
The Town Board of Brookhaven, New York, has awarded a contract that will allow it to expand and extend the life of its landfill.
Brookhaven, located in Suffolk County on Long Island, accepts construction and demolition (C&D) debris at the landfill and also stores the ash from its municipal solid waste (MSW) incinerator there.
According to an online report by the Long Island-based newspaper Newsday, the contract, announced at a meeting in early February 2016, is worth $10 million and has been awarded to Gibson & Cushman Contracting of Port Jefferson, New York.
As described by the Town’s Department of Waste Management, collected MSW is taken to a Covanta facility in Nassau County described as “a modern incinerator equipped with state-of-the-art pollution control devices,” and “electricity is generated from the energy contained in the garbage (waste-to-energy incineration).”
The department continues, “In return, the Town accepts the incinerator ash generated by the plant and landfills it.”
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SENNEBOGEN 340G telehandler improves the view in Macon County, NC
An elevated cab is one of several features improving operational efficiency at the Macon County Solid Waste Management agency in North Carolina. When it comes to waste management, efficiency, safety and reliability are priorities driving decisions from day one, according to staff members of the Macon County Solid Waste Management Department in western North Carolina. The agency operates a recycling plant in a facility originally designed to bale incoming materials. More recently, the building has undergone significant transformations centered around one machine: a SENNEBOGEN telehandler (telescopic handler).
Sponsored Content
SENNEBOGEN 340G telehandler improves the view in Macon County, NC
An elevated cab is one of several features improving operational efficiency at the Macon County Solid Waste Management agency in North Carolina. When it comes to waste management, efficiency, safety and reliability are priorities driving decisions from day one, according to staff members of the Macon County Solid Waste Management Department in western North Carolina. The agency operates a recycling plant in a facility originally designed to bale incoming materials. More recently, the building has undergone significant transformations centered around one machine: a SENNEBOGEN telehandler (telescopic handler).
Also still accepted at the Brookhaven Landfill, according to the department, are “unrecyclable and unrecovered materials from [the] construction and demolition of buildings” plus “a small quantity of rejected materials and residues from the Materials Recycling Facility.”
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