Stuck in next to last place
By Will Collette
When the state divided up the profits from the sale of
materials taken out of the waste stream for recycling, it had almost $2 million
to share.
Based on the gross tonnage of recycled material, Charlestown
came in at 38th place, next to last, for the second year running.
This year, as well as last year, the dubious distinction of the last place
finish went to West Greenwich.
Sure Charlestown is small so obviously there’s no comparison
between Charlestown and, for example, Providence and Warwick.
But compared to our peers, and even compared to our past
performance, Charlestown is lagging behind on recycling.
DiLibero noted that Charlestown’s lackluster reports needed
action and that he was ordering some measures to improve performance. More
recycling bins would be installed at town beaches. Private haulers would be
reminded to make sure to keep recyclables separate and to make sure Charlestown
was given proper credit when they took the waste to the state Central Landfill.
DiLibero noted that it’s problematic to get our part-time
residents to take recycling seriously, but that the town needed to make the
effort. At the time, as I reported it, the Town Council majority seemed disinterested and unengaged on the subject.
Charlestown has little to show for the efforts of the past
year. Our 2012 tonnage increased by only 9.28 tons to 351 tons, bringing our profit-sharing
total to $7,539.75. That’s an increase of only 2.7%.
And it doesn't look like we're going to do any better in 2013. If you look at the most recent report from Charlestown Public Works to the Town Council, we sent 69.48 tons to the Central Landfill, but of that, only 26.84 tons were recyclables. Our monthly average last year was 29.25 tons.
And it doesn't look like we're going to do any better in 2013. If you look at the most recent report from Charlestown Public Works to the Town Council, we sent 69.48 tons to the Central Landfill, but of that, only 26.84 tons were recyclables. Our monthly average last year was 29.25 tons.
Charlestown recycling |
The smallest town of them all, New Shoreham (a.k.a. Block
Island) has a population just over one-eighth the size of Charlestown, but they
recycled almost twice as much tonnage (612.54 tons).
Little Compton is around half the size of Charlestown, but
recycled nearly twice as much (589.09 tons).
The most impressive small town is Jamestown. With 2400 fewer
inhabitants than Charlestown, Jamestown recycled 810.47 tons.
Exeter, Richmond and Foster also beat Charlestown by more
than 200 tons each even though they have smaller populations than Charlestown.
Our large part-time population is simply no excuse when you
compare Charlestown’s results with those of Block Island, Little Compton and
Jamestown who also have large seasonal populations.
We have several members of the Town Council who like to investigate
things – I’m thinking of Deputy Dan Slattery and our ace researcher George Tremblay. Isn’t it time for them to try to find out why Charlestown lags so far
behind its peers in recycling?
Perhaps they can tear themselves away from their crusades against
affordable housing and against struggling working families to address what
appears to be a real problem. A real problem that often gets deposited in the
trash cans at Cumberland Farms or on our roadsides.
Maybe that’s just part of our traditional “rural lifestyle”
where we just used to throwing our trash out the windows of our pick-ups.
Maybe Rhode Island’s mandatory recycling law is the problem.
Perhaps Charlestown doesn’t recycle because state law says we need to. We’re
such revolutionaries down here that if our state oppressors tell us to do
something, we just have to do the opposite. If that’s the case, then clearly
our CCA-sponsored town officials have themselves a new crusade to launch –
repeal the state recycling law.