Steve
Lawson, head of Charlottesville's public service, says since
recyclables started going to Chester, the amount of recycling has
increased 26 percent.
PHOTO BY WILL WALKERThe
desire to recycle is powerful in many of us-- especially when it's
easy. That's why Charlottesville's quiet switch to single-stream
recycling-- obviating the tedious separation of glass and paper-- is
such a godsend to those who want to save the earth without getting
their hands too dirty.
Last year, the city's recycling hauler, Allied Waste, saw an opportunity to expand its services and pick up plastics and cardboard without having to separate the materials on the street.
"We talked to the city and said we'd put it all
together," says Allied's Tad Phillips. The change was possible thanks
to Tidewater Fiber in Chester, a recycling sorter with facilities in
Richmond, Chesapeake, and North Carolina. "We were able to piggy back
on them," Phillips says.
Starting in February 2007, citizens could toss
recyclables with abandon; by October, mixed paper was added to the
commingled pool. Despite little notice to the public beyond City Notes,
the newsletter enclosed with utility bills, the amount of recycling
collected between October and March increased by 301.26 tons over the
previous year, a 26 percent increase, according to Steve Lawson, the
city's public services manager. During that same period, trash tonnage
decreased 226.08 tons, saving Charlottesville over $14,000 in tipping
fees.
Plastics and glass are losers in the recycling world
because they cost more to recycle than toss. But since the advent of
material recovery facilities (MRFs, pronounced "murfs") such as
Tidewater Fiber-- a.k.a. TFC Recycling-- in Chester, and a market for
paper and cardboard, centers are more willing to accept the
less-desirable materials.
"The factor [MRFs] play is, if not for single stream, we
wouldn't have as long a list of things we pick up," says Lawson. And he
notes another advantage to mixing everything together: "The more paper
you have, the less breakage."
Charlottesville paid Allied Waste $345,400 to pick up
recycled materials in fiscal year 2007-08. Allied Waste gets some
additional income from the sale of recyclables such as aluminum and
cardboard to Tidewater Fiber, but it's not a windfall.
Lawson doesn't think the city will see any reduction in
fees for the upcoming year and says collecting is Allied's main
interest. "I don't think the sale of recyclables is where they're
making money," he says.
Allied Waste's Tad Phillips concurs. "It costs more to
process single-stream stuff," he says. While Allied saves labor costs
by not having to separate materials at the curb, the cost shifts to
processor Tidewater Fiber, which charges Allied to sort the materials
and then gives back a rebate, based on a complex formula of what
actually is in the load.
For instance, if the load is heavy on bottles, Allied is
paid less. ("The fine folks in Charlottesville must have a lot of
wine," observes Phillips.)
And there's the cost to truck the recycling to Chester in vehicles using 50 to 60 gallons of diesel (currently at $4.80 a gallon) per day.
The real savings, says Phillips, is not having to throw
the material into a landfill-- at $62 a ton. As for the myth that
recycling should pay for itself, "There's always going to be a cost,
unless you put gold nuggets into it," he says.
Charlottesville recycled 2,500 tons last year, and in
next year's contract the city can decide to retain ownership of the
recyclables and market them. "We'll be looking at a lot of things,"
Lawson says.
Waste Management was paid $559,356 to pick up trash last
year, and that doesn't count the tipping fees, which the city paid. Its
contract renewed July 1 with a four percent increase. Waste Management
won't lose money if less trash goes to the landfill. "They wouldn't
complain, because their price is fixed," says Lawson. "They'd love to
pick up less."
In theory, citizens and businesses should be seeing a
drop in their garbage sticker fees-- currently $2.10 per 32-gallon or
$1.05 per 13-gallon trash can.
That's certainly been the case at the Downtown Mall office of the Hook,
which-- with office paper as its main refuse-- has been able to reduce
the number of trash stickers purchased by more than half since becoming
aware of the change in April.
That hasn't been the case for nearby Rapture restaurant.
"There's been some confusion," says Rapture owner Mike
Rodi. "We put out cardboard, and it gets left. I don't know if it's
because we're on a commercial route and get trash pickup every day. I
don't know if we have a special day. I got so much stuff from the city, maybe I overlooked it. But I've heard other merchants say the same thing."
So, in the name of keeping the streetscape clean, Rapture
has reluctantly gone back to puttingtrash stickers on cardboard. "We
don't want to have to bring that stuff back in," Rodi says.
"Oh, we need to talk to him," Lawson replies. "One thing
that's confusing: it's two different vendors." Allied picks up
recycling six days a week downtown, Lawson says, and Waste Management
collects trash seven days a week. So if the red recycling bin is still
sitting on the street after the garbage bags are gone, he advises
giving Allied a little more time.
Other reasons cardboard might not be picked up: if it's
contaminated with food or by a wax coating, as is often the case in the
food industry.
Commingled recycling has rendered passé the "igloos"
found at 56 multifamily dwellings all over town. "Allied is in the
process of replacing them with two-cubic-yard steel containers at no
extra charge," says Lawson, so drivers won't have to get out and
manually empty each igloo.
In sharp contrast to the city's curbside recycling,
Albemarle County's has lurched back to pre-1993, the year it started
its "blue bag" program that allowed county folk to toss their bottles,
cans, and plastics into one clear bag.
Albemarle ditched the program in 2003 because of its
prohibitive cost, which skyrocketed from $50 a ton to have private
trash haulers pick it up (something they were forced to do for free for
the pleasure of doing business in Albemarle) and take the commingled
materials to Coiner's Scrap Metal for sorting.
As the market for glass and plastics nose-dived around
the turn of the century, the cost jumped to $150 a ton-- and county
conservationists discovered that their carefully sorted and washed
chardonnay bottles were being dumped in a landfill.
"Our real cost to recycle was $300 a ton," says Mark
Graham, Albemarle's director of community development. "The cost was
mind-boggling for very little recycling, especially after finding out
half the material-- glass-- was being thrown into the landfill."
The
Board of Supervisors continues to voice support for recycling-- but
doesn't make any promises to expand curbside recycling beyond
newspapers, which trash haulers are still required to pick up, although
many citizens-- and haulers-- are unaware that's the case.
Faced with the county's paltry $33,000 budget for a
variety of recycling projects (compared to Charlottesville's $345K
commitment to curbside recycling), some Albemarleans are taking
curbside recycling into their own hands.
Albemarle County Schools just announced its own
commingled recycling plan in which Allied will empty dumpsters at
schools and haul the contents to Chester for sorting. The school system
has had a contract with Allied for years to pick up paper and cardboard.
"Allied allowed us to expand that," at no additional
cost, says Lindsay Check, environmental compliance manager for
Albemarle schools.
Another option for county residents is My Recycling Club.
Sue Battani, owner of Cville Concierge, got the request for recycling
services from some Ivy clients who said people in their neighborhood
were interested in the service. If a minimum of six neighbors sign on
and sort their recycling, Battani provides the bins, empties them every
two weeks, and takes the material to McIntire Recycling for $20 a month
per household. So far, about 50 households have signed on.
"Our main motivation is to encourage people not to give up on recycling," Battani says.
Albemarle's
capital improvement budget allots $1.38 million for building recycling
centers through fiscal year 2012-- "exact location to be determined,"
according to county spokeswoman Lee Catlin. The hold-up is being blamed
on concerns with the other Rivanna Authority-- the Water & Sewer
Authority-- dealing with citizens unhappy with a 50-year water project.
"The county is waiting for Rivanna Solid Waste
Authority's strategic plan," Graham says. "It was supposed to be here,
but it's been delayed. All this stuff with the water supply plan has
caused [Rivanna director] Tom Frederick to divert all his attention to
that."
Graham adds, "There's no sense in investing a lot of
money in infrastructure if the strategic plan is going to take us in a
different direction."
"We're anxiously awaiting the consultants'
recommendation, and know it will include some sort of curbside
recycling," says Albemarle Board of Supervisors Chairman Ken Boyd. "But
whether it's feasible, we don't know."
Frederick foresees a plan ready for presentation to the
Rivanna board by August or September. "The question about county
curbside recycling will ultimately be up to the county," he says. "We
think there's a niche for us where we can find economies of scale for
both Charlottesville and Albemarle."
Consultants have suggested a local sorting center, which
"might be a good role for us," Frederick says. But higher volumes are
required to make it feasible, and that means both Albemarle and the
University of Virginia would need to sign on.
And how significant is curbside pickup to recycling in
general? "One philosophy is to make it as convenient as possible," says
Frederick, noting Charlottesville's comparatively large and growing
program.
He also points out the number of citizens who are
committed to bringing their sorted recyclables to McIntire Recycling
Center, which is run by Rivanna.
In the past year, McIntire has added cell phones, compact
fluorescent lamps, and batteries to the ever-expanding list of
materials it accepts.
Mercury-laden CFLs are recycled into new bulbs with
partner AERL in Richmond, McIntire recycling guru Bruce Edmonds says.
"They have a machine that recycles them completely," he adds. "Even the
powder is recycled."
Edmonds also touts the battery program-- everything
except car batteries-- added last month through Metal Conversion
Technology from Georgia. "They're turning the batteries into a steel
alloy," he says. "We've already recycled 500 pounds in the past two
weeks."
McIntire has added auxiliary newspaper recycling sites at Sam's Club on U.S. 29 north, and Rose's on Pantops.
"My goal is to recycle every newspaper and catalog in the
jurisdiction," vows Edmonds, who reminds that McIntire has the only
phone book recycling around, which is a good thing, he says, because
"We have four different phone book companies around here."
Both Edmonds and Frederick note that the community has
hit a 40 percent recycle rate for the first time, up two percent from
2006 and topping the regional rate of 36 percent. That number is
plumped by fall leaf collection and sewage sludge from Moore's Creek
that's trucked to Richmond to be composted.
Rivanna Solid Waste Authority picked up an honorable
mention from the Virginia Recycling Association, "on 100 percent
recycled glass," says Edmonds. He also credits Frederick with
implementing the newest recycling programs. "He's been the best friend
recycling ever had at Rivanna," Edmonds says.
"You know what the most popular program over the last 14
years is?" Edmonds asks a caller. "The book bin. You wouldn't believe
how much business that does." And while musty or mundane volumes
(encyclopedias, Readers Digest condensed collections) are taken over to
the phone book bin, others are read, a nod to the "reuse" part of the
"reduce-reuse-recycle" mantra.
Downtown, some businesses are putting the emphasis on
reuse. At high-end paper goods store Caspari, "We recycle our
cardboard," says manager Linda Long. "We have a shredder, and we use it
as a packing material."
Joan Fenton, proprietor of J. Fenton Quilts, says her
store receives packages, but does little shipping. "We save styrofoam
and give it away to people who ship," she says.
Eye Response Technologies has tried a different tactic to
get rid of the huge amount of cardboard it gets each week. "We have so
many boxes, we put them on Craigslist," says president/CEO Chris
Lankford. "Within a few hours, they're gone. We don't even take them
downstairs [to the street] anymore."

For paper-centric businesses like the Hook,
being able to throw all recycling into one bin has saved a ton in trash
stickers. But other businesses downtown seem unaware of the program.
PHOTO BY WILL WALKER

Sue
Battani saw a niche in curbside-bereft Albemarle-- and had clients
willing to pay $20 a month to have her company, My Recycling Club, pick
up sorted glass, cans, and so on, to take to McIntire Recycling..
PHOTO BY WILL WALKER



This is where your single-stream stuff goes: to the hard-working, fast-sorting folks at Tidewater Fiber in Chester.
PHOTO BY JEANNE SILER
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