Sludge Watch ==> Residents in British Columbia worried about even stinker sludge compost site
Maureen Reilly
maureen.reilly at sympatico.ca
Sun Apr 13 13:08:07 EDT 2008
British Columbia, Canada
Neighbours to block compost plant
By Jeff Nagel - Surrey North Delta Leader - April 13, 2008
Delta is standing firm against a proposed new composting plant in east
Ladner that residents fear will stink up their already odour-plagued
neighbourhood.
Dozens of residents appeared before Delta council Monday to oppose the plan
by Westcoast Instant Lawns to add a second composting site at its existing
operation at 4295 72 St.
Subsidiary Enviro-Smart Organics Ltd. would compost 100,000 tonnes of
organic material per year
Neighbours have complained since 2003 about the stench coming from the
existing plant and Delta has pressed for restrictions to limit its
operation.
The company upgraded the site by building a covered structure to house the
composting operation after fresh complaints last year.
Last summer people were gagging, they werent able to eat and had to stay
indoors, Coun. Jeannie Kanakos said.
Council voted to oppose the plan, but that doesnt amount to a full veto
The proposal would need a compost facility licence from Metro Vancouver.
If granted, it would give the operators the ability to compost a wide range
of material, including food waste, manure, sewage sludge, brewery waste,
fish waste, poultry carcasses and milk processing waste.
Whats that going to smell like? asked Kanakos. Thats really bad stuff.
Staff also warned higher volume and different source material may increase
the potential for obnoxious odours.
Westcoast Instant Lawns president Daryl Goodwin said in a letter to council
he has no intention to compost special wastes like animal carcasses and
septic tank sludge.
Delta is also calling on the environment ministry, Agricultural Land
Commission and Metro Vancouver air quality division to audit the existing
composting plant to ensure it complies with regulations.
The 100,000 tonne capacity sought by Enviro-Smart far surpasses the 6,000
tonnes of yard waste collected from all Delta residents each year and is
equivalent to five times the garbage picked up in all of Delta.
A compost facility of more than 20,000 tonnes needs a provincial
environmental impact study, Delta staff noted, but the proponents have not
yet indicated whether one will be conducted.
jnagel at surreyleader.com
Find this article at:
http://www.bclocalnews.com/surrey_area/surreyleader/news/17565984.html
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