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NYC Must Act to Meet its Trash Challenge

6 Comments

  • jottman
    Posted June 22, 2015 at 9:35 am

    One way to help reduce waste and get more traction for recycling in NYC is to help educated people on the REAL meaning of the Chasing Arrows recycling logo. HInt: it’s not reduce, reuse recycle. Then, we’d have many chances per day to reinforce this important message. Learn more HERE: ow.ly/OcjY8 Pass it on! #DontTrashNYC

  • DLH
    Posted June 22, 2015 at 5:37 pm

    Reducing excessively overlapping private garbage truck routes – and cleaning up old & polluting private trucks – would do a great deal to improve the health, safety & quality of life in truly overburdened parts of NYC. Completing the one lonely, remaining element of the 2006 SWMP in Manhattan (the East 91st Street MTS) will do virtually nothing to reduce these burdens. This one Manhattan MTS is just a convenient if hollow symbol – but it’s much easier to achieve than the real solutions needed.
    Descriptions of the area surrounding the East 91st Street MTS have been inaccurate to the point of absurdity. This MTS will be in FEMA flood zone A, its first floor will be almost 6 feet below recommended flood elevation, and it will lie less than 400 feet from NYCHA residences that flooded badly during Sandy- causing long term dislocation of residents. The area around this MTS is not the exclusive UES – but it is among – if not the – most densely residential neighborhoods in all of NYC.
    Long before the East 91st Street MTS was scheduled for completion, a much more important SWMP facility was scheduled for full operation – an MTS at West 59th Street – intended to handle construction & demolition (C&D) waste. C&D waste accounts for the majority of transfer stations & many of the trucks that create problems in overburdened neighborhoods of the City. To operate effectively, however, upgrades to the West 59th Street MTS – had to be preceded by upgrades to another SWMP MTS – a recycling facility at Gansevoort on the Westside. But work on these two facilities appears to be on permanently hold – due to powerful real estate development & political interests.
    The three facilities – E. 91, W. 59 & Gansevoort – were essential elements of the now outdated 2006 SWMP. As far as I can see, the two more critical, Westside elements of the SWMP in Manhattan have fallen away – or been radically delayed & reduced in scope. Only the much less effective & more harmful East 91st Street MTS remains. The vast majority of the waste East 91st is built & permitted to process has never gone through & burdened any other borough of NYC – it goes directly to NJ. This status quo solution is far from ideal – only real waste reduction, reuse, composting & recycling can create a real solution. But the flood-prone East 91st Street MTS in an economically diverse & densely residential neighborhood is not the glorious solution described in the article above. It’s just more of the same old divisive politics – shifting burdens & making excuses.

    • native new yorker
      Posted June 23, 2015 at 7:31 am

      I live on Staten Island. We lived with the Fresh Kills landfill until it was shut down by New York state in 2001. The odors reached all the way to the east shore of SI, 5 miles from the dump. The DSNY ‘promised’ Staten Islanders that the stench could be lessened in some way, but it never was, because the DSNY had no idea what they were doing out there. My advice to east siders living near the proposed E 91 Street MTS is not to trust the DSNY and it’s unenforceable promises at all.

      Fresh Kills is slowly being transformed into a park. Plans exist to build roads (if approved by the NYSDOT) through it from Richmond Avenue at Yukon Avenue connecting to NY440.

      https://www.nycgovparks.org/park-features/freshkills-park/design-and-construction

      https://www.silive.com/westshore/index.ssf/2015/06/armed_with_new_designs_borough.html

  • DTS
    Posted June 24, 2015 at 10:57 am

    Mr. Kearney is naive if he believes that the MTS tipping fee set by the City Officials will be “competitive”. In reality, the City itself admits that the cost of operation at the MTS exceeds $220 per ton. Current tipping fees for Private transfer stations average $75 per ton. So to be competitive, they would in essence have to subsidize disposal for private carters. Instead, it will be the carters who will be required to use these expensive disposal sites to subsidize the City. $250/ton tipping fees? Why not. It is also naive to think that once franchises are formed that this won’t be the beginning of yet another unseen revenue stream back to the City in the form of a mark up on the cost of collection. Flow control municipalities have used this now for years and it will become a burden on the small business owners over time. Is there a need to rework the system, I think there is. But before you continue your crusade, you need to look at what the unintended consequences are of your actions. What about working with the industry you so want to destroy. Let’s not forget that the current “Sprawling, unwieldy” industry was created by City regulations in the first place. Unintended consequences?

  • Back in black
    Posted June 25, 2015 at 4:09 pm

    Back before 1994 when the city was mob controlled there were 300 Carter’s with condense routes now there are 90 Carter’s and dwindling so where’s the extra trucks ? Also by 2020 all garbage trucks must meet all new environmental regulations which would make the garbage truck pollution issue mute..Carter’s are buying brand new trucks by the hundreds to be ready for this date..now with the pollution issue resolved and trucks not contributing to pollution as it used to than we must look at the real issue…the unions and labor..the politicians do their bidding

  • drc
    Posted July 21, 2015 at 7:21 pm

    Obviously, Mr Kearney does not live in Yorkville if he did he would not be a proponent of putting a toxic MTS next to 22,000 residents mostly children and seniors. Let’s put it in his neighborhood in NJ!

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