For second year in a row,
Charlestown comes in dead last for recycling
At the end of every fiscal year, the RI Resource Recovery Corporation
distributes the profits to the 39 RI cities and towns from its sale of recycled materials .
Each town’s share is based on how much they recycled.
Predictably, the large cities received the most money,
with Warwick topping the list for 2012.
But coming in at sixth
place was the joint effort of Westerly-Hopkinton, proving that you
don’t have to be a big city to recycle on a large scale (3,739 tons) and reap
the profits.
Coming in dead last – again – was Charlestown. With only 341 tons of recycled
material (3% less than the year before), Charlestown’s share of the profits was
only $2,647.
Some of our part-time residents recycle by donating their trash to local businesses |
While Charlestown’s recycling efforts fall each year,
the rest of the state improves, up by 5% statewide in the past year alone.
Some readers may be thinking that it’s unfair to
compare Charlestown to the rest of the state because our population is so
small.
It's true that Charlestown has a small population, However, out of Rhode Island's 39 cities and towns, seven are
smaller than Charlestown and all of them do much better than Charlestown both in gross tonnage and in the rate of recycling per person.
Indeed, when you adjust for population to arrive at
how much each town recycles per person, Charlestown’s performance looks even
more awful.
This table compares Charlestown to the seven towns in
Rhode Island that are smaller than Charlestown.
Population
|
Tons recycled
|
Tons per person
|
Profits
|
|
Charlestown
|
7,827
|
341
|
0.044
|
$2,647.51
|
Richmond
|
7,708
|
581
|
0.075
|
$3,966.17
|
Exeter
|
6,425
|
673
|
0.105
|
$5,217.78
|
West Greenwich
|
6,135
|
397
|
0.065
|
$3,081.75
|
Jamestown
|
5,405
|
898
|
0.166
|
$6,788.11
|
Foster
|
4,606
|
457
|
0.099
|
$3,758.26
|
Little Compton
|
3,492
|
560
|
0.160
|
$4,235.70
|
New Shoreham
|
1,051
|
584
|
0.556
|
$4,412.93
|
Based
on the rate, Block Island recycles
almost 13 times as much per person than Charlestown. Even West Greenwich, the
town that comes closest to Charlestown in terms of rate of recycling per
person, still recycles at an almost 50% higher rate than Charlestown.
Let’s
look at it another way: based on this year’s tallies, Charlestown residents only recycled 88 pounds each. I don’t have
the exact numbers, but I’ll bet the average Charlestown resident eats more pounds of French fries per year than that.
Compare
Charlestown’s 88 pounds to Block Island’s 1,112 pounds recycled per person!
Even though world market prices for recyclable trash
dropped over this past year, slashing the state program’s revenues by more than
half, the program remains more necessary than ever.
Aside from conserving resources and preventing pollution, it also extends the
life of the state’s Central Landfill. When the Johnston dump is finally filled in the
next few years, the state will be scrambling for alternatives.
Here is an example of one of Copar investor Phil Armetta's pet projects - a regional "recycling" plant in Middletown, CT that blew up in 2010, killing six workers |
When the state goes shopping for a new statewide waste disposal site, what better place - from their perspective - than down in our part of the world, which is pretty much the back of beyond to most of our fellow Rhode Islanders up north of the Tower.
When Cathy and I moved to Charlestown eleven years
ago, one of the many things we liked was Charlestown’s pride in its
environmental record.
But since then, Charlestown’s environmental focus has
narrowed dramatically to the point where, outside of open space, it’s hard to
see any commitment to environmentalism at all in our community.
Our unwillingness to take action to boost our recycling
goes hand in hand with the town’s rejection of green energy, its apathy toward
our several abandoned toxic waste dumps and the unwillingness to take effective
action against an active polluter like the Copar Quarries. Conservation, however important, is but a small part of the larger environmental picture.
Frankly, I can’t understand why Charlestown doesn't do
better on its recycling rate. I know that we are supposed to believe that
Charlestown is somehow unique and special and that the laws of nature, physics
and economics somehow work differently here.
DiLibero's green initiatives were among the reasons why he was forced to resign |
So DiLibero tried to get the private haulers who serve many Charlestown households to make sure they credited Charlestown when they delivered their cargoes to the Johnston landfill.
That obviously didn't work very well since many of
these private haulers have enough trouble keeping the recyclables from getting
mixed in with the rest of the trash, never mind dividing it into municipal
jurisdictions.
It doesn't help that Charlestown doesn't have any homegrown private haulers, at least none that are members of the Chamber of Commerce. It also doesn't help that we don't allow haulers who pick up Charlestown trash to take it to Charlestown's facility. Is it any wonder they aren't that motivated to credit Charlestown when they have to take recyclables up to Johnston.
It doesn't help that Charlestown doesn't have any homegrown private haulers, at least none that are members of the Chamber of Commerce. It also doesn't help that we don't allow haulers who pick up Charlestown trash to take it to Charlestown's facility. Is it any wonder they aren't that motivated to credit Charlestown when they have to take recyclables up to Johnston.
Also, most local haulers come out of Westerly which may
account, in part, for some of their impressive recycling numbers.
When the state first adopted mandatory recycling statewide, Charlestown tried to get itself exempted. In letters written by then (and present) Charlestown Public Works Director Alan Arsenault, Charlestown sought an
exemption from the law. Instead, the town wanted to expand the
use of its unlined and poorly monitored landfill operations
along Narrow Lane and Old Coach Road.
As
Arsenault wrote to the RI Department of Environmental Management on October 3,
1986:
“The vacationing public will be less likely to
participate in any recycling program for several reasons….many individuals feel
freed of normally responsible behavior – vacation mentality….There is no
incentive for these people to recycle….[and] there are limited penalties which
can be brought to bear on the tourists.”
However, Charlestown is hardly unique for having a
high number of summer visitors or having a lot of private haulers. Our
coastline neighbors and Block Island all have the same issues, yet they do so
much better than we do. And without the whining.
Another common form of Charlestown recycling |
Instead of trash being sorted and separated for recycling where we would recover some of the costs, it goes by the roadside. Or it ends up in the trash barrels at local merchants. Or it goes somewhere else, who knows where.
Charlestown is supposed to spend the $2,647 it is
getting from the RIRRC to boost recycling efforts Charlestown. There’s not much you can do
with $2,647.
Maybe the town should use the money to get a bunch of
imprinted garbage bags to leave at each summer home with the inscription
reading, “When full, please dispose of in
Westerly.”
Here is the complete listing of Rhode Island cities
and towns, ranked by their profits from 2012 recycling efforts:
1.
Warwick: $79,594.13
2.
Providence: $71,347.62
3.
Cranston: $57,087.48
4.
East Providence: $37,781.85
5.
Pawtucket: $37.277.52
6.
Westerly-Hopkinton: $29,049.23
7.
Coventry: $28,599.29
8.
Cumberland: $24,881.60
9.
South Kingstown: $24,241.34
10.
North Kingstown: $23,957.94
11.
Woonsocket: $21,070.66
12.
North Providence: $20,544.35
13.
West Warwick: $18,433.33
14.
Newport: $17,356.93
15.
Barrington: $17,808.65
16.
Johnston: $16,107.02
17.
Smithfield: $15,998.25
18.
Lincoln: $15,652.42
19.
Tiverton: $15,374.27
20.
Portsmouth: $14,969.31
21.
Bristol: $13,366.75
22.
Burrillville: $13,267.45
23.
East Greenwich: $13,235.90
24.
Middletown: $12,434.62
25.
North Smithfield: $10,619.86
26.
Warren: $9,299.49
27.
Glocester: $9,216.12
28.
Narragansett: $8,965.98
29.
Scituate: $8,403.11
30.
Central Falls: $8,075.31
31.
Jamestown: $6,788.11
32.
Exeter: $5,217.78
33.
New Shoreham: $4,412.93
34.
Little Compton: $4,235.70
35.
Richmond: $3,966.17
36.
Foster: $3,758.26
37.
West Greenwich: $3,081.75
38.
Charlestown: $2,647.51