Solid Waste Authority Instructs Engineers to Stop Transfer Station Engineering

At the December 3rd Pocahontas County Solid Waste Authority (SWA) meeting, SWA Chairman Dave Henderson announced that he has talked to their engineering firm, directing them to stop their engineering work for building the SWA’s transfer station at the landfill.

This is seen as definitive confirmation that they are now firmly committed to not building their own transfer station but instead using the future transfer station Allegheny Disposal LLC will be building near Green Bank. However, concerns remain about whether Allegheny Disposal will have enough time to obtain the necessary permits, and to have their station built and operational before the landfill closes due to reaching capacity next fall.

They had originally submitted a Solid Waste Facility Siting Plan and a Litter & Solid Waste Control Plan which were based on their building their own transfer station at the landfill.  They now have to replace those with new plans.

They still had to hold the public hearings on the original plans submitted, and did so at the beginning of this meeting.

Four members of the Green Bank Sustainability Working Group spoke out at that public hearing. They told the SWA members that they need to offer a lot more recycling options for cardboard, white goods, electronics, and tires, all of which are no longer accepted at the 5 green box sites. They said this greatly reduces the amount of recycling because it is inconvenient for the public to bring those up to the landfill site. They also said that increased recycling would eliminate a substantial amount of trash from being disposed in the landfill, which could prolong the life of the current landfill for a bit, and when the transfer station is operational, increased recycling will save substantial on tipping fee costs, especially if county residents increase their recycling from the current 3.6% to the national average of 25%.

Later during the regular meeting, Jacob Meck of Allegheny Disposal said the cost problem is not the result of having too much trash, since the costs of building and operating a transfer station, buying and maintain equipment and vehicles, hauling the trash and of the labor are all fixed costs no matter how much trash is handled.  He said it costs just as much to collect and haul half the amount of trash, since the transfer station; equipment; and the transportation vehicles are already going to be minimum-sized, and those are the primary expenses, not tipping fees.

Additionally at the meeting, during her financial statement, Mary Clendenen told the members that the SWA currently has $488.467.00 available in unrestricted funds, and they are on target this financial year,

They went into an hour long Executive (or closed) session to consult with their attorney, but upon returning to open session, they did not pass any motions, nor explain what the closed session was about.

They also approved:

  • Renewing the annual contract with their CPA, Mark Joseph, at the same cost as each of the last three years.
  • Agreed to give their employees off both the 24th and 26th of December, in addition to Christmas day.
  • Agreed to contact their surveyor to look into a landfill boundary discrepancy with Steve Dilley’s property.

They have scheduled a special meeting for Wednesday, December 17th at 6 pm in the courthouse, where they will further discuss the Future Solid Waste Plan; update the Application for a Certificate of Site Approval with Allegheny Disposal, LLC; and revise the Commercial Solid Waste Facility Siting Plan; and the Comprehensive Litter and Solid Waste Control Plan Update Schedules.

Story By

Tim Walker

Tim is the WVMR News Reporter. Tim is a native of Maryland who started coming to Pocahontas County in the 1970’s as a caver. He bought land on Droop Mountain off Jacox Road in 1976 and built a small house there in the early 80’s. While still working in Maryland, Tim spent much time at his place which is located on the Friars Hole Cave Preserve. Retiring in 2011 as a Lieutenant with the Anne Arundel County Police Department in Maryland, Tim finally took the plunge and moved from Maryland to his real home on Droop Mountain. He began working as the Pocahontas County Reporter for Allegheny Mountain Radio in January of 2015.

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