The Hamilton Avenue MTS is undergoing permit inspections and could be open by early 2017.

RzNagle

The Hamilton Avenue MTS is undergoing permit inspections and could be open by early 2017.

A new plan to send Brooklyn’s garbage upstate would solidify the city’s waste export strategy for decades, but also shows how impractical the system has become.

Under a newly proposed 20-year contract with IESI—a major industry player owned by Canadian company Progressive Waste Solutions—much of Brooklyn’s residential garbage would be shipped to the company’s Seneca Meadows landfill at a projected cost of $3.3 billion.

“It’s significantly more than what the city pays now,” says Tammy Gamerman, a senior research associate for the Citizens Budget Commission. “A much smarter investment would have been infrastructure to process our trash in the city and convert it into an energy source.”

New York has struggled to deal with its garbage in a sustainable way since the Fresh Kills landfill closed on Staten Island in 2001. According to Department of Sanitation (DSNY) data, it cost $99 to dispose of a ton of garbage in 2000 versus $145 in 2014 when adjusted for inflation.

NEW YORK'S TRASH CHALLENGE: Read our series on the mounting obstacles to handling the city's waste.

Adi Talwar

NEW YORK'S TRASH CHALLENGE: Read our series on the mounting obstacles to handling the city's waste.

Much of the waste from central and southern Brooklyn is currently shipped out of the city from truck-based transfer stations—including two owned by IESI—or by rail. In an effort to reduce emissions, more barges will eventually handle waste at the city’s long-delayed marine transfer stations. The Hamilton Avenue MTS is undergoing permit inspections and could be open by early 2017. The Southwest Brooklyn MTS is still under construction.

While IESI originally planned to send barges from the Brooklyn contract to New Jersey, shipments will now go to Staten Island’s Global Container Terminal instead. Once every marine transfer station is operational, the terminal will handle thousands of tons of garbage from Brooklyn, Manhattan and Queens each day.

Borough President James Oddo sees this as an economic development opportunity rather than an environmental burden.

“They’re union jobs. They’re jobs where people can raise a family on these wages,” he says. “These are sealed containers. It’s very different than open barges being dumped into an unlined swamp that is now a landfill.”

Oddo does recognize the costs involved—which he believes limits funding for other city services—and says New Yorkers should reduce the amount of trash they send to other communities.

DSNY’s export operations are projected to cost more than $367 million in Fiscal Year ’16 and will likely be higher once all marine transfer stations are open.

Seneca Meadows already takes large amounts of Brooklyn’s waste by truck, but continuing this plan long-term presents multiple challenges.

Railroad tracks don’t go directly to the Seneca Meadows landfill and a state judge ruled against the company’s attempt to rezone land for a necessary rail spur last year. According to the state’s Department of Environmental Conservation, the landfill’s permit also expires in 2017 and it only has 7.5 years of capacity remaining if intake levels remain the same.

IESI did not respond to multiple requests for comment.

Despite attention upstate in the Finger Lakes region, local discussion of the plan has been limited. The attorney for Concerned Citizens of Seneca County, Douglas H. Zamelis, was one of only three people to testify at a contract hearing last month.

“Any expansion of this dump is going to be met with stiff local opposition,” he says. “The people in Seneca County generally have had it up to here with the dump and they’re not interested in getting New York City’s trash for 20 years.”

The proposed 20-year contract could extend landfill use past the city’s target date of sending “zero waste” to landfills by 2030 until at least 2037. DSNY can end the deal early, with penalty levels for termination decreasing over time, or take the option of two five-year extensions.

DSNY’s director of public affairs, Kathy Dawkins, says long-term stability is the city’s primary goal.

Where NYC’s Garbage Went

“Zero waste to landfills by 2030 is an ambitious goal that we believe can be achieved through sound planning and citizen support and cooperation,” she says. “Nevertheless, the city still needs to be able to plan for what we produce today and have the necessary capacity for the garbage that we generate.”

LIFE NEAR A LANDFILL: Click here to read more about Seneca Meadows

LIFE NEAR A LANDFILL: Click here to read more about Seneca Meadows

DSNY hopes to have the contract registered by the city comptroller’s office within a few months.

Though this deal would decrease New York’s dependence on out-of-state landfills, it merely shifts the burden within state lines. Until residents become more aware of what it costs to make their 3 million tons of waste go away each year they’ll have little incentive to reduce it.

“Having people pay directly for their trash is so powerful, because today it is so easy to throw your garbage into the trash chute in your apartment building or bring it out to the curb,” says Gamerman. “Sanitation comes to collect it and then it disappears and you don’t have to think about it again.”