A relatively routine presentation on the county’s Solid Waste division Tuesday got interesting during the recycling portion when the conversation shifted from trying to woo Ocean City back into the fold but ended up with the commissioners contemplating seeking their own exemption from state mandates.
No direct action was taken by the county to formally explore the idea, just a vague directive offered by Commissioner Vice President Merrill Lockfaw, adopted unanimously, to direct staff to “continue to explore options,” to shore up solid waste operations.
A number of factors contributed to the turn in discussion, including Director of Public Works John Tustin’s revelation that recycling operations cost the county an average of $690,000 annually.
Also, the county gets a credit for chicken manure in mandated state goals, which could be affected by phosphorus management tool regulations put forth by Gov. Larry Hogan based on legislation passed by the O’Malley administration.
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then you are doing it wrong because I know communities that MAKE MONEY and run big recycling centers.
ReplyDeleteJust curious which communities are making money. Everything I've been reading for the last coupla years indicates losses.
ReplyDeleteSalaries of people who run it to large.
ReplyDeleteUse prisoners to sort through it and mandate the big businesses to recycle and you will have you profit. There is a way and I heard the opposite that well run facilities make money off of it.
ReplyDelete