June 2009

Green in Demand

A growing number of cities and towns are seeking to boost their green status by diverting waste from landfills and turning it into green products. This growing market has helped offset some of the decline from the slumping housing industry.

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Photo: CWQ Mill

By Dan Rafter

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Unfortunately, that left only a small window of opportunity for people to drop off their recyclable materials. Faced with such a limited amount of time to recycle, residents instead chose to pack most recyclable materials with their regular trash, which, of course, ended up at the local landfill.

Starting in 2007, the county made a significant change. It began opening 24-hour-a-day drop-off centers that were monitored by onsite video cameras. The new sites are larger and house more drop-off containers, Hale says. By the end of 2009, the county will be operating 20 of these full-time centers.

Thanks to this, the amount of materials the county will divert from its landfill will increase seven times from the amount it is diverting now, Hale says.

“The message is definitely getting out,” Hale says. “If you are going to live in the 21st century, you have to face the trash issue by not creating so much of it. You have to deal with it properly. You have to recycle more, and you have to stop consuming so many things that can’t be recycled.”

The county also has plans to add organic composting to its diversion efforts in the next three to five years, Hale says. This way, Logan County will be able to divert foodwaste from the wastestream, he says, something that isn’t done today.

“We don’t have organic composting in this county right now,” Hale says. “The foodwaste goes down the sewer if people have garbage disposals in their homes, or it goes to the landfill.”

The county does not usually do much with yardwaste, Hale says. But in January of 2005, Logan County did boost its mulching efforts significantly, he adds.

That’s when a devastating ice storm swept through the county, snapping trees and dragging down hundreds of electrical lines with them. Thousands of county residents were without power as cleanup crews hustled to clear away the tree debris and repair downed power lines.

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The county collected 14,000 tons of yardwaste and tree debris that year. It mulched all of it, converting it into fertilizer and selling it commercially. The county sent none of this debris to the landfill, Hale says.

“I hate ice storms,” he says. “I lived this one every day for six months. I remember seeing those guys cutting away trees every day. It took us a year-and-a-half to clean the debris from that storm.”

Author's Bio: Dan Rafter is a technical writer based in Chesterton, IN.

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