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The
original document and answers provided below were prepared by Suzanne Tresko, Recycling Coordinator for the Spokane Regional
Solid Waste System. Subsequent remarks and questions, highlighted in blue,
were submitted by local citizens for further clarification. |
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The questions below were selected from list of
about 40 submitted questions.
Questions from C.S.
1. Why are state-of-the-art landfills not the very highest priority for
the regional system?
Washington State establishes waste reduction, reuse, and recycling as the
highest priorities for solid waste management, followed by disposal, including
both combustion and landfilling.
Obviously the
question was intended to prioritize disposal options, which is extremely
important, because the Waste to Energy Facility has reached full capacity, and
we are currently hauling the excess to a private landfill site that is over 200 miles
away.
2. Why has the System not done a Financial Cost Analysis that incorporates
the use of privately owned local landfill sites?
The City of Spokane does not conduct cost analyses or feasibility studies for
privately owned landfill operations.
Nearly every
Financial Model used by the System incorporates the use of the private sector (WTE
operations, Ash disposal,
Private
Long Haul, Clean Green, Rabanco), so why wasn't a private sector Short Haul
solution considered?
Statements from C. S.
2. Methane electrical generation produces 1000 pounds of CO2
per MWH, while Spokane’s Waste to Energy Facility produces 3500 pounds of CO2 per MWH.
Please refer to the EPA’s report on Greenhouse Gas Emissions from Management of
Selected Materials in Municipal Solid Waste at http://epa.gov/climatechange/wycd/waste/SWMGHGreport.html
for accurate information on greenhouse gas emissions by various disposal
methods, including Waste to energy facilities and landfills. Combustion of waste
allows energy recovery to displace fossil fuel-generated electricity from
utilities, reducing greenhouse gas emissions both from the utility sector and
landfill methane emissions. An integrated solid waste management operation such
as the Spokane Regional Solid Waste System provides additional opportunities for
greenhouse gas emission reductions: source reduction and recycling programs
reduce emissions at the manufacturing stage, increasing forest carbon storage,
and avoiding landfill methane emissions; diverting organic materials through the
System’s Clean Green program also reduces methane emissions.
We read the EPA
document listed above. The Spokane area uses very little fossil fuel for
electricity generation (hydroelectric) and a modern landfill collects nearly all
the methane it produces, so her response has nothing to do with the initial
statement. The figures for the amount of CO2
per MWH listed in the original statement were correct.
3. Landfills are half the cost to operate as compared to a WTE plant.
The revenue produced from the electricity generated by Spokane’s WTE facility
pays for the cost of its operation while producing enough electricity to light
20,000 homes.
In 2007, the
System will pay $16 million to operate the WTE facility, $4 million to
haul the ash away, and $10.2 million towards it's debt. Electricity sales produce $12.6 million, for a $17.6
million dollar loss to the System, and the losses are increasing every year.
Landfills are less than half the cost to operate.
4. Modern landfills are much safer for the environment than incineration.
All methods of solid waste management contain risks. Landfills produce risks
through methane and CO2 greenhouse gas and other toxic gas emissions,
groundwater and surface waste contamination, and onsite security concerns.
Landfill risks become legacy issues for future generations. The Spokane Regional
Solid Waste System was specifically formed through interlocal agreements with
Spokane County, the City of Spokane, each of the other cities within the County,
and Fairchild Air Force Base to remediate the contamination and risk issues from
past landfill operations, and manage solid waste within our County in an
environmentally responsible and sustainable manner.
Garbage is
roughly 30% carbon, and incineration removes 98% of that carbon during combustion, and places it into the
atmosphere as CO2
(630 million pounds
of greenhouse gas annually from Spokane's Waste to Energy Facility).
Incineration also emits substantial amounts mercury, lead, sulfur, and nitrous
oxides into the air. Incineration byproducts become a legacy issue to the
entire planet for future generations. On the other hand, modern landfills are a contained system,
and leave a large part of the carbon buried, while converting a portion of the
carbon to methane through anaerobic decomposition, which is easily collected.
Methane produces three times the energy per carbon molecule as compared to
garbage. Modern landfills also collect and dispose of any harmful leachate, and
are a much safer and cleaner option
than incineration.
Questions from M.N.
3. Why is the cost of consultants for the Solid Waste Plan Update
$500,000.00? The average cost for Eastern Washington Counties is believed to be
approximately $50,000.00 and Walla Walla is updating their plan with no
consultant cost.
Each County must prepare a Comprehensive Solid Waste Management Plan. Depending
on the circumstances in each County and the planning needs at the time they are
doing their Plan update, each planning contract will vary. The scope of work
describing the tasks within the Spokane County’s SWMP reflects the planning
needs for Spokane County as articulated by Spokane County, the City of Spokane,
the Spokane Regional Solid Waste Liaison Board, and SWAC. Along with extensive
updates to each section, the scope of work includes a waste flow analysis and a
draft financial model calculating levelized tipping fee and lifecycle costs to
different combinations of disposal methods, recycling programs, and
jurisdictional partnerships. Submitted proposals were evaluated and consultants
interviewed by a committee consisting of representatives from Spokane County,
the City of Spokane, the Regional Cities, and SWAC. The consultant was chosen on
the basis of the qualifications in their written and oral evaluations.
The County and
the SWAC chose a less expensive consultant, so the City re-wrote the bid
proposal to enable CH2M Hill to be part of the process, forcing the cost to go up. This
is one of the main reasons that the updated plan is 3 years behind schedule.
5. Why is there no meaningful measure of system performance available
relative to meeting the goals of the original Solid Waste Plan as well as
ongoing year to year performance?
There are several meaningful measures of system performance. A stable tipping
fee (only a $1.00 increase in 11 years); a high recycling rate (43%); a
proactive SWAC; involved and knowledgeable elected officials and staff, and
award-wining programs (2006 North American Hazardous Materials Management
Association for Program Excellence for Best Moderate Risk Waste program in the
nation, 2003 Rechargeable Battery Recycling Corporation Recycler of the Year,
2006 Washington State Recycling Association Recycler of the Year to Jim Haynes
of Pacific Material Exchange, the contractor that operates the System’s Waste
Reduction Assessment program (WRAP), 2000 Solid Waste Association of North
America for Best Integrated Solid Waste system in the North America).
Useless awards
issued by fellow bureaucrats is not a meaningful measure of System performance.
A recycling rate of 43% is low when compared with our high tipping fees (San
Francisco's tipping fees are similar to ours, but they have a 67% recycling
rate. Washington's statewide recycling rate is 44%, with an average tipping fee
much less than Spokane's)
10. If the City of Spokane did not control the revenue of the SRSWS and was
unable to charge the system for a myriad of services, what would be the monetary
impact to the city’s annual budget?
The City of Spokane owns and operates the Spokane Regional Solid Waste System
for the benefit of all residents within Spokane County. The responsibilities of
the City of Spokane in paying for the costs of administering and operating the
System are defined in the interlocal agreements signed by the County, the City
of Spokane, and each of the other cities within Spokane County, as well as
Fairchild Air Force Base. Certain major decision must be approved by both the
City of Spokane and Spokane County, as defined in their interlocal agreement.
Costs of the System are paid through user fees only and do not impose any taxes
on residents or businesses. Interfund charges only apply to those operations
related to the Spokane Regional Solid Waste System, such as City of Spokane
staffing at the transfer stations. System revenue has no impact on the City of
Spokane’s general revenue.
The
City of Spokane receives nearly a million dollars from the System as "Interfund
Charges", and another 1.6 million dollars for a "Rebate of Closure Component".
11. How can the director of the SRSWS act in the interest of the entire
region if that person is an employee of the city and reports to city officials
facing severe financial shortfalls?
System revenue does not impact the City of Spokane’s general revenue. The City
of Spokane operates the Spokane Regional Solid Waste System for the benefit of
all residents and businesses within the County. The responsibilities of the City
of Spokane in paying for the costs of administering and operating the System are
defined in the interlocal agreements signed by the County, the City of Spokane
and each of the other cities within Spokane County, as well as Fairchild Air
Force Base. Certain major decision must be approved by both the City of Spokane
and Spokane County, as defined in their interlocal agreement. The Spokane
Regional Liaison Board, consisting of 6 elected officials representing the
Spokane County, the City of Spokane, the City of Spokane Valley, and the other
regional cities, act as a forum for the interlocal agreement partners to discuss
System operations and policies. The Liaison Board reviews the System’s budget
annually.
System revenue usually does not go into the City's general fund (see question
above), but the System pays for
City owned property, such as the Waste to Energy Facility, the Transfer
Stations, Northside Landfill, Malloy Prairie, Colbert Compost Facility, and all the equipment to operate them - at a cost
of hundred of millions of dollars.
Any System
Director (a city employee) that placed the priorities of the entire County above, or even
equal to, that of the City, would lose their job immediately.
Questions hand-written on the back of M.N’s letter:
1. Can you provide complete and timely financial accounting information
pertaining to the performance of the Spokane Regional Solid Waste System?
The System annually presents its budget to Spokane County and the Spokane
Regional Liaison Board. Spokane County conducted a detailed review of the
closure component portion of the System’s budget and found no irregularities.
The SWAC chair annually receives a copy of the System’s financial statement. The
City of Spokane is audited annually by the State. Specific financial accounting
information requests can be made through the public disclosure process with the
City of Spokane Clerk’s office at 509-625-6350.
A request was submitted to the City Clerk for the years 2007-2012. Only year 2007 was
provided.
2. Will SRSWS be addressing the high cost of Clean Green Disposal
The System’s Clean Green contract handles over 40,000 tons of yard waste
annually. The contract was competitively bid and awarded to the most highly
qualified respondent. With proper permitting, any private operator may build and
operate a compost facility within Spokane County and charge a competitive fee.
What high
qualifications are required to be the middleman for a simple hauling contract?
The
System has and will only consider Waste Management as qualified, so actually,
there is no competitive bid
process. Also, the private sector cannot compete with a heavily subsidized
System that takes Clean Green at a huge loss.
5. Since this is a regional system shouldn’t the director be independent?
The City of Spokane owns and operates the Spokane Regional Solid Waste System
for the benefit of all residents and businesses within the County.
The City of Spokane
and Waste Management are the only major beneficiaries of the System, receiving
$48 million from the System's $56 million dollar budget. County residents will
have nothing to show for all the money they've dumped into the System, except
for a
few closed landfills.
8. Why is your system so complicated?
During the early 1900’s, Spokane used to dispose of its garbage in the Spokane
River. We advanced to putting raw garbage in unlined pits at garbage dumps,
which lead to the contamination of our sole-source groundwater supply.
Thankfully, those days of uncomplicated garbage disposal are over. The Spokane
Regional Solid Waste System manages a safe and effective integrated solid waste
system that complies with local, State, and Federal solid waste management
regulations and protects our environment for the benefit of all residents of
Spokane County, including waste reduction, reuse, recycling, moderate risk
waste, education and outreach, planning, and disposal.
The Waste to Energy Facility is the largest single producer of greenhouse
gases in the County (630 million pounds annually), and some people believe that
global warming would be harmful to the environment.
9. What are you doing to lower the cost of disposal?
The System’s disposal contracts are competitively bid and compare favorably with
other disposal contracts in the State. The System tipping fee includes costs for
other components for repayment of revenue bonds that many other jurisdiction pay
for out of property or other taxes rather than a user-based tipping fee. Those
revenue bonds will be retired in 2011. A major point of the current planning
process is to gather input on how to reassess the tipping fee once we do not
have to include the costs of revenue bond payments.
The
operation of the Waste to Energy Facility has never been put out to bid, and
over the 16 years of their 20 year contract, the cost of operating the plant has
outpaced inflation twofold. The current cost of operations is $55 per ton, while
the 1991 costs were approximately $27 per ton, for an inflation rate of 100%, as
compared to the CPI, which rose
only 48%.
10. Can we separate the inert materials out at the transfer stations? (This
will be a money saver).
Inert materials are separated out as much as operationally possible at the
System facilities. Ferrous (iron-based) metals are retrieved from the ash after
combustion. The public has access to a recycling area where they can drop off
recyclable material at no charge before disposing of their non-recyclable
material. There are numerous construction, demolition, landclearing, (CDL),
inert, and scrap metal facilities that accept these materials for recovery. The
Recycling Hotline at 625-6800 can provide information on CDL, inert, and scrap
recovery facilities.
There is only one CDL dumpsite in the entire County (Airway Heights), an
inconvenient location for over half the population of the County. If the
Transfer Stations allowed a lower rate for CDL materials, the System would be
more equitable to County residents.
14. Do you believe that free-market competition would make the system more
efficient?
All System contracts operate under a free market system.
It's not a free
market if it's a government controlled monopoly. The System makes competition
illegal.
17. Is it true that Spokane pays more than any other city in the lower 48
states that operate waste to energy systems?
No, it is not true.
Where exactly is this WTE facility that charges more than $55 per ton
just to
operate the plant?
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