s " f 20 Herald & Lantern 1 August '84
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News Notes from Lower Township E. ). Duffy 465-5055
LOWER S MUNICIPAL incinerator Authority tapped Gary Boyer, an engineer with VanNoteHarvey Associates of Court House, Thursday to represent it during a meeting with the county Municipal Utilities Authority yesterday afternoon, according to Sue Sanborn, township incinerator consultant. Boyer will be paid $50 an hour, she said, "to field questions frorft their (the MUA's) engineers. " Sanborn co-authored a report last fall that recommended Lower avoid the then projected increases in trash disposal costs by recycling salable refuse and burning the rest at a township-operated incinerator. That incinerator, Sanborn reasoned in the study, could provide steam to power adjacent buildings — preferably businesstenants in a township industrial park at HarbisonWalker's closed magnesite plant. Sunset Beach. The township would have to acquire the plant property, and permits to operate the facility in competition or cooperation with the county MUA. Theodore F. O'Neill, MUA solid waste manager, has argued that the MUA holds a franchise on county solid waste disposal. The MUA, he noted, isn't likely to amend its ovrall plans to allow Lower incinerator operations that would compete with the MUA by -f diverting trash and $26.25 a ton dumping fees from it. Samuel Stubbs, unsuc- . cessful mayoralty can- 1 didate; Debi de la Cretaz, his council running mate in May, and Stubbs' son, Michael, also criticized the incinerator plan as an immature scheme lacking engineering expertise. Its prime proponent was the senior Stubbs' political opponent, Mayor Robert Fothergill The incinerator authority considered naming as its engineering consultant, Chacles Harris, who serves in a similar capacity for Delaware County, Pa He wanted $50 an hour plus a retainer. Boyer was named instead. Sanborn said, at least in part because Harris had been recommended for the job by a company whose incineration units the incinerator authority has been considering buying. SANBORN'S COLLEAGUE. Marc F. Lange, reports that Lower recyclers diverted 213.8 tons of trash from dunl^)sites and into municipal coffers between November and July. The township made
$7,661.70 on 159.7 tons of paper ($4,639.44), 52.3 tons of glass i $1,821. 75) and 1.8 t o n j of aluminum t,:J00.52> . according to incinerator consultant, estimates that I receive $1,069 in state ycling rebates for a total gross income of $8,730.70. \ But that's not the \total picture, Lange noted. By recycling some of the trash, the township saved $2,088.40 in dumping fees at Mar-Tee landfill in Middle Township and $1,301.60 (since May 15) at the new county landfill in Woodbine for a total dumping fee saving of $3,390 between November and mid-May. Adding the recycling income to the dumping fee avoidance gave the township a gross saving during the eight-month period of $12,120.70, according to La,nge's figures.
He predicted even bigger savings in the months to come. Since November, Lange explained, only one converted school bus has been collecting recyclable ^ material ; a second bus was "added last month, allowing collections of paper, glass and aluminum throughout the municipality. With the second vehicle, Lange said, the township expects to increase the number of residents who participate in the recycling effort. Only 28.8 percent has been recycling paper with 5.3 percent recycling glass and 4.5 percent aluminum. If the township acquires a baler, as expected, it could divert 270 tons of cardboard a year from the dump and earn $8,100 at $30 a ton. If 40 percent of Lower's residents recycles paper. (Page 21 Please)
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