Journalist @baltimoresun writer artist runner #amwriting Chaplain PIO #partylikeajournalist

Journalist @baltimoresun writer artist runner #amwriting Chaplain PIO #partylikeajournalist
Journalist @baltimoresun writer artist runner #amwriting Md Troopers Assoc #20 & Westminster Md Fire Dept Chaplain PIO #partylikeajournalist

Monday, March 17, 2008

20080317 Alaskan Governor Sarah Palin on the vice-presidency and being pregnant

Alaskan Governor Sarah Palin on the vice-presidency and being pregnant

March 17, 2008

Hat Tip: Colonel B5

This post is for my Anchorage brother-in-law… And yes, the East Coast is slowly but surely discovering Alaska Governor Sarah Palin…

20080317 Alaskan Governor Sarah Palin on the vice-presidency

Speculation continues to persist as to whom Republican presidential candidate Senator John McCain will choose as a running mate.

One person frequently mentioned in the mix is the popular Alaskan Governor Sarah Palin, 44. Many of us feel that she would do a great job as vice-president.

Then in an interview with the Washington Post in late February 2008; “When asked about whether she would consider the number-2 spot in the country -- the vice presidency… Pursing her lips, Palin calls it an ‘impossibility’ this time around, but not altogether out of the question.

Many folks did not pick up on her use of the words “impossibility this time around, but not altogether out of the question.”

In the video, carried by ABC Alaska News http://www.aksuperstation.com/, also notice the quick cameo appearance of former Maryland Governor Robert L. Ehrlich…

And do not overlook her quick take on the candidacy of Senator Barack Obama…

Then, on or about March 6th, 2008, the matter of the curious words, “impossibility” was explained. Many media outlets carried the news, including the Anchorage Daily News http://www.adn.com/ and ABC Alaska News http://www.aksuperstation.com/; which carried the second half of this video:

“Gov. Sarah Palin dropped a day-ending bombshell. She's pregnant. Palin said Wednesday that she and her husband Todd are expecting their fifth child sometime in mid-May.”

When asked about how this new child would affect her, the Governor said, "This is one of those circumstances that has kinda shifted our way of thinking. It certainly makes me very much more so committed to even wanting to stay in Alaska, you know wanting to raise kids in Alaska and at some point in the future I don't know how far off in the future but in some point maybe there will be other doors open."

We certainly look forward to Governor Palin’s future national leadership; meanwhile congratulations are in order for the impending birth of her fifth child.

For other posts on Alaska Governor Sarah Palin and other things – Alaska on “Soundtrack,” please click on: Alaska Governor Sarah Palin , Alaska , Alaska Anchorage , Alaska weather , Alaska Issues

Find other videos on Alaska Governor Sarah Palin here.

*****

Kevin Dayhoff writes from Westminster Maryland USA.

www.kevindayhoff.net

E-mail him at: kdayhoff at carr.org or kevindayhoff at gmail.com

His columns and articles appear in The Tentacle - www.thetentacle.com; Westminster Eagle Opinion; www.thewestminstereagle.com, Winchester Report and The Sunday Carroll Eagle – in the Sunday Carroll County section of the Baltimore Sun. Get Westminster Eagle RSS Feed

“When I stop working the rest of the day is posthumous. I'm only really alive when I'm writing.” Tennessee Williams

####

NBH:

20080317 Alaskan Governor Sarah Palin on the vice-presidency and being pregnant

20080314 Stacy Westfall and Roxy on the Ellen Degeneres show!

Stacy Westfall and Roxy on the Ellen Degeneres show!

Added: March 17, 2008

Hat Tip: Mrs. Owl

Stacy Westfall and Roxy on the Ellen Degeneres show!

Stacy Westfall and Roxy on the Ellen Degeneres show with Roxy (Whizards Baby Doll), March 14, 2008. Visit the show's website at http://ellen.warnerbros.com. Stacy's website is http://westfallhorsemanship.com

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xMrtJWC7Bvk

Related: 20080317 Stacy Westfall’s 2006 Championship Run

_____

####

Related: For posts about the 4-H Therapeutic Riding Prog. of Carroll Co. on “Soundtrack.”

The web site for the 4-H Therapeutic Riding Program of Carroll County is: http://www.trp4h.org/

20080317 Stacy Westfall’s 2006 Championship Run

Stacy Westfall’s 2006 Championship Run

Added: March 17, 2008

Hat Tip: Mrs. Owl

Anyone who has spent anytime around horses – this video is for you. Ms. Stacy Westfall performs complicated horseback riding and western reining bareback without any bridle – at the 2006 “All American Quarter Horse Congress.”

Simply amazing. Please enjoy.

Stacy Westfall 2006

http://youtube.com/watch?v=a-7v8Ck1crg

####

Related: For posts about the 4-H Therapeutic Riding Prog. of Carroll Co. on “Soundtrack.”

The web site for the 4-H Therapeutic Riding Program of Carroll County is: http://www.trp4h.org/

20080317 More information on Waste to Energy and the future of solid waste management in Frederick and Carroll Counties

20080317 More information on Waste to Energy and the future of solid waste management in Frederick and Carroll Counties

More information on Waste to Energy and the future of solid waste management in Frederick and Carroll Counties

March 17, 2008

Related: 20080317 Recent columns on the future of Solid Waste Management in Carroll and Frederick Counties

Recently a colleague who is opposed to a waste-to-energy solution for the future of solid waste management in Frederick and Carroll Counties e-mailed me some additional information that anyone interested in the current debate may very well want to take a moment and review… I have worked with this person on environmental issues for about 20 years and his view has been consistently responsible and thoughtful. See the information he forwarded me below.

Unfortunately some folks who are against building a waste-to energy facility have mistaken the debate to be about whether to build an incinerator or recycle.

To the best of my knowledge - - as a result of a number of in depth conversations with the decision makers, no one disagreed with me that we need to increase the recycling rates.

The key to my view is that I do not like waste-to-energy or landfilling but I am particularly and adamantly opposed to landfilling and need to provide the decision makers with an alternative until recycling takes care of our trouble with trash. Unfortunately, the only other viable option with what is not currently recycled – is waste-to-energy, which is far better option than landfilling.

In my Westminster Eagle column of March 5, 2008 [Westminster Eagle: Trouble with trash is nothing new, but the technology may be] I wrote:

On February 25, 1996 I was quoted in the paper: “… none of the (current) options of waste disposal are palatable…” Twelve years later I still feel the same way.

Every quality of life we enjoy today has an environmental consequence. There is no silver bullet with trash except 100 percent recycling.

[…]

In the late 1990s, most environmentalists, (including me,) were uncomfortable with burning trash. We were concerned that the benefits of waste-to-energy did not outweigh the potential deleterious impact on air quality.

However, cutting edge technological advances and research, especially out of Germany and the European Union, which have the strictest environmental regulations in the world, indicates that an undue air quality consequence is no longer the case.

In recent years, several EU countries including Germany have essentially banned landfilling in lieu of incineration and recycling.

In consideration of the new cutting edge waste-to-energy technologies, the ability to generate and sell electricity; and the idea of mining, mitigating, and removing all our existing landfills - waste-to-energy appears to be the best solution today, or at least the lesser of evils - as long as a revitalized initiative is concurrently adopted to increase our recycling rates.

The one thing we all can agree upon is that we need to continue to increase our recycling rates.

For me there is no question that the answer to the challenges of solid waste management is recycling.

It is only a matter of time until market forces and economics will prove recycling more cost effective that landfilling and waste-to-energy. As that develops we need to be compelling and persuasive and that simply is not going to happen if the proponents of recycling are condescending and unpleasant.

Nevertheless, once again - the challenge remains what do we do until we increase the recycling rates – what do we do with the remaining materials. I remain adamantly opposed to landfilling.

The manner in which I continue to feel is the best way to dispose of any remaining materials is co-composting. However, at this point that methodology is not currently economically feasible.

See below for the statement: ‘the fact remains that dumping garbage in a landfill site is far more environmentally destructive, damaging, and disgusting than an incinerator” in context…

In the first installment of my 2-part series in The Tentacle, I wrote: [The Tentacle: March 5, 2008 Making Trash Go Away – Part One ]

Meanwhile many of us have grave concerns that we can currently recycle our way out of our present predicament. In 1970, when I first began speaking out for recycling, the Central Maryland recycling rate was essentially zero.

Almost four decades later it is only around 30 percent. Doubling the recycling rate in five years, as has been suggested by incinerator foes, may be difficult in light of the fact that it has taken us four decades to get the rate to 30 percent.

Besides, interestingly enough, in Carroll County, on April 21, 1994, when a county “Waste-to-Energy Committee” rejected the idea of building an incinerator, the 23 members “instead recommend(ed) aggressive recycling programs… to extend the life of the” landfills in Carroll County.

Folks who believe that increasing recycling rates in the near future is the answer are dooming our community to another disastrous round of landfilling.

Until we can get the recycling rate to 100 percent, I wholeheartedly agree with what I wrote in the 2nd installment of my 2-part series in The Tentacle: [The Tentacle: March 6, 2008 Making Trash Go Away – Part 2 ]

In 2006, the waste-to-energy issue blew up in the Toronto Canada mayoral election; which prompted Christopher Hume to write in “The Hamilton Spectator”:

“It’s time for the opponents of incineration … to wake up and smell the garbage… Opponents should travel to Europe to see for themselves how a state-of-the-art incinerator works. One thing they would see immediately is that two-thirds of each plant is devoted to filters, scrubbers and the machinery of emission cleaning.”

Mr. Hume wrote: “And even if the criticisms by … opponents were justified, the fact remains that dumping garbage in a landfill site is far more environmentally destructive, damaging, and disgusting than an incinerator.”

Many of us who follow environmental issues closely could not agree more with Mr. Hume, who said that most of the objections to incineration “are based on information that’s thirty years out of date.”

If you have not had a chance to read my 2-part series in The Tentacle – it can be found here: http://www.thetentacle.com/author.cfm?MyAuthor=41

_____

Meanwhile, my colleague who is opposed to waste-to-energy forwarded me the following material to review:

"When we look at thermally treating a tonne of mixed waste in a modern incineration facility (in this case data is from the most efficient facilities currently operating in Europe), recycling that same waste would result in about 5.4, 1.6 and 2.6 times the energy savings than incinerating with electricity recovery; heat recovery; or combined electricity and heat recovery respectively."

"When we compare energy producing technology used in Ontario, incineration contributes the greatest amount of greenhouse gas emissions. Compared to coal fired technology, mass-burn incineration contributes about 33%, and gassification about 90% more GHG emissions per Kwh of electricity produced."

http://www.wrap.org.uk/wrap_corporate/about_wrap/environmental.html

Excerpts from the foreward to the report: "Environmental Benefits of Recycling: An international review of life cycle comparisons for key materials in the UK reycling sector." May 2006 (no old reports here!)

"The results are clear. Across the board, most studies show that recycling offers more environmental benefits and lower environmental impacts than other waste management options."

"Again, the results are clear and positive. The UK's current recycling of those materials saves between 10-15 million tonnes of CO2 equivalents per year compared to applying the current mix of landfill and incineration with energy recovery to the same materials. This is equivalent to about 10% of the annual CO2 emissions from the transport sector, and equates to taking 3.5 million cars off UK roads."

Incineration of Muncipal Solid Waste:

Understanding the Costs and Financial Risks
http://energy.pembina.org/pub/1448
(overall link to the four individual links posted below)

http://pubs.pembina.org/reports/Incineration_FS_Climate.pdf
http://pubs.pembina.org/reports/Incineration_FS_Pollution.pdf
http://pubs.pembina.org/reports/Incineration_FS_Energy.pdf
http://pubs.pembina.org/reports/Incineration_FS_Costs.pdf

From the Energy fact sheet:

"When we look at thermally treating a tonne of mixed waste in a modern incineration facility (in this case data is from the most efficient facilities currently operating in Europe), recycling that same waste would result in about 5.4, 1.6 and 2.6 times the energy savings than incinerating with electricity recovery; heat recovery; or combined electricity and heat recovery respectively."

"When we compare energy producing technology used in Ontario, incineration contributes the greatest amount of greenhouse gas emissions. Compared to coal fired technology, mass-burn incineration contributes about 33%, and gassification about 90% more GHG emissions per Kwh of electricity produced."

OTHERS

PDF of Friends of the Earth

"Greenhouse Gases and Waste Management Options"
http://www.foe.co.uk/resource/briefings/greenhouse_gases.pdf

PDF FOE "An Anti-Green Myth: Incineration Beats Recycling" http://www.foe.co.uk/resource/briefings/myth_incineration_recycling.pdf

Link to abstract of Jeffrey Morris' "Comparative LCAs for Curbside Recycling Versus Either Landfilling or Incineration with Energy Recovery"

http://www.springerlink.com/content/m423181w2hh036n4/

This from Earthjustice:

"In another critical case, the EPA attempted to avoid classifying thousands of waste burning installations as 'incinerators' so they could operate under less stringent regulations. But our lawyers convinced a Washington D.C. federal district court judge this was illegal, resulting in the strongest air pollution controls being placed on these highly toxic incinerators. Earthjustice also challenged the emissions limits the EPA adopted for brick and clay manufacturers, which are far below the law's requirement. Our victory in this case forced the EPA to impose the strict emissions standards set by the Clean Air Act on these facilities, which are spewing some of the worst pollution imaginable into our air."

Covanta was recently highlighed in Kiplinger's personal finance journal as one of: http://www.kiplinger.com/magazine/archives/2007/10/25green.html

25 Stocks to Invest in a Cleaner World

Not all greentech is speculative. We've identified solid companies that should profit big from addressing climate change and encouraging the use of alternative fuels. And you'll profit, too.

By David Landis and Andrew Tanzer From Kiplinger's Personal Finance magazine, October 2007

You don't have to be a tree hugger to believe that climate change and energy efficiency will be significant investing themes for years to come.

The National Petroleum Council, a U.S. government advisory body, says existing supplies of oil and natural gas may not meet soaring global demand over the next 25 years. A shortfall could be a windfall for companies that can supply cheaper alternatives to fossil fuels.

RELATED LINKS

Five Green Up-And-Comers

Green Investing is the Next Big Thing

Meanwhile, the focus on global warming promises to lead to greater regulation of greenhouse-gas emissions. Already, the European Union has instituted a quota for carbon emissions in response to the Kyoto Protocol, a global treaty that went into effect in 2005. The U.S. did not sign the treaty, but a number of states are acting on their own to limit these pollutants. In addition, Congress passed an energy bill in 2005 that offers subsidies for various new energy technologies, and it is considering another bill this year.

Clearly, these trends will produce stock-market winners and losers, but not all of them are obvious. Makers of wind turbines and biofuels will surely benefit. But so will makers of rail cars and auto-emissions controls.

We've sifted through the implications and put together the Kiplinger Green 25, a list of companies we believe will get a big boost from the growing focus on climate change and the move toward alternative fuels. Our picks vary widely in size, and four are based overseas. Some of the stocks may be expensive, and shares of some of the smaller companies may be volatile. But we think all will do well over the long term. In addition, check out our separate profiles of five up-and-comers -- small (with market values of less than $1 billion), more-speculative companies that someday could grow into green giants.

COVANTA

An alternative approach to power generation that is already commercially viable is to get it from garbage, and the leader in waste-to-energy facilities is Covanta. The company operates 32 plants that burn trash and municipal waste to make steam and heat for power generation. Trash haulers pay the Fairfield, N.J., company to take the waste off their hands. This form of renewable energy is especially competitive in places such as New England, where landfill space comes at a premium. Besides, while there may be shortages of oil and natural gas, it's hard to imagine that there will ever be a shortage of a superabundant source of renewable energy such as trash.[Although no new plants have been built in ten years, existing contracts obligate municipalities and counties to supply trash fuel inexpensively].

####

For more posts on Solid Waste Management on Soundtrack click on:

Environmentalism Solid Waste Management Waste to Energy

Environmentalism Solid Waste Management Recycling

Environmentalism Solid Waste Management

20080317 Recent columns on the future of Solid Waste Management in Carroll and Frederick Counties

Kevin Dayhoff writes from Westminster Maryland USA.

www.kevindayhoff.net

E-mail him at: kdayhoff AT carr.org or kevindayhoff AT gmail.com

His columns and articles appear in The Tentacle - www.thetentacle.com; Westminster Eagle Opinion; www.thewestminstereagle.com, Winchester Report and The Sunday Carroll Eagle – in the Sunday Carroll County section of the Baltimore Sun. Get Westminster Eagle RSS Feed

“When I stop working the rest of the day is posthumous. I'm only really alive when I'm writing.” Tennessee Williams

20080317 More information on Waste to Energy and the future of solid waste management in Frederick and Carroll Counties


20080317 CCBOC Agenda for the week of March 17 2008

Carroll County Board of Commissioners’

Agenda for the Week of March 17, 2008 ~ Revision 1

Please Note: This weekly agenda is subject to change. Please call 410-386-2043 to confirm a meeting you plan to attend. All meetings will be held at the Carroll County Office Building

Room 311. (Unless otherwise noted)

  • Indicates Outside Activities

Monday ~ March 17, 2008

11:30 a.m. Westminster Sr. Center Luncheon

Westminster, MD

Commissioner Zimmer

Tuesday ~ March 18, 2008

9:00 a.m. Planning & Zoning Commission

County Office Building ~ Room 003

Commissioner Gouge

5:00 p.m. Baltimore Museum of Art Board Meeting

Baltimore, MD

Commissioner Zimmer

Wednesday ~ March 19, 2008

4:00 p.m. Chamber of Commerce PM Connections

Westminster, MD

Commissioner Zimmer

6:00 p.m. Maryland Municipal League Chapter Dinner

Westminster, MD

Commissioner Zimmer

6:30 p.m. Carroll Community College Board of Trustees

Westminster, MD

Commissioner Gouge

Thursday ~ March 20, 2008

9:30 a.m. Board of County Commissioners Open Community Discussion

10:00 a.m. Board of County Commissioners Open Session

Draft of Comprehensive Alternative Solid Waste Management Plan

Mr. Steve Cassis ~ Solid Waste Analysis Group

Request Approval to Proceed on a Public Hearing

to Discuss Small Wind Energy Systems

Department of General Services ~ Mr. Ralph Green

Request Approval ~ Exercise the Option to Purchase

Rickell Property ~ Union Mills Reservoir Project

Department of Public Works ~ Mr. J. Michael Evans

Department of General Services ~ Mr. Ralph Green

Capital Budget Resolution C-10

2008 Neighborhood Overlays

Department of Management & Budget ~ Mr. Ted Zaleski

Department of Public Works ~ Mr. J. Michael Evans

Capital Budget Resolution C-11

2008 Low Volume Roads

Department of Management & Budget ~ Mr. Ted Zaleski

Department of Public Works ~ Mr. J. Michael Evans

Bid Approval

Hot Mix Asphalt Overlay of Five (5) Roads

Bureau of Purchasing ~ Mr. Rich Shelton

Department of Public Works ~ Mr. J. Michael Evans

Bid Approval

Addition and Renovation to Taneytown Library

Bureau of Purchasing ~ Mr. Rich Shelton

Department of General Services ~ Mr. Ralph Green

Bid Approval

Letter of Intent (14) 2008 Ford Crown Victoria Police Interceptors

Bureau of Purchasing ~ Mr. Rich Shelton

Department of General Services ~ Mr. Ralph Green

Thursday ~ March 20, 2008 ~ Continued

Bid Approval

Commissary Services for the Carroll County Detention Center

Bureau of Purchasing ~ Mr. Rich Shelton

Carroll County Detention Center ~ Mr. Steve Reynolds

Bid Approval

2008 Mitigation Projects

Bureau of Purchasing ~ Mr. Rich Shelton

Department of Planning ~ Mr. Steve Horn

Progress Report on the Greater Baltimore Region

Department of Economic Development ~ Mr. Larry Twele

Request Approval to Proceed to Public Hearing

Gateway Tax Credit

Department of Economic Development ~ Mr. Larry Twele

Chief of Staff Time ~ Mr. Steve Powell

Closed ~ Pending Litigation

Department of the County Attorney ~ Ms. Kimberly Millender

Administrative Session ~ Closed

Friday ~ March 21, 2008

HOLIDAY ~ GOOD FRIDAY ~ County Offices Closed

Saturday ~ March 22, 2008

Sunday ~ March 23, 2008

8:05 a.m. “The Commissioners’ Report” – WTTR

Commissioner Zimmer

CARROLL COUNTY a great place to live, a great place to work, a great place to play

20080317 Recent columns on the future of Solid Waste Management in Carroll and Frederick Counties


Recent columns on the future of Solid Waste Management in Carroll and Frederick Counties

March 17, 2008

Folks have asked me where they may find my columns on the current discussions in Frederick and Carroll Counties about the future approach to solid waste management – trash…

Recently I’ve written five columns on the future of solid waste management in Frederick and Carroll Counties. Two have appeared in The Tentacle. Two have appeared in the Westminster Eagle and one has appeared in The Sunday Carroll Eagle.

In the Westminster Eagle:

Trouble with trash is nothing new, but the technology may be

One of the difficult decisions currently facing our community is the trouble with trash.

When the last major decision occurred in 1996 and 1997, I was chair of the county's Environmental Affairs Advisory Board.

At that time, I was impressed with the combination of an aggressive recycling program... [Read full story]


Don't let 'wrap rage' leave you in stitches

It's been two months since Christmas and, with any luck and the power of prayer, perhaps you have been able to break free most of your family's gifts from the dreaded, adult proof, clamshell plastic "blister" packaging.

This oppression of over-packaging is not only a leading cause of holiday depre... [Read full story]

*****

In The Tentacle:

March 6, 2008

Making Trash Go Away – Part 2

Kevin E. Dayhoff

The February 26th joint meeting between Frederick and Carroll County over how to make trash go away came after two years of discussions and deliberations resulting from the Frederick County commissioners’ adoption of Resolution 06-05, on February 16, 2006.

March 5, 2008

Making Trash Go Away – Part One

Kevin E. Dayhoff

On February 26, the Frederick and Carroll County commissioners met to discuss how to make a combined 1,100 tons of trash-a-day go away.

In The Sunday Carroll Eagle:

20080309 The Sunday Carroll Eagle: “History will know us by our trash”

Sunday Carroll Eagle

History will know us by our trash

Sunday Carroll Eagle March 9, 2008 by Kevin Dayhoff

I cannot find my March 9th, 2008 Sunday Carroll Eagle column on the Westminster Eagle web site.

Pasted below, please find the column as it was written. It is my understanding that the column was altered for publication…

Ever since the first Earth Day on April 22, 1970, many of us has felt that the best management approach to solid waste was source reduction and recycling. It would take 18 long years to get the Maryland Recycling Act passed in 1988. That legislation required a recycling rate of 20 percent.

Twenty years later, getting the recycling rate increased is still illusive. In 1998, on the 10-year anniversary of the law, the Baltimore Sun ran a lengthy analysis in which the Maryland General Assembly member who spearheaded the recycling initiative, Montgomery County Sen. Brian Frosh, admitted “that recycling has been costlier than expected. His 1988 bill predicted significant cost savings…”

Read the rest of the column here: 20080309 The Sunday Carroll Eagle: “History will know us by our trash”

_____

For more posts on Solid Waste Management on Soundtrack click on:

Environmentalism Solid Waste Management Waste to Energy

Environmentalism Solid Waste Management Recycling

Environmentalism Solid Waste Management

####

20080317 Recent columns on the future of Solid Waste Management in Carroll and Frederick Counties

20080309 The Sunday Carroll Eagle: “History will know us by our trash”


Sunday Carroll Eagle

History will know us by our trash

Sunday Carroll Eagle March 9, 2008 by Kevin Dayhoff

Folks have asked me where they may find my March 9th, 2008 Sunday Carroll Eagle column... Well... I cannot find it on the Westminster Eagle web site...

Sooo... Pasted below, please find the column as it was written. It is my understanding that the column was altered for publication…

Ever since the first Earth Day on April 22, 1970, many of us has felt that the best management approach to solid waste was source reduction and recycling. It would take 18 long years to get the Maryland Recycling Act passed in 1988. That legislation required a recycling rate of 20 percent.

Twenty years later, getting the recycling rate increased is still illusive. In 1998, on the 10-year anniversary of the law, the Baltimore Sun ran a lengthy analysis in which the Maryland General Assembly member who spearheaded the recycling initiative, Montgomery County Sen. Brian Frosh, admitted “that recycling has been costlier than expected. His 1988 bill predicted significant cost savings…”

Later in the article, the $250 million cost of recycling 2.5 million tons was compared to the $83 million it would’ve cost to landfill it instead. The rest of the article went downhill from there.

Those of us who are opposed to landfilling were less than pleased. Four decades after the first Earth Day, the recycling rate in Carroll County is only around 30 percent.

Meanwhile, on May 29, 1997, Commissioners Donald Dell and Richard Yates voted to transfer the trash out of the county. Commissioner Ben Brown wanted - as many of us wanted - to build a co-composting facility.

This decision came after thirteen years of study which began in 1984 when Carroll, Frederick, and Howard County investigated “building a regional waste-to-energy incinerator,” according to an old press clipping. The commissioners opted instead to build another landfill.

In subsequent research, on a June 17, 1993 visit to the Lancaster County waste-to-energy plant, one of the fascinating components of the operation was mining an existing landfill.

After two years of research, on April 21, 1994, a second “Waste-to-Energy Committee” rejected building an incinerator. The 23 members “instead recommend(ed) aggressive recycling programs… to extend the life” of the landfills.

That was followed on April 24, 1996, when Mike Evans, the Carroll County director of public works first warned the Environmental Affairs Advisory Board (EAAB) that Northern Landfill, which began operations in December 1988 was going to run out of capacity in 15 to 20 years. It takes 10 years to site locate, permit and build a landfill.

The EAAB, for which I was chair at the time, exhausting investigated increasing our recycling rate, co-composting, landfilling, waste-to-energy and charging for trash pickup by weight. The research involved a number of field trips, including a trip to the co-composting facility in Sevierville, TN.

Nevertheless, in spite of our best efforts, our investigation could not justify the economic feasibility of co-composting or convince us that an incinerator would not cause more problems than it solved.

Fast forward to today and the European Union has the strictest environmental regulations in the world. In several EU countries, landfilling has been discontinued in lieu of a waste-to-energy and recycling interactive waste management.

It was noted in a German Federal Ministry for the Environment study released in September 2005: “In the eighties of the previous century, waste incineration plants came to be the symbol of environmental contamination… Today, more than half of all household waste (55%) is recycled… Since June 1, 2005, untreated waste is no longer landfilled. And because of stringent regulations waste incineration plants are no longer significant in terms of emissions of dioxins, dust, and heavy metals…”

Much of the opposition to waste-to-energy these days is based on information that is decades out of date.

Meanwhile many of us are concerned that we cannot increase our recycling rate quickly enough to avoid the costly and environmentally suspect method of hauling our trash to Virginia and throwing it in a hole.

Nevertheless, hopefully Northern Landfill is the last trash dump in the county’s history.

In consideration of the ability to generate and sell electricity and the opportunity to mine all our existing landfills and restore them to a productive use - -waste-to-energy appears to be today’s worthiest trash management option.

One of the earliest references to a landfill in Carroll County is when the Bark Hill landfill began operations in 1892 near Uniontown. The county it over in 1972 and closed it in 1981.

Throughout history there have been around 30 trash disposal sites in Carroll County. How many can you name? What memories do you have of getting rid of trash years ago? How many folks remember one of the first trash hauling companies in Carroll County, G. L. Cubbage?

E-mail me your memories and we’ll throw your name in a hat and draw one for a famous Sunday Carroll Eagle coffee mug. You can use it instead of a throwaway cup and avoid contributing to the trouble with trash.

When Kevin Dayhoff is not recycling, he can be reached at: kdayhoff at carr.org

####

Footnote:

The Sunday Carroll Eagle: October 28, 2007 - On October 28th, 2007 the publication for which I write, The Westminster Eagle and The Eldersburg Eagle, (which is published by Patuxent Newspapers and owned by Baltimore Sun); took over the Carroll County section of the Baltimore Sun.

“The Sunday Carroll Eagle ” is inserted into the newspaper for distribution in Carroll County. For more information, please contact:

Mr. Jim Joyner, Editor, The Westminster Eagle

121 East Main Street

Westminster, MD 21157

(410) 386-0334 ext. 5004

Jjoyner AT Patuxent DOT com

For more posts on “Soundtrack” click on: Sunday Carroll Eagle

http://kevindayhoff.blogspot.com/search/label/Sunday%20Carroll%20Eagle

20071028 The Sunday Carroll Eagle introduction

http://kevindayhoff.blogspot.com/2007/10/20071028-sunday-carroll-eagle.html

Also see: Monday, October 22, 2007: 20071021 Baltimore Sun: “To our readers”

http://kevindayhoff.blogspot.com/2007/10/20071021-baltimore-sun-to-our-readers.html

20080317 This week in The Tentacle

This week in The Tentacle

Monday, March 17, 2008

General Assembly Journal 2008 – Volume 4

Richard B. Weldon Jr.

Less than four weeks to go, and some of the biggest battles remain to be fought. Seems odd, but it’s completely natural in Annapolis.


Political Pornography

Steven R. Berryman

Just imagine that – in 10 years or so – you will be reminding yourself of just where you were and what you were doing when Gov. Eliot Spitzer (D., N.Y.) abruptly resigned his sacred office. Not!


Friday, March 14, 2008

Politics of Desperation

Roy Meachum

Geraldine Ferraro's withdrawal from the Clinton campaign drowned in the flood of news generated by the New York governor's resignation. Elliot Spitzer accepted the inevitable. The lady was altogether another case.


Politics as Usual – Sadly

Patricia A. Kelly

My life as a Republican was altered forever on the day the United States Senate attempted to circumvent the ruling of the state of Florida regarding Terry Schiavo. Bill Frist, a Tennessee senator, and cardio-thoracic surgeon said that, in his opinion from viewing a four year old videotape, there were signs of life in Terry, in spite of multiple court rulings that she was in a persistent vegetative state.


Thursday, March 13, 2008

Character Counts…

Chris Cavey

The race to become the 44th President of the United States has boiled down to three individuals, two Democrat and one Republican. There are some similarities, such as all three are members of the human race and each have the letters a, c and o in their name. They are also each members of the U.S. Senate, however only one passes underwriting standards.


“Sing A Song Of Sixpence…”

Joan McIntyre

Perceptions.................. what are they and how do they develop?

My perception is that our government spends too much of our money.


Wednesday, March 12, 2008

“Power to Tax, Not Power to Destroy…”

Kevin E. Dayhoff

…With all apologies to Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr.; but today is being dubbed as “tax day” in the Maryland General Assembly.


Gilgamesh and such…

Tom McLaughlin

I have tried many different and unique ways to meet ladies of quality and one of them is to join poetry groups. My logic is that warm, sensitive and intelligent women would be attracted to these gatherings and I would woo them with my rhymes.


Tuesday, March 11, 2008

Commissioners' No Common Sense

Roy Meachum

Sweeping aside the short-neck, no-growth mentality promoted chiefly by newcomers, will someone please explain why Frederick's Board of County Commissioners insisted on penalizing taxpayers again by their erratic logic?


Monday, March 10, 2008

Casa de Illegals

Steven R. Berryman

Historians contend that “Nero fiddled while Rome burned.” While The Maryland General Assembly is allowing time for debate on key issues such as the protection for “Doo-Wop” singers against copyright infringement, consequential issues like the current illegal immigration disaster fall by the wayside. Do we really want to hold a nationally infamous title as a “Sanctuary State?”

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March 6, 2008

Making Trash Go Away – Part 2

Kevin E. Dayhoff

The February 26th joint meeting between Frederick and Carroll County over how to make trash go away came after two years of discussions and deliberations resulting from the Frederick County commissioners’ adoption of Resolution 06-05, on February 16, 2006.

March 5, 2008

Making Trash Go Away – Part One

Kevin E. Dayhoff

On February 26, the Frederick and Carroll County commissioners met to discuss how to make a combined 1,100 tons of trash-a-day go away.