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# tt post mar 24 2016

Regarding JoeyGee's link: http://m.toledoblade.com/local/2016/03/24/Toledo-s-landfill-is-reaching-capacity-unless-the-city-acts.html

Holy hell. This is what we mean by Detroitification.

I refuse to believe the city's claim. It's a lie, in my opinion. A huge, fear-mongering-based lie.

People, one reason for the city implementing the illegal refuse fee tax last decade was because the city claimed that we needed to extend the lifespan of our landfill.

The city promised that the refuse fee would drop to zero for people who recycled. This was to encourage more recycling, which would extend the lifespan of the landfill.

All lies. More people recycled, which allegedly was a good thing. But the city did not give recyclers a discount because the city needed the money.

The refuse fee sold as something altruistic, but it was always revenue stream for the city to use however it wanted.

Lies.

Blade stories:

  • March 2007 when the refuse fee was first implemented:
The fee is aimed at subsidizing the $16 million annual expense of unlimited weekly trash pickup and dumping in the city-owned landfill in North Toledo.

Yeah right. We already paid taxes to support those functions.

A Toledo councilman wants to charge residents who don't recycle a $10 monthly trash fee. The cost for those who do recycle at the curb? Nothing.

Councilman D. Michael Collins, author of the proposed ordinance, said the incentive will increase recycling and thereby extend the life of the city's landfill on Hoffman Road.

"If 60 percent of the households recycle, that equates to 18,000 tons of solid waste a year," Mr. Collins said.

The landfill has an expected remaining life of about 27 years. Building a new landfill would cost about $80 million.

That was 2008. 27 years. That equals 2035.

From today's March 2016 story, the city claims that the landfill has a lifespan of 6.7 years. That's about 2023.

Despite the dramatic increase in recycling over the past nine years, our landfill lost about 12 years of life.

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