Leaf
Main Menu
Home
BLOG
The News
Streaming News
Native View TV
YouTube Videos
Tribal Sites VT
Tribal News VT
VCNAA Commission
VCNAA Members
Lake Champlain
Heritage
Arts / Crafts
Environment
VT GOV Sites
Contact Us
Links
Search
Translate the Entire Web Site


Abenaki Language
Online Dictionary of The Western Abenaki Language and Radio.
Alliance for Abenaki Basketmakers
The Story and Membership Application Form
'Moccasin Tracks' Community Radio
Moccasin Tracks  Deborah Reger Alt Saturdays 7:30pm - 10pm
Radio Free Vermont!
Youth in Transition
Anywhere In Vermont 211 can Help
 Vermont 211 , United Ways of Vermont
If you are in a Crisis
    A 24-hour, toll-free suicide prevention service
Green Mountain Care
Administrator

Design
Lavinya
Leaf Home arrow Environment arrow Intervale_News arrow Compost Enforcements Threaten Vermont
Compost Enforcements Threaten Vermont
Written by Administrator   
Thursday, 31 July 2008

Compost Enforcements Threaten Vermont’s Solid-Waste Dreams

Local Matters

By Mike Ives  - 07.30.08

Last summer, 13 garbage experts covered a 20-by-10-foot wall with sticky notes. As members of a state-sponsored subcommittee studying “organics,” they were preparing to tell Vermont’s Agency of Natural Resources what should be done with the state’s compostable waste. They had a lot of material to wade through.

The subcommittee’s recommendations were rolled into a 92-page ANR study, “Life Beyond Garbage,” that will inform the next phase of Vermont’s solid-waste planning process. The study reports that the amount of waste generated by Vermont businesses, residences and institutions increased by 73 percent from 1987 to 2006, and that the average Vermonter generates nearly twice as much waste as he or she did 20 years ago. According to the study, every third pound of Vermont’s “municipal solid waste stream” is compostable.

Among other measures, the study, which was released in early July, calls for an expanded composting infrastructure and a more comprehensive “perishable food network” — both of which seem incompatible with the state’s threat to close Vermont’s two largest compost operators.

Indeed, subcommittee members and other “stakeholders” in the garbage study say closing the Intervale Center and the Vermont Compost Company — which compost more than 20,000 tons of organic waste per year — would make it hard for the state to achieve the composting goals laid out in “Life Beyond Garbage.”

In Burlington, the Intervale Center is negotiating behind closed doors the fate of its 179-acre site with state officials. Despite a moratorium that exempts compost facilities from regulatory enforcement for two years, ANR officials reportedly want the center to pay more than $375,000 just to stay in business.

In Montpelier, the Vermont Compost Company was recently socked with an “administrative order” from the state’s Natural Resources Board. The order requires company president Karl Hammer to cease composting on his 45-acre site and pay $18,000 in fines. The Northeast Organic Farming Association of Vermont has declared the NRB’s actions “gratuitous and aggressive.” Hammer told Seven Days that threatening to shut down his operation “isn’t the best way to achieve life beyond garbage.”

Donna Barlow Casey, who chaired the organics subcommittee and is the executive director of the Central Vermont Solid Waste Management District, said closing the state’s two largest compost operations would be “horrific.” If either the Intervale or Vermont Compost were to close, she said, composters statewide would be discouraged from doing business for fear of prosecution.

Tom Gilbert, a member of the organics subcommittee and vice president Composting Association of Vermont, agreed. “In the immediate future, the impact of what’s happening at both facilities makes everyone more cautious,” he said. “People become hesitant to invest when the future looks uncertain.”

Gilbert is programs director at the Highfields Institute, a Hardwick nonprofit that promotes on-farm composting and soil quality. He said losing either of the state’s largest compost facilities would be a “setback” to the goals of the new ANR garbage study. “Life Beyond Garbage,” after all, predicts that Vermont could divert 100 percent of its organic material from landfills by 2023.

“Life Beyond Garbage” addresses larger issues related to waste prevention. Reducing landfill waste cuts back on greenhouse gas emissions, the study noted, and a more comprehensive waste-recovery industry could produce 10 times as many jobs as currently exist in Vermont’s waste-disposal industry.

The study has been forwarded to an ANR-appointed Solid Waste Working Group that includes representatives of the legislature, the Vermont League of Cities and Towns, as well as the private and nonprofit sectors. The 16-member working group’s first meeting was originally scheduled for February 15, but was delayed four months while the compost controversy festered. The group met for the first time on June 10.

The group is expected to present a report to the state legislature in January that lawmakers will use to draft Vermont’s next 5-year solid waste management plan. The current one expires in 2011.

http://www.7dvt.com/2008compost-enforcements-threaten-vermont-s-solid-waste-dreams

 

 

 
< Prev   Next >
Make this a favorite RSS
Super Bookmark It !
Share this Page
 
Search this Site
Who's Online
We have 21 guests online
 How do I get my company on this website
Transformative Counseling Services, LLC
W'Abenaki Stylez
W'Abenaki Stylez
Basketmakers Alliance
The Story and Membership Application Form
Juice Plus+®
Western Abenaki Baskets
Western Abenaki Baskets .com
ADMINISTRATIVE SERVICES
 MEDICAL AND MENTAL HEALTH TRANSCRIPTION SERVICES
LAUGHING COUPLE
Native American Storytelling
Morningstar Studio
Micnaki Trading Post
Rhonda Besaw.com
Traditional and contemporary beadwork
VT Speciality Foods
 VT Speciality Foods
The Bad Black Dog
The Bad Black Dog Online Store
Website Managed by "The Doctor"   Beautiful template designed by Lavinya  Template Valid w3c XHTML 1.0