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Placing profitability above a clean environment and public health will be the ruin of this one and only earth. -----Original Message----- From: Eric Lombardi [mailto:eric@no.address] Sent: Thursday, April 01, 2004 12:43 PM To: greenyes@no.address Subject: [greenyes] Lack of oxygen to the brain and recycling in Denver The most recent BIOCYCLE survey showed Colorado at a 3% recycling rate. and here's an example of the mentality that has gotten us there. The RMN is the state's biggest paper. Eric at Eco-Cycle Rocky Mountain News URL: <http://www.rockymountainnews.com/drmn/opinion/article/0,1299,DRMN_38_26 51109,00.html> http://www.rockymountainnews.com/drmn/opinion/article/0,1299,DRMN_38_265 1109,00.html Recycling plan still wastes cash February 15, 2004 We've long thought that municipally sponsored recycling is not economically sound, especially in a place like Colorado which has plenty of landfill space. People who want to recycle for personal reasons should expect to pay whatever extra it costs their city. That's what happens in jurisdictions that don't have city-provided trash service. But if cities are determined to recycle on the taxpayer dime they should craft a program that wastes as little money as possible. Denver's plan to shift to a new one-bin, mix-everything-together system by 2005 sounds promising in at least that respect. <<...OLE_Obj...>> There's not much argument about the economic inefficiencies of recycling. In its best year, 2000, Denver's program eked out only a $64,000 profit on $1.2 million in revenues. The following year, revenues fell by nearly half and the city hemorrhaged $545,000 on the program. The reason, in part, was that prices for recycled materials were highly volatile and kept low by legislative mandates in other states that ensure supply exceeds the demand. But another factor, according to Gary Price, director of the solid waste division of Denver's Public Works Department, was the end of the "newspaper war." As circulation fell after the two Denver newspapers entered a joint operating agreement and ended their penny-a-day subscription offers, so did the amount of newsprint recycled. In any case, the volume of recycled materials is only a fraction of the trash Denver collects - some 16,000 to 18,000 tons annually compared with 260,000 tons of refuse that isn't recycled. And that's only for single-family residences and small apartment buildings. Apartment buildings with eight or more units, as well as commercial and industrial operations, make their own agreements with waste-management firms. The city currently has 14 trucks collecting recyclables, Price said, and they pick up every two weeks at the roughly 78,000 households that have signed up for the program. City workers hoist the contents of the two bins, one for newsprint and one for cans and bottles. Under the new plan, the city will have 10 compacting trucks with automatic hoists, reducing not only work time but workers' injuries. So far, so good. But why shouldn't the people who want to recycle pay when they sign up? It's not a lot of money, after all; perhaps $7 per family in a year when recycling revenues are weak. But that's exactly the difficulty. The city could probably collect as much as $7 a year per family as a surcharge on its service bill for trash pickup - if only there were such a bill. Currently, there is no fee for trash pickup and Mayor John Hickenlooper has said, no doubt correctly, that he doesn't believe residents would support one. Collecting for recycling only - assuming recyling fans would continue to do it if they had to pay even a notional fee - would probably cost more to administer than it would be worth. The sensible thing would be for the city to stop recycling until the market for it improves or the cost of landfilling increases, if either of those things ever does occur. But we don't suppose devout recyclers will allow Denver to be sensible. Eric Lombardi Executive Director Eco-Cycle, Inc Boulder, CO 303-444-6634 www.ecocycle.org "Recycling may not save the world, but the recycling spirit might." |
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