The Day

Trash program vote postponed in New London

City Council tables decision after several residents voice opposition to plan

- By GREG SMITH Day Staff Writer

New London — The trash talk ended late Monday without a vote by the City Council.

The council decided to table a decision on implementa­tion of a new pay-as-you-throw trash-removal program until July 16. It had faced an onslaught of opposition from residents at a packed meeting on Monday and raised more questions of their own.

Councilor Don Venditto said he was prepared to vote and was leaning in favor of the program but did have a question about the city’s contract for lease of five new public works vehicles.

“I asked if there was a way to get out of the lease at the end of one year if we decided the program wasn’t meeting projection­s and expectatio­ns,” Venditto said.

The city has budgeted $250,000 a year for the next five years to lease new trash-removal vehicles. Public Works Director Brian Sear has said the trucks were needed to replace the aging fleet.

The city is poised to vote on revisions to a city ordinance mandating the use of special 30-, 15- and 8-gallon yellow bags by residents and on a oneyear agreement with WasteZero Inc. for purchase of the bags. WasteZero, as part of a state grant awarded to the city for the program, also is expected to begin an educationa­l campaign.

The goal of the system is to curb future tax increases associated with the cost of disposing of municipal waste by increasing recycling. The 90-gallon bins now used for garbage would instead be used for recyclable­s.

The new program also is pitched as a way to more evenly spread the cost of trash removal to everyone, including nonprofits and other tax-exempt entities.

Some residents remained skeptical, arguing it feels like a new tax and predicting an explosion of trash throughout the city from bags torn open by animals and illegal dumping to avoid the $1 bag fees.

“It’s going to be a big mess,” resident George Hager said. “One of the big things you have to consider is people in the downtown area will find other areas to dispose of their trash.”

“I think you’re hearing loud and clear from the citizenry they’re not in favor of this,” said Tim Wheeler, president of the Neighborho­od Alliance. “I think your intentions were good in getting nonprofits to pay their fair share. That being said, we’re getting caught in the net, too.”

“We just ask the City Council to dump this trash plan and do research on other trash plans,” Beverly Steinman said.

Kat Goulart said that at a public forum describing the program, residents were presented a choice of a pay-as-youthrow program or a tax increase. “It seems like we got both,” Goulart said. Councilor Martin Olsen, the lone Republican on the council, was the only councilor to vote against tabling the vote. He is opposed to the plan and said the city has not done enough research into alternativ­es.

“I wanted to vote last night. To me it was a punt — kicking the can down the road,” Olsen said. “I have not supported this program since it was initially proposed. I have severe reservatio­n of this program being successful in New London.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States