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Article History BALTIMORE (Map, News) - Howard County Executive Ken Ulman wants to raise the county’s trash collection fees to cover an expanding recycling program and the rising costs of trash collection.
Ulman said he likely will propose a $50 increase for most residents, bringing the annual trash collection fee to $225.
The fee increase, which will be part of the proposed fiscal 2009 operating budget to be released later this month, is expected to generate an additional $5 million, which can help purchase recycling bins for every county resident, Ulman said.
“I see it as investing in infrastructure,” he said of his plans to expand a pilot program started last year in Elkridge and Ellicott City.
The areas that received free recycling bins have increased recycling by 25 percent, Ulman said, which justifies buying bins for all county residents.
The county generated about $1.4 million this year by selling the collected recyclable materials to Waste Management at $55 a ton. By encouraging more recycling, county officials said they hope to reduce the overall cost of trash collection.
The fee increase also will mitigate an expected increase in trash collection costs.
In 2013, a $33-per-ton fixed-rate contract with Waste Management for collection will expire, and the rate could skyrocket. The market rate is $70 a ton and rising, Public Works Director Jim Irvin said.
Meanwhile, the County Council on Monday voted 3-2 to approve a measure enabling the county to combine the recycling and trash funds.
This allows the county to use trash revenue for the recycling program.
“It doesn’t make sense to have a fund that covers one truck that comes one day a week, and another truck that comes a few days later,” said Ulman, who sponsored the measure.
Councilman Greg Fox, R-District 5, who along with Council Chairwoman Courtney Watson, D-District 1, voted against the change, said it was a way for the administration to raise the fee.
“I’m concerned about the intent of the bill,” he said.
The council will have the final say on the fee increase and trash and recycling funds during the budget process.
Discussions about the fees “should be had in the context of the entire budget,” said Councilman Calvin Ball, D-District 2, who voted for the measure.
smichael@baltimoreexaminer.com
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Comments from Examiner Readers
10:03 PM MST on Fri., Jun. 13, 2008 re: "Recycling center closing due to dumping"
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2:09 PM MST on Fri., Jun. 13, 2008
re: "Recycling center closing due to dumping"
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10:13 AM MST on Fri., Jun. 13, 2008
re: "Recycling center closing due to dumping"
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5:09 AM MST on Mon., Apr. 14, 2008
re: "Recycling stressed as alternative to incinerator in Carroll"
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4:01 AM MST on Mon., Apr. 14, 2008
re: "Recycling stressed as alternative to incinerator in Carroll"
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3:49 AM MST on Mon., Apr. 14, 2008
re: "Recycling stressed as alternative to incinerator in Carroll"
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2:38 PM MST on Thu., Apr. 10, 2008
re: "Ulman eyes raising trash collection fee"
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4:06 PM MST on Fri., Mar. 14, 2008
re: "‘Paper police’ creating a furor in hunt for delinquent recyclers"
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1:29 PM MST on Wed., Feb. 20, 2008
re: "Panel disputes claim that incinerator increases recycling"
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10:34 AM MST on Tue., Jan. 22, 2008
re: "New fees may be introduced to encourage recycling"
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7:46 PM MST on Thu., Aug. 23, 2007
re: "Recycling now mandatory in county buildings"
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8:53 AM MST on Thu., Aug. 23, 2007
re: "Recycling now mandatory in county buildings"
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5:55 AM MST on Mon., Jul. 16, 2007
re: "Harford residents recycle the most in the state"
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Examiner Reader said:
Who are you kidding, re education. You are dealing with a different clientile in Randallstown then was there only 15 years ago, there in lie your problem. You can close that center all you want to, THEY will continue to left trash on the location. Then when THEY are made to stop doing that THEY will leave it somewhere else for the county to clean up. Put a fork in NW Baltimore County
1 agree | 1 disagree
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Examiner Reader said:
so now the county closes the recycling center and what will these people get when they call bureau of waste management, I'll tell you they will get the number of a comercial recycler who will charge them for picking up their stuff, so resident pays and county can avoid the hassle, why not just dump it out on the road and let the county decide what to do with then, since they don't want to make it convenient or take the time to secure the center or supervise it properly doesn't have the problem nor does the Timonium center soooooooo......
0 agree | 1 disagree
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Examiner Reader said:
This is how some people mess things up for everyone. Save your time on the re-education. Some people never learn.
2 agree | 0 disagree
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Examiner Reader said:
It's better to use waste for energy that it is to use food for energy. The environmentalist driven decision to use ethanol, made from corn, for fuel is rapidly causing food shortages around the world and higher prices here. Global warming is another lie from the environmentalist. Real science, not poorly written computer models, is showing that global warming is caused by changes in the suns output and not CO2. I used to think recycling was a good idea but because more and more stuff being pushed by environmentalist is being proven to be a bad idea or scam I now have doubts that recycling is doing an good either. Build the waste to energy power plant. I will kill two birds with one stone. It gets rid of trash and gives us needed energy. How can you go wrong. Montgomery cty. has on and it has been a success. None of the scare stories from the environmentalist have come true there either. Environmentalist have gone from being a good idea to radical religious nuts and need to be stopped.
8 agree | 4 disagree
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Examiner Reader said:
Even if everything that could be recycled was there would still be waste. We also still need energy. What better source for fuel is there than garbage. No one wants it. People will pay you to take it. We will never run out. It has to go somewhere. Why not use it for energy. Waste to energy is a win win situation. You can also ignore any concerns about global warming because that has been proven to be a big lie being pushed by those who stand to make a profit from it, like Al Gore. Mother nature has come out as the biggest denier of GW. Earth temperature has dropped for the past 10 years without spending a dime on it. Build the plant and use the waste from the environmentalist to run it.
9 agree | 3 disagree
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More power needed said:
Real scientist don't anticipate much effect from carbon dioxide at all, much less "increasingly critical". Atmospheric carbon dioxide's greenhouse effect is logarithmic-the first half of pre-Industrial Revolution-level effect was achieved by less than 20 parts per million, then needing the addition of 250 ppmv more to achieve the same warming increment to reach pre-IR effect and it will take a massive increase to repeat the dose again. (The "how much" depends on total sensitivity estimates but, utilizing A Field Guide to the Atmosphere (Houghton, 1983)'s commonly cited 7 K greenhouse effect for 300 ppmv (presumably from Kondratyev & Moskalenko but the origin of this common figure is obscure) then quadrupling pre-IR levels to 1120 ppmv can deliver a mere 1.71 K warming in total -- since there's already alleged to have been 0.7 K that leaves just 1 kelvin potential for adding another 740 ppmv to the current 380 ppmv.) Now Becker can read something disputing the GW scam. Build the pla
6 agree | 1 disagree
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Examiner Reader said:
Tax and spend. Typical Ulman. What happened to the surplus he promised us? If he had solutions as creative as his resume, we wouldn't have this problem. A "Secretary of the Cabinet" should know better.
5 agree | 1 disagree
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Examiner Reader said:
It's probably impossible to practically do, but what if they billed for waste collection based on the amounts and kinds of waste a site produced? Let people do whatever they want with their waste, as long as they pay for it.
3 agree | 4 disagree
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Robin said:
The math doesn't work. Incinerators recover ferrous and non-ferrous metals (engine parts, aluminum foil, bicycle frames, coins, etc.) which can't be recycled in a curbside program. That means more wastes are recycled, not less.
29 agree | 46 disagree
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Alarm Dude said:
When styrofoam recycling comes, I'll know they're serious about waste stream reduction. This is coming from a dude that usually puts out full composting and recycling containers, and only 1/2 full trash. Take my styrofoam, and I'm down another 30 to 50%...
52 agree | 48 disagree
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William Cooke said:
Recycling is a scam.
155 agree | 155 disagree
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Examiner Reader said:
Recycling should be mandatory throughout the country not only in offices but everywhere else and especially at home. I always look for recycle bins when I'm out and am amazed at how few there are.
195 agree | 151 disagree
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Hampstead said:
Provide a better bin to place recyclables in. That smaill blue bin will only hold a small amount of what most households generate.
181 agree | 165 disagree
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