Archive for June, 2008

Maryland-Delaware Solid Waste Association Opposes House Bill 159 as Bad Policy for Delaware

The Delaware House of Representatives recently passed legislation that would establish a framework for a statewide residential curbside recycling system. The proposed program would be funded by the Delaware Recycling Fund through a new $3 per ton tax on trash. The bill now is pending in the Delaware Senate. The Maryland-Delaware Solid Waste Association (MDSWA) opposes the tax in this legislation.


These new taxes would be assessed unequally. Local governments that already offer a program to all residents would be exempt from paying the tax. But many of Delaware residents – who recycle on their own, use the Delaware Solid Waste Authority or pay a private hauler for recycling – would not be exempt and would be forced to pay. The exemption would not be offered to local businesses that have recycling programs. The tax would apply to all trash, including construction and demolition waste, commercial waste, and municipal solid waste. There would be no exceptions for businesses or schools already recycling or who are planning a recycling program.


Creating further inequities, local governments that are exempt from paying the tax could receive state funding through the program, creating situations where non-exempt communities will subsidize exempt communities.


“The Maryland-Delaware Solid Waste Association opposes the new $3 per ton trash tax because our members believe that it is not good public policy,” said MDSWA’s Director Alice Jacobsohn. “Delaware residents should not be fooled by the term ‘assessment’ or ‘fee’ in the bill. The supporters of the legislation should be upfront with their constituents. They are proposing a new tax!”


Jacobsohn added, “Americans already are reeling from inflation at the gas station and supermarket. Delaware residents living on fixed incomes – such as senior citizens or those living on social security – are especially vulnerable. Why add to their cost of living with an unnecessary new tax?”


Many people in Delaware already have recognized the need to recycle without state legislation. In fact, more than 60,000 Delaware households already are recycling. And the number of households engaging in recycling efforts is increasing every day.


Jacobsohn concluded, “Most MDSWA members already are engaged in recycling. Many of them have been for years. They are looking to increase this area of their businesses, making recycling available to their customers. New taxes only serve to hinder this on-going progress.”

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MDSWA is a trade association that serves the interests of solid wastes and recyclables collection and management companies of all sizes in Delaware. Members also include engineering, financial, and legal firms as well as manufacturers and distributors of equipment and products used for the management of wastes and recyclables. We are a chapter of the National Solid Wastes Management Association with members in all fifty states.

WASTEC Issues Bulletin on Materials Cost Increases

As manufacturers, the industry is facing some of the toughest issues with raw materials costs that is has ever faced. The attached Issue Bulletin is an update of the steel pricing Bulletin issued during the last period of escalating steel cost in 2004. This time it’s not just steel… it’s steel, resin, lubricants, coatings, copper wire and other copper-containing items, such as motors.


The linked Issue Bulletin explains what is happening, the effects on manufacturers and how this affects customers of waste equipment manufacturers.

NSWMA and SWANA Comment on EPA Greenhouse Gas Reporting

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE


Robert Wolfe, SWANA, Manager of Marketing; 1-800-GO-SWANA (467-9262); rwolfe@swana.org


Thomas Metzger; NSWMA, Director of Communications & Public Affairs; 202-506-0511; tmetzger@envasns.org


Silver Spring, MD, (June 2, 2008) - In a joint letter to the U.S. EPA, the National Solid Wastes Management Association (NSWMA) and the Solid Waste Association of North America (SWANA) commented on the agency’s draft mandatory greenhouse gas (GHG) reporting and its potential impact on municipal solid waste (MSW) landfills. As the EPA proceeds with requirements identifying reporting sectors in this rulemaking process, NSWMA and SWANA requested the following be considered:


· The solid waste sector has substantially reduced GHG emissions.


· A protocol for estimating fugitive landfill emissions should be established.


· Carbon sequestration should be accounted for in estimating GHG emissions of individual landfills.


· Strong enforcement authorities make third-party verification unnecessary.


· Biogenic GHG emissions should not be a mandatory reporting element of a federal program.


NSWMA President and CEO Bruce Parker said, “The waste management industry is aggressively responding to the challenges presented by climate change and how the industry’s carbon footprint can be reduced. We are leaders in the innovative production of renewable energy from the disposal of waste, and any reporting system should acknowledge the progress that we’ve made in this area.”


“Environmentally sound solid waste management practices can make an important positive contribution towards reducing greenhouse gas emissions” added SWANA Executive Director and CEO John H. Skinner, “It is important that any reporting system encourage these practices” he added.


The EPA greenhouse gas reporting would mandate reporting of greenhouse gas among all industries, including municipal solid waste, above the EPA determined threshold. The EPA is still in the process of developing the rule’s guidelines.


About NSWMA:


The National Solid Wastes Management Association (NSWMA) – a sub-association of the Environmental Industry Associations (EIA) – represents for-profit companies in North America that provide solid, hazardous and medical waste collection, recycling and disposal services, and companies that provide professional and consulting services to the waste services industry. NSWMA members conduct business in all 50 states. For more information, visit www.nswma.org.


About SWANA:


For 40 years, SWANA, the Solid Waste Association of North America, has been the leading professional association in the solid waste management field. SWANA’s mission is “to advance the practice of environmentally and economically sound management of municipal solid waste.” SWANA serves over 8,000 members and thousands more industry professionals with technical conferences, certifications, publications and a large offering of technical training courses. For more information, visit www.SWANA.org.


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Thom Metzger • Director of Communications and Public Affairs • Environmental Industry Associations

4301 Connecticut Avenue, NW, Suite 300 • Washington, DC 20008 • office: 202.364.3751 • mobile: 202.506.0511

email: tmetzger@envasns.org


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