requirements, not disposal capacity
DEP expects to hold public
hearings on the Revised SWMP in June.
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Sullivan Runs for President
Yours truly, Claire Sullivan,
is the only one that has thrown her hat into the ring as candidate
for President of MassRecycle.
Over her 5 year tenure, current
Pre-sident Jan Ameen, my Franklin
County counterpart, has led MassRecycle from the brink of insolvency to resume
its place as the voice and resource for our state's recycling
community.
I believe that the mission of
MassRecycle has much in common with that of the SSRC, and want it to
continue to thrive. The priorities I would bring to a MR
presidency are to advocate for sensible waste management policy at
the state level, and to influence individual behavior through public
outreach.
I would do my very best as
president to keep MassRecycle's voice and support for the recycling
community strong and effective.
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EVENTS
F
Northeast Resource Recovery Association Recycling Conference,
June 6-7, Waterville Valley resort, NH, 603-798-5777
F
SSRC MSW Manager/Board Meeting,
Wed., June 15,
9-11 am, Abington Town Hall
F
50th
Annual South Shore Arts Festival,
June 17-19, Cohasset Common,
781-383-2787
F
DEP
Solid Waste Advisory Committee,
Thurs., July 28,
1-3:30, 1 Winter St., Boston,
Karen Michaels 617-574-6820
“HANDKERCHIEF:
Goes in ‘used cloth’ after it has been washed and dried”
“PING PONG BALL: Goes into burnable household goods”
-2 of the 518 items listed n Yokohama’s 27 page
manual on how to sort trash into ten categories
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