Bill Burnett wrote:The Mayor says the city pays $42 a ton for landfill fees. The city receives $27 a ton for recycling. Simple logic will tell you that getting paid $27 is better than paying $42
Bill
In most instances the city would be paying $27 a ton for recycled trash that $42 a ton.
Recycled trash is not high demand, nor is it high use. Most people still tend to share away
from recycled paper, plastics, etc. Also the cost of recycling most things outside of plastic
bottles and aluminum cans is higher than using virgin materials. I cannot honestly believe it
is a $69 swing to the plus. Maybe we save $27 a ton with recycled goods.*
However Matt's point and a valid one is. The city told us we would save $43,000 a year with
automated trash pick up. The equipment to switch was over $1.5 million dollars, trucks,
cans, etc. Well that would indicate a savings in 29 years. Then it was mentioned, there
would be an additional bump through retirement of another $40,000 a year. This would
take it to 15 years to break even.
HOWEVER we added the smaller than most cities recycling barrels.** At a cost they said
was the same as the green barrels, so $740,000 is added to the final figure and adds a
total of 10 years to the break even date.
This city has fallen into the "Blondie" trap, and fallen in head first.

Bragging of $400,000 in new meters, in an area that just got new meters, but we got
25% off with this grant! What a savings!!!!
"We just got this helicopter drone, it will save us boat rentals." Ahh you never rented a boat,
"I mean it will stop us from climbing the cliffs" errrr you have never climbed the cliffs. "It
saves us from being bored and we wanted it to check out the swimming pools in the summer!
* Many cities use "recycle collectors" that haul the trash away, yet it has been proven, it
is never recycled. The infamous trash island the size of Texas is thought to be mainly the
result of Chinese freighter that are being paid to take "recyclable trash back to China for
sorting, and dumping it in the middle of the ocen so that when they get back to port they
are empty. No matter it allows the city to say with a straight face, "we recycle."
** When I asked Parma's mayor Tim DeGeeter why their recycle cans are bigger than trash
he said, we are aiming at having more recycled tons in the future, than now so it only
makes sense to think ahead and get larger barrels. Perhaps, Ward 3 councilman should
have been training City Hall instead of trying his social experiments on the residents.
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