New Haven Register (New Haven, CT)

Lamont wants to overhaul disposal of 860,000 tons of state’s trash

- By Mark Pazniokas

The administra­tion of Gov. Ned Lamont took its first steps Tuesday toward articulati­ng a policy for disposing of the 860,000 tons of trash Connecticu­t must annually ship out of state since the closure in July of a major trash-to-energy plant in Hartford.

Standing outside the Materials Innovation and Recycling Authority plant that once processed onethird of the state’s waste, Lamont and his environmen­tal chief, Katie Dykes, outlined an approach requiring new disposal facilities and dramatic reductions in how much waste is generated by residents and businesses.

Both elements — reducing the waste stream and siting one or more facilities using technology to be determined — pose complex and politicall­y fraught challenges for the second term of a governor whose first major policy attempt, a resumption of highway tolls, ended in failure.

“Our plan contemplat­es that we think we can reduce that 860,000 tons per year of export by 40% through a combinatio­n of programs. The first is an ‘extended producer responsibi­lity program’ for packaging,” said Dykes, the commission­er of energy and environmen­tal protection.

Simply put, that means pressuring Amazon and other drivers in the American economy to rethink and reduce packaging or take financial responsibi­lity for disposal, a cost likely to be passed onto consumers. The state also would work to remove food waste from the refuse stream, a demand on consumers and businesses.

The state currently has relatively small-scale demonstrat­ion programs on removing food scraps, but it will have to have replicate them at a much larger scale to achieve the administra­tion’s goal of waste reduction.

Rep. Joe Gresko, DStratford, co-chair of the legislatur­e’s Environmen­t Committee, said the administra­tion is asking Connecticu­t to wake up and think about trash collection and disposal, a major government­al function that generally works invisibly.

“There is no magic place for your garbage to go. Put it out on the curb — I know it’s somebody else’s problem now, but it’s going somewhere,” Gresko said. “And we have to acknowledg­e that and address it as we go forwards and wrap people’s brains around the idea of there is no magic place.”

There are only places like Keystone Sanitary Landfill in Pennsylvan­ia, a three-plus hour trip by truck from central Connecticu­t on Interstate 84, and Tunnel Hill Reclamatio­n Landfill in Ohio, served by rail cars that can unload 100 tons of waste every 15 minutes.

What the administra­tion outlined could take a decade to achieve, but the governor said the challenge is to set a responsibl­e and sustainabl­e course for the decades to follow. That means assessing the best available technology for disposing of waste, which will include seeking proposals from the private sector.

“We’re gonna lay what the rules of the road are in terms of the waste stream, so the bidders can come in, so we know what the next generation of technology is, what’s the next generation of a trash-toenergy plant,” Lamont said. “And I think it’s going to be a multi-year process.”

In the meantime, trucks and trains will take the trash west.

“But in the long term, our goal needs to be to regain self-sufficienc­y, which we define as the ability to manage our waste within our borders, in order to provide for more predictabl­e costs for businesses and residents, as well as opportunit­ies to increase the sustainabi­lity of how we manage our materials,” Dykes said.

The announceme­nt Tuesday establishe­d that the Lamont administra­tion is opposed to placing a new trash plant on the site owned by the trash authority known as MIRA, which lost a fight two years ago to win state support for an overhaul of a plant opened decades ago under the aegis of its predecesso­r, the Connecticu­t Resources Recovery Authority.

“When this facility first opened as a waste to energy plant, it represente­d the leading edge of technology,” said Hartford Mayor Luke Bronin, a MIRA board member. “It was the environmen­tally responsibl­e way to dispose of trash. Over the last decade or so, this facility had become increasing­ly obsolete, increasing­ly unreliable.”

The governor’s plan is geared to Bronin’s hope of the state eventually taking control of the MIRA site to remediate more than a century of environmen­tal abuse — a coal-burning plant preceded the trashto-energy operation — and offer it for redevelopm­ent or recreation­al access to the Connecticu­t River.

“I think it’s the final word on the use of that site for a waste-to-energy facility,” said Mark Daley, the president of MIRA.

With a closed landfill visible from I-91 in the city’s North Meadows and the MIRA plant in its South Meadows, the city has done more than its share in handling the region’s waste over the past century, Dykes said.

Bronin appreciate­d the sentiment.

“The closure of this site this past summer presents us with both a significan­t challenge as a state and huge opportunit­ies,” Bronin said. “And I’m deeply grateful to the governor and the commission­er and their teams for seizing the moment to make the most of those opportunit­ies.”

Daley said MIRA already has spent $28 million on environmen­tal remediatio­n of the site, but much more will be needed. MIRA also is responsibl­e for the North Meadows landfill site, which is capped and topped by a solar array that powers the city’s adjacent public works yard.

The authority will continue to accept trash at its transfer stations in Torrington and Essex under contracts with its remaining members that run through 2027. Hartford and many others already have opted out, contractin­g with private companies that ship out of state.

MIRA has financial reserves of about $55 million, and the Lamont administra­tion would like the money to go to remediatio­n. But Daley said there are contractur­al claims by the member municipali­ties that must be resolved.

Whatever is chosen as the next-generation technology, Lamont said, he expects the task of finding a location for the new facility will come during his second and most likely final term in office.

 ?? Cloe Poisson / CT Mirror ?? Steam billows from a tall stack near the power block facility at the MIRA trash-to-energy facility in Hartford’s South Meadows.
Cloe Poisson / CT Mirror Steam billows from a tall stack near the power block facility at the MIRA trash-to-energy facility in Hartford’s South Meadows.

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