Your Chance to Talk Town Garbage Hauling October 24
The town is holding a meeting to discuss a proposal for a single trash collection contract and a "Pay As You Throw" disposal system.
Updated Oct. 24, 2011: Bob McCoy of the Green Team and Mapelwood Environmental Advisory Committee tells Patch that a few changes have been made since the new plan was introduced in June; he reports that the changes lower the estimated fee and, hence, the anticipated costs somewhat. McCoy also notes that the proposal now includes language that recognizes that some prefer stickers to premarked bags. Finally, residents should note that the actual costs will only be known when the proposal is put out to bid; but, it is unlikely that the bids will be accepted if they result in higher costs than the current system. Show up tonight to find out more!
Trash talk is actually being welcomed by the Maplewood Township Committee at a special meeting being held on Monday, October 24, at 7:00 p.m. at Maplewood Town Hall.
That night, the Township Committee will host a presentation and community meeting to discuss a proposal for the Township to enter into a single trash collection contract and institute a "Pay As You Throw" disposal system. An email notification sent Friday, Oct. 7 stated: "The purpose of these changes would be to bring savings to each household on collection costs, and allow households to also save money by generating less waste and recycling more."
The proposed changes were discussed this past June at two Township Committee meetings when Dirk Olin of the Maplewood Environmental Advisory Committee, Steve Weber of the Green Team, and Bob McCoy — a member of both — presented a new scenario for garbage hauling to the Township Committee.
A 4-page description of the proposal can be found on the Township website. In brief, the proposal has two key elements:
- Single contract between the town and a hauler (currently residents contract directly with one of two designated haulers). The town bills each individual user (homeowner, apartment dweller, etc) with an annual fee, similar in structure to the sewer fee paid now. The fee — estimated to be between $175 and $235 — covers collection, administrative costs and a "recycling improvements fund."
- A "pay as you throw" system, whereby customers throw their garbage out in special bags that are purchased in stores or from the hauler. The cost of the bag covers the tipping fee — the actual cost of throwing out trash. The presenters contrasted this with the current system where customers pay for two 32-gallon garbage pails per pickup twice a week no matter how much trash they have. Using this plan, "light users" — or those using about two 13-gallon bags per week — could pay as little as $250 to $310 per year. (The proposal estimates that "heavy users" — those using three 30-gallon bags per week — would pay between $375 and $435 per year.)
The proposal projects the annual overall savings to Maplewood residents to be between $300,000 and $700,000.
Trash pickup would continue to be twice weekly and the hauler would provide rear yard service.
McCoy, Olin and Weber pointed to successful programs such as the one they described in nearby towns like Chatham and Glen Ridge.
Overall, said the men, the theory of the propositions are that they reduce the waste stream, drive efficiencies by making the cost of the trash that residents toss out more visible to each customer, induce more recycling (and recyclers) and cost dramatically less than what Maplewoodians are paying now.
Although the Township Committee focused more on the potential cost savings of such at plan at the last meeting, McCoy says that the environmental motivation of the proposal should be a bigger part of the discussion. "The potential benefits are of a large magnitude," wrote McCoy. "National studies of pay-as-you-throw systems indicate that they reduce garbage disposal an average of 17% by a combination of source reduction — people finding ways to reduce the intake of materials that end up at the incinerator — and increased recycling."
"We calculated that if Maplewood could get even a 10% reduction it would be the environmental equivalent of avoiding 4 million minivan miles," added McCoy. "So we are talking about a big deal!"
The Environmental Advisory Committee is continuing to work out details of such a plan, including what the administrative costs would be for the town. There are also questions about the cost of bulk pickup and how it would work.
Tina Kelley
9:37 pm on Monday, October 10, 2011
This would be great, and would be a payoff to people who compost, as well as those who are less likely to buy products that have excess packaging. Sign me up!
Lydia Shay
9:12 pm on Friday, October 21, 2011
What's so great about the program and/ or compost? Theoretically, reduce, reuse and recycle sounds great! This will make people compost more and we need to eliminate food sources so there isn't another "moderate" rat infestation in Maplewood. Why fix something that ain't broken? Dumb idea! You'll see! Those who recycle will continue to do so but to punish people who throw garbage in the garbage sounds a bit insane, don't you think? If you want to help Maplewood residents - lower the taxes and stop obsessing over the garbage.
Your Name Here
9:35 pm on Saturday, October 22, 2011
The numbers to not add up to savings. See discussions at length here:
http://forum.maplewoodonline.com/vc/discussion/74858/the-maplewood-town-meeting-single-trash-collection-pay-as-you-throw#Item_239
Lydia Shay
6:34 pm on Monday, October 24, 2011
What's so great about the program and/ or compost? Theoretically, reduce, reuse and recycle sounds great! This will make people compost more and we need to eliminate food sources so there isn't another "moderate" rat infestation in Maplewood. Why fix something that ain't broken? Dumb idea! You'll see! Those who recycle will continue to do so but to punish people who throw garbage in the garbage sounds a bit insane, don't you think? If you want to help Maplewood residents - lower the taxes and stop obsessing over the garbage.
Joseph Redcay
10:24 am on Tuesday, October 25, 2011
People will compost more? Don't most households have sink disposal systems and doesn't organic matter represent only a tiny portion of bagged waste? It seems that just changing the recycling pickup schedule to once, or even twice, a week would have a tremendous impact. Let's try something small and simple first before changing the entire pickup system.
Nick Muson
10:44 am on Tuesday, October 25, 2011
"Don't most households have sink disposal system"
No I don't think so. Garbage disposals are a plumber's dream come true.
Lydia Shay
11:41 am on Tuesday, October 25, 2011
Joseph: No - most households don't have sink disposal systems! If you do - good for you! Otherwise, people will compost more and not the efficient way and we will have a rat infestation. Yes, another rat infestation! Also, every trash can in front of CVS, Wahlgreens, and other stores will be overflowing. Maplewood will start loking like Newark and Irvington. I have lived in Maplewood for 40 years and I have seen people come and go and they are not willing to pay for anything extra or do anything that extra effort has to be put into. Our taxes are very high for what we have (not many people have even a full acre of land). It would be different if you have 5 acres of land - do what you want. But for such a proximity - what your neighbor does with their trash impacts you greatly! I think this garbage obsession must stop! Even when I go to public works with my recycables I see individuals putting in the dumpsters thing they shouldn't and I tell them plastic bags don't go and they look at me like "who died and made you boss?" You think see through bags will stop people from doing what they have been doing for years. Keep on dreaming! Ridiculous! Just let it be!