The Connecticut Resources Recovery Authority and FCR, Inc., a subsidiary of Casella Waste Systems, Inc., unveiled plans to build a new regional recycling center (RRC).
CRRA also announced that starting this October, the 70 cities and towns served by its Mid-Connecticut Project will be able to recycle more recyclable commodities.
Items that will be included are the following: junk mail, catalogues, magazines, office paper and other mixed paper. The project already accepts No. 1 and No. 2 plastics, aluminum and steel cans, glass containers, corrugated cardboard and newspaper.
When the new center is operational, residents of the 70 towns will also be able to recycle boxboard, aerosol cans and oversized plastic and metal containers such as No. 10 steel cans.
Under terms of the agreement between CRRA and FCR, FCR will build the new RRC in Hartford, investing $6 million in capital improvements and processing equipment. Sales of commodities delivered to the new RRC are expected to net CRRA about $2.7 million per year. Historically, the net cost of recycling has been subsidized by the trash disposal fee, which currently is $70 per ton.
The new setup will help CRRA remain the only agency of its kind in the nation that does not
charge a separate fee for recycling.
“This is good news for the people of our towns in so many ways,” said Thomas D. Kirk, CRRA president. “First, more recycling means less trash. Second, FCR has agreed to finance construction of the new facility, so there will be no cost to the ratepayers. Third, the revenue from our new recycling program will help contain the cost of disposing of trash.”
“We are thrilled that CRRA has chosen us as their partner for the next 10 years,” said James Bohlig, president and COO of Casella Waste Systems. “Our whole company is excited about the prospects of installing one of the most technologically advanced materials recycling facilities (MRFs) in the United States right here in Hartford. We are comfortable that our experience in operating state-of-the-art MRFs, managing complex retrofits, coupled with our proven record of running safe and clean MRF operations should foster a sustainable business model that will provide the residents of Connecticut with positive, predictable revenue streams, well into the future."
The new facility will replace two existing processing centers, one for containers and one for paper, and will be able to process 160,000 tons of recyclables per year. Currently, Mid-Connecticut Project towns deliver about 78,000 tons of recyclables per year.
The new facility will be built on the site of the current container recycling facility. Current plans call for the project to be completed by 2007. Design work and equipment procurement, as well as a modification to CRRA’s operating permit granted by the Connecticut Department of Environmental Protection, must be completed before construction can begin. CRRA expects that recyclable containers will have to be diverted to other processing facilities for about three months during construction of the new facility.
Under terms of the agreement with FCR, CRRA will own the site on which the building is located and will have the option to purchase the facility from FCR after 10 years. The facility and its processing systems are being designed for a minimum life span of 15 years.
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