11 NW Connecticut Towns Seek Trash Solution

Eleven Northwest Hills Council of Governments towns, including Norfolk, are trying to get money to buy a new municipal solid waste (MSW) distribution center.

At this week’s Board of Finance meeting, Matt Riiska briefly outlined the efforts being made by NWCHCOG to solve the looming problem of solid municipal waste disposal. The town currently contracts with the MIRA Dissolution Authority to take its MSW and recyclables. The town ships about 700 tons of MSW, including 170 tons of recyclables, at a cost of $136 a ton, for a total of about $95,000 a year.

The state has decommissioned the MIRA burn plant, and solid waste is shipped to the Midwest. MIRA has $55 million to $60 million designated for cleaning up its site and Riiska said the towns are trying to get some of that money to buy a new distribution center in Torrington.

Alternatively, the town could contract with another vendor to collect the materials, including continuing with its current hauler, USA Waste & Recycling. Riiska said the cost to contract with a hauler would initially be somewhat lower but would slowly creep up over two years to be “almost a wash.”

“The towns want to find another option,” he said. “At the end of five years, the cost for MSW would go up to $142 a ton, and an additional $75 a ton for recyclables, for a total of $120,000 annually. So, you can see it is a serious thing to look at. All the towns are in the same boat and trying to figure it out.”

Kathryn Boughton

View all News