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Press Statements
October 31, 2000
Harrisburg
City Council Bond Authorization Hearing for the Harrisburg
Incinerator
Michael Fiorentino:
Good evening. I am Michael Fiorentino,
Harrisburg Director of Clean Air Council. The Council is
a non-profit membership environmental organization dedicated
to protecting everyone's right to breathe clean air. Founded
in 1967, the Council works through education, advocacy and
oversight to advance this goal.
City Council has an extraordinary opportunity tonight, an
opportunity to say "no more" to a financial liability
that is infamous for its lamentable environmental performance.
Shouldn't Harrisburg be nationally and internationally known
as something other than the home of the largest incinerator
dioxin source in the nation?
Before deciding to authorize this $25 million bond issue,
Council should pause and carefully consider a number of
issues.
Is there any reason to believe this is the last time this
incinerator will come to you for a handout? Tonight's bond
issue is the smaller of two near term requests-the next
is likely to be $60 million for the full retrofit to meet
federal standards for such facilities. But the fact of the
matter is that you cannot receive adequate assurance of
clear sailing with this facility even after that amount
of money is spent. Simply look at its history--repeated
substantial expenditures beyond simple operation and maintenance
as well as penalty payments to the DEP and EPA. These costs
add up. Furthermore, this plant's effort to meet new standards
is no guarantee of future compliance with the standards.
Pollution control technology is only as good as those who
operate and maintain it. Waste combustion remains an industrial
process that creates huge amounts of pollution. If the controls
are not engaged or functioning optimally, then the dangerous
chemicals are released to the air. If the controls work
as intended, then the city is left with even more potent
incinerator ash to dispose of.
In addition, the $60 million retrofit is no guarantee to
unfettered operation for the life of the plant. Though EPA
sometimes allows facilities to do the best they can with
the technology that prevailed in the era in which construction
took place, there is no regulatory certainty that EPA won't
require a major upgrade 10 or 15 years down the road. What
would happen if, with substantial remaining debt, the incinerator
revenue stops due to a future federal or state standard?
Incineration is a flawed and dangerous means of handling
municipal waste. This city must embrace the future, and
the future is waste reduction, reuse and recycling. It is
extremely counter-productive environmentally to burn materials
which can be recycled. Recycling avoids the pollution and
degradation caused by the extraction and processing of virgin
materials. It also avoids the pollution caused by the act
of incineration itself. Organics, like dioxins that resulted
in the evacuation of Times Beach, heavy metal poisons like
mercury and lead, and acid gases like hydrogen chloride-all
of these pollutants take an unacceptable toll on human health.
Another consideration worthy of pause is the fact that there
is no certainty that this plant will be given the green
light to operate after December 19 short of a full retrofit.
The city is attempting to work out a suitable plan to "de-rate"
the plant and keep it running. But if DEP and EPA do not
appear to have great enthusiasm for the city's proposal,
it's no small wonder. Acceptance of the city's plan requires
a questionable interpretation of the federal regulations,
one vulnerable to challenge.
The city wants to draw waste from other municipalities and
even other states to burn. It's outrageous. This proposed
720-ton incinerator far exceeds Harrisburg's disposal needs.
Even though Dauphin Meadows landfill may no longer be an
option, Pennsylvania has a tremendous surplus in permitted
daily capacity at its landfills. It is better to improve
the recycling programs here, encourage waste reduction and
fully utilize the new transfer station. Economists should
identify the advantages this option would hold over the
huge new investment in the incinerator, and all the operations
and maintenance costs and increased ash disposal costs concomitant
with continued burning.
The incinerator repeatedly violates its permit and spews
poisons into the air. Why should the good working class
and low-income residents of the city be exposed to these
toxins? Why should anyone? When in society, an individual
repeatedly violates the law, that person is taken off the
streets-sometimes for good. Why shouldn't the same standard
apply to a recalcitrant polluter? Throwing more money at
this plant is not the answer.
Clean Air Council urges this deliberative body to close
an unfortunate financial and environmental chapter in the
city's history by refusing additional funding for this obsolete
facility. Thank you for the opportunity to comment on this
matter.
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