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November 15, 2002
New compactor to crush
citys garbage problem
Embers still smouldering
at the dump
City officials
hope Iqaluits new compacting equipment will soon end burning at the landfill.
(PHOTO BY MIRIAM HILL)
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MIRIAM
HILL
The burning of trash, which
has gone on at the citys landfill site "forever" will soon come
to an end, Iqaluit Mayor John Matthews said last week.
Officials held a press
conference at the dump on Nov. 7 to show off their new compactor a piece
of heavy equipment that looks like a tractor with big metal spikes on its wheels.
It was to be put into action starting Nov. 10.
Along with a plastic and
metal recycling program launched last year, the compactor is councils
answer to residents concerns about smoke from the landfill, which wafts
into the city and not only smells bad, but causes respiratory problems as well.
The group Citizens for
a Clean Iqaluit has been pressuring the citys administration to follow
regulations set out in its municipal water licence, which required Iqaluit to
stop burning plastics by June 1, 2001. The water licence, issued by the Nunavut
Water Board, also stated that only food waste, paper, cardboard and untreated
wood could be burned.
However, the city was facing
a major labour dispute when the June 1 deadline passed and it didnt have
the capacity or time to deal with water board regulations.
That summer, resident Paul
Crowley even took the city to court to get an injunction against the open-air
burning, but the judge ruled Crowley failed to offer concrete proof the burning
was causing irreparable harm to residents health.
Stu Kennedy, chair of the
citys solid-waste management committee, said city council has looked into
a variety of options in the past two years, including purchasing an incinerator,
but it decided the cost was prohibitive and there were too many risks involved.
About $500,000 later, the
city has a compactor and all the equipment needed to crush garbage so it takes
up less space, and bury it at the site, extending the life of the landfill six
to seven years.
The loader cost about $150,000
and the compactor cost $250,000, financed over three years to amount to $300,000,
Matthew Hough, the citys director of engineering, explained. A large structure
to house the equipment, an office, and a place for recyclables to be separated
at the dump cost an additional $100,000.
"[The compactor] will
run every day for three to four hours," landfill foreman Darcy Reist said.
"Itll compact garbage into the ground as soon as it comes in."
The loader will move dirt over the garbage immediately to keep gulls and ravens
away.
The compactor arrived on
this years sealift, but blew a fuel-injection nozzle when it came off
the boat. It was repaired, Hough said, and other upgrades that would have been
required in a year were done at that time, delaying the start of compacting.
Burning ended in late October
so that the structure to house the equipment could be built. However, while
Reist prepared to give a demonstration of the compactors abilities, a
small fire smouldered in a pile of garbage.
"We do have to get
rid of some of the waste that has been built up," Hough said. "The
objective, though, is to burn as little as possible from now on."
The compactor, he said,
is part of the short-term phase for the city, which will help make the trash
fit into a smaller space. The next phase will entail re-evaluating the landfill
site to make sure it can operate for a further six to seven years.
As part of a long-term
phase, a southern consulting firm came to Iqaluit and ripped open garbage bags
to do a waste audit and project how trash will be produced here for the next
20 years. Hough said the report will be made public within a few weeks and will
give the city a more accurate idea of what its waste management plan should
prepare for.
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