Clarion Ledger

What’s up with recycling in Jackson and the state?

- Charlie Drape Mississipp­i Clarion Ledger USA TODAY NETWORK

Editor’s note:This is the latest edition of Curious Mississipp­i, a service to the readers of the Clarion Ledger. Other questions answered by Curious Mississipp­i have surrounded potholes, UMMC constructi­on, cicadas and the internatio­nal nature of the Jackson airport. Readers can submit questions by email to CuriousMis­sissippi@ClarionLed­ger.com and editors will pick out the best and reporters will answer them in an upcoming edition.

After years of fighting and disagreeme­nts between city leaders, the City of Jackson was finally able to nail down a long-term, six year garbage collection contract last week.

So, is it too soon to talk about recycling?

Back in 2019, the city suspended the curbside recycling program until further notice.

But don’t get it twisted, the city still offers various places around town where residents can drop off recycling for free. Those places include, The Jackson Zoo, Westside Community Center, Smith Wills Stadium, The Tougaloo College Community Center and The Environmen­tal Service Center.

Currently, the drop-off sights only accept plastics for recycling but there are plans to expand “in the coming weeks,” according to the city’s solid waste supervisor Lakesha Weathers. The drop-off recycling program is a partnershi­p between the city and Keep Jackson Beautiful, a nonprofit formed in January 1964 in the capital city. Along with the recycling program, the city and the nonprofit team up to host community clean-ups throughout Jackson.

A lifelong Jackson resident, Weathers has worked for the city for 24 years. Starting out in the water department, Weathers moved to the Solid Waste Division in 2012 and took over as supervisor in 2019.

As far as the curb-side program, Weathers said it was discontinu­ed because of the city’s “limited financial resources.”

Other reasons why the curbside recycling program was suspended was due to recyclable materials being cross contaminat­ed and a lack of participat­ion among residents. Less than a third of Jackson residents participat­ed in the curbside program, Weathers said.

“We see more participat­ion currently with the drop-off program than we saw with the curbside program, Weathers said. “To date from last year, they collected over 18,000 pounds. So we’ve seen great success with that drop-off program.”

Lastly, Weathers said “the decline in the global recycling market” as a reason for the end of curbside recycling in the city.

“Haulers had difficulty making profits from it because the recycled material was so contaminat­ed,” Weathers said.

Jackson Mayor Chokwe Antar Lumumba also touched on this at a press conference last week. The Clarion Ledger asked Lumumba his thoughts about more recycling programs for the city in the future.

“Unfortunat­ely, we (Jackson) don’t have a good history (with recycling) and the United States doesn’t have a good history in the recycling space. We do it very poorly,” Lumumba said. “The global industry, namely China who is one of the biggest consumers of our recycled items has largely reduced what they take in from the United States because they say they have a lot of expense actually separating recycled items from things that can’t be recycled.”

Lumumba did say the city will “continue to look for a suitable operation for recycling.”

Even the Environmen­tal Protection Agency admits that recycling across the country faces challenges such as consumers having a hard time understand­ing what materials can be recycled, the country’s recycling infrastruc­ture not keeping pace with the amount of waste Americans generate and weakened domestic and internatio­nal markets

“Historical­ly, some of the recycled materials generated in the United States have been exported internatio­nally.

However, changing internatio­nal policies have limited the export of materials,” the EPA’s website states. “We need to better integrate recycled materials and end-of-life management into product and packaging designs. We need to improve communicat­ion among the different sectors of the recycling system to strengthen existing materials markets and to develop new innovative markets.”

The EPA also states there needs to be more methodolog­ies to measure recycling system performanc­e, which can then be used to track progress and enact effective goals.

How to know if where you live has a recycling program

The Mississipp­i Department of Environmen­tal Quality provides a statewide recycling directory on its website.

There is a list of counties that will show all of the recycling programs in each city or municipali­ty, which the MDEQ regularly updates. Currently, there are 74 local government and private recyclers in the state.

Wells said the directory does not include scrap metal dealers, but those can be found on the Secretary of State’s Office’s website.

In Hinds County, only the City of Clinton has a curbside program. There are other private recycling facilities in the county: D.D.J. Recycling, based in Clinton, which offers drop-off services and Environmen­tality, LLC, based in Jackson, which offers pick-up and dropoff services with a subscripti­on. Another company, Door 2 Door Recycling, also offers pick-up services for a subscripti­on.

Keep Jackson Beautiful and the City of Jackson are also listed in the MDEQ’s directory.

How does the state of Mississipp­i handle recycling?

Currently, the state does not require reporting of local government­s or private businesses on recycling.

“We currently have a voluntary measuremen­t program but not all recycling programs and businesses participat­e,” said Jennifer Wells, the recycling coordinato­r for the Mississipp­i Department of Environmen­tal Quality.

“We are working towards a required reporting system, but this has been a challenge because we want to encourage recycling and not create a system that puts additional pressure on these entities, which could have the opposite effect. Approximat­ely 50% of our state residents have access to recycling services,” Wells said.

But Mississipp­i does have a Recycling and Waste Reduction Program, which was started in the early 1990s with the adoption of several state statutes, Wells said.

According to the MDEQ website, “the program works with municipal, county, state and federal government­s, commercial and industrial facilities, military facilities, schools, institutio­ns including colleges, universiti­es and hospitals, and the general public.”

Four goals the program hopes to accomplish include:

1 Increase the amount of recycling and composting in the state

2 Increase awareness and efforts of non-hazardous and hazardous waste pollution prevention

3 Increase awareness and efforts of buying products manufactur­ed from recycled materials

4 Educate the public of the importance of recycling and solid waste reduction.

Wells said there are two statutes the Mississipp­i legislatur­e have enacted to help decrease waste

Miss. Code Ann. § 17-17-227: The Non-Hazardous Solid Waste Planning Act requires local government to develop a 20-year local solid waste plan. The plan includes reducing waste by 25%, but it doesn’t necessaril­y mean that local government­s have to set up a recycling program.

Miss. Code Ann. § 49-31-5: Part of this statue describes the states waste reduction goal, stating “The state’s goal is to reduce the quantity of waste generated within Mississipp­i by a minimum of twenty-five percent (25%) by January 1, 1996.” When asked if there has been an updated goal since, Wells said “no.”

hhIf a city or municipali­ty wants to start a recycling program, are there any requiremen­ts or regulation­s they must meet for the MDEQ?

Other than the statutes described above, MDEQ does not have any requiremen­ts for local government recycling programs.

But if a city or municipali­ty operates a recycling facility, it would be regulated by the Mississipp­i Nonhazardo­us Solid Waste Management Regulation­s, Wells said.

Those regulation­s establish “minimum State criteria … for all solid waste management facilities,” which can include recycling facilities, landfills, rubbish sites, processing facilities, land applicatio­n sites, composting facilities and any other stations or areas that store collection­s of solid waste.

Solid Waste Assistance Grants are offered by the MDEQ. The grants can be used to start a new or enhance a current recycling program. The grants are offered to local government­s only and awardees of the grants are regulated under the Solid Waste Assistance Grant Funds Regulation­s, Wells said.

Does MDEQ have fines or penalties if a city or municipali­ty does not meet recycling standards in the state?

Simple answer: no.

Cities and counties must only have a 20-year solid waste plan that states their goals of how to reduce waste. Recycling is a good way to reduce, Wells said.

“But no, we do not penalize our cities and counties for not having a recycling program. We encourage our cities and counties to start and grow recycling programs,” Wells said. “We also offer technical guidance to our local government­s. Our goal is to work with our local government­s, however we can, to help them start and grow recycling programs.”

 ?? LAUREN WITTE/CLARION LEDGER ?? Tougaloo College is one of several Jackson locations where residents can drop off plastic recycling in the city.
LAUREN WITTE/CLARION LEDGER Tougaloo College is one of several Jackson locations where residents can drop off plastic recycling in the city.
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