HomeMy WebLinkAbout05-10-18 EMC Final Minutes
TOMPKINS COUNTY
ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT COUNCIL
121 East Court Street Ithaca, New York 14850
Telephone (607) 274-5560
http://www.tompkinscountyny.gov/emc
EMC Final Minutes 1
May 10, 2018 4:00 p.m. 2
Ithaca ReUse Center (214 Elmira Road), Ithaca, NY 3
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Attendance 5
Member Seat Member Seat
Steve Bissen E Town of Dryden Amanda Champion P Legislative Liaison
Maureen Bolton P Town of Enfield Susan Allen-Gil P Associate Member
Cait Darfler P Town of Ulysses Karen Edelstein A Associate Member
John Dennis A Village of Lansing Bill Evans E Associate Member
Brian Eden P Village of Cayuga Heights Anna Kelles A Associate Member
Pegi Ficken E Town of Groton Dooley Kiefer E Associate Member
Michelle Henry P Town of Newfield Dan Klein P Associate Member
Anne Klingensmith P Town of Danby Jose Lozano P Associate Member
James Knighton E At-Large Osamu Tsuda A Associate Member
Vladimir Micic P Town of Ithaca David Weinstein A Associate Member
Steve Nicholson E Town of Caroline Robert Wesley A Associate Member
Susan Riley P At-Large Roger Yonkin A Associate Member
Tom Shelley P City of Ithaca Scott Doyle P EMC Coordinator
Genny Shipley P At-Large Kristin McCarthy P County Staff
Don Smith P At-Large
Ron Syzmanski E Village of Freeville
Regi Teasley A At-Large
Guests – Barbara Eckstrom Tompkins County Department of Recycling and Materials 6
Management; Diane Cohen, Finger Lakes ReUse; Mike Merchant 7
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Call to Order – Chair Brian Eden called the meeting to order at 4:03 p.m. 9
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Agenda Review/Changes – None 11
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Approval of the Minutes – A motion was made by Tom Shelley, seconded by Anne 13
Klingensmith, to approve the April 12, 2018, minutes. Motion carried. 14
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TC County Recycling and Materials Management – Barbara Eckstrom, director 17
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• Barb Eckstrom, director of the County’s Recycling and Materials Management 19
Department, spoke about the Department’s history, current activities, and 20
forthcoming 10-year Solid Waste Management and Diversion Plan. The plan is being 21
developed completely in-house with no consultants, and a draft will probably be 22
issued this August for review by the community and the Legislature. 23
• Barb described her professional background, which once upon a time included serving 24
as EMC coordinator for the County. She also talked about the chaos/anarchy of the early 25
days of recycling in our area and legislators like Stu Stein and Barbara Mink, who 26
advocated for sustainable waste management when it was still extremely unpopular. 27
• Much effort was undertaken to keep recycling out of the domain of garbage haulers, and 28
the decision was made to create a County recycling and waste management building 29
instead. In Barb’s opinion, the best decision the County made was not to build a local 30
landfill. Instead, Stu and Barbara helped to draft policy to use a regional landfill. 31
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Here are a few further details from her talk: 33
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• Recycling compliance in Tompkins County averages about 85%. The Department makes 35
a concerted effort to hold public outreach events to educate people. A new section will 36
be added to their website this summer. Their ReBusiness Partners program helps 37
businesses, schools, and organizations to reduce, reuse, recycle, and rebuy. Cayuga 38
Medical Center is one such partner. 39
• The Waste Diversion program started about seven years ago to keep scrap metal and 40
special recyclables out of the waste stream. Tompkins County pays Finger Lakes ReUse 41
to pull out valuable materials. They also have an incentive program to encourage 42
universities and other haulers to come for high-value items. That recycling revenue helps 43
with other costs. 44
• There are 13 food scraps collection sites throughout the County. They tried a curbside 45
pilot but no organization wanted to pick up the cost for the service. 46
• With funds from a $400,000 Climate Smart Community Grant, Recycling and Materials 47
Management will be releasing a bid for construction of a food waste transfer station for 48
scraps from stores, universities, etc. 49
• The Department works extensively with Cooperative Extension’s Compost education 50
program. They offer a Borrow-a-Bin service for events and have a mobile food scraps 51
vehicle. One should be opening in Newfield this summer. In addition, the County offers 52
subsidies to companies like Wegmans to compost, making it a more affordable than 53
paying to haul away food waste. 54
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Ithaca ReUse Center: Expansion Project Update – Diane Cohen, executive director 56
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• Diane Cohen, who heads up Finger Lakes ReUse, spoke to the group about the 58
organization’s background and plans for the future, in particular the expansion of the 59
Ithaca ReUse Center on Elmira Road. Phase I of the expansion, which involves 60
construction of an unconditioned 7,500-square-foot storage space, is slated for the 61
summer of 2018. Phase II, which is more ambitious and includes a 4-story addition to 62
the current building, is scheduled for 2019. For the latter, Finger Lakes ReUse is 63
exploring possible collaborations with housing partners to defray costs and support 64
project feasibility. 65
• The organization’s stated mission is to enhance the community, economy, and 66
environment through reuse. Diane shared some of ReUse’s initiatives that work toward 67
fulfilling that mandate, including the ReSet Job Skills training program, deconstruction 68
and salvage services, eCenter Computer Refurbishing program, and the Ithaca Fixers 69
Collective. 70
• One of many standout statistics from Diane’s talk was that it costs $85 per ton to dispose 71
of waste in Tompkins County, yet it is possible to earn $2,000 per ton through reuse. 72
• There was time for a few questions from the members, but the Council hopes to invite 73
Diane back for a more in-depth discussion. Diane’s PowerPoint presentation is available 74
on the EMC website. 75
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Committee Reports 77
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Climate Adaptation: Brian Eden 79
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The Committee is working on the Flooding Hazard and Risk Survey Report. They hope to share 81
a draft with everyone prior to the next meeting. 82
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Environmental Review: Brian Eden 84
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• Some residents of Nate’s Floral Estates have reported experiencing health problems. 86
The Committee would like to ask residents to fill out a health questionnaire to explore 87
whether a connection exists between the reported illnesses and Nate’s location. (It was 88
built on top of a former landfill.) However, members have been unable to get on the 89
privately owned property to inquire. Results from the NYSDEC’s soil and water testing at 90
Nates are not yet available for evaluation. 91
• The remediation plan for the Chain Works District was recently changed to “expedited.” 92
A public information meeting has been scheduled by the NYSDEC for June 7, 5:00- 93
7:00pm, at South Hill Elementary. 94
• The Court of Appeals in Albany ruled that the NYSDEC’s general permit for CAFO 95
pollution control does not fully comply with the federal Clean Water Act. 96
• The Article 78 hearing against Cargill will be heard by the Tompkins County Supreme 97
Court tomorrow morning (May 11th). 98
• The ERC is working with members of the Lansing Rod & Gun Club to find an amicable 99
way to get them to stop using lead shot on the property. 100
• At a recent TCCPI meeting, heating and cooling of the planned North Campus 101
dormitories came up as a topic of discussion. Brian asked Susan Riley if they could 102
confer about scheduling a conversation between Cornell and other community 103
stakeholders concerned with sustainable development. 104
• There is a bill in the NYS Legislature to further regulate solid waste incinerators in New 105
York State. 106
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Unique Natural Areas: Steve Nicholson 108
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• The Committee will meet Monday (May 14th). Members hope to plan the new boundary 110
revisions for Batch 5 in their multiple year review process. 111
• Contracts for the consultants have been finalized. 112
• Proposed construction of the Freese Road bridge in Varna could possibly affect a UNA in 113
the area. 114
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Waste Reduction: Tom Shelley 116
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• Members fine-tuned the Committee’s mission statement and discussed possible short- 118
and long-term goals. 119
• Long-term goals included reducing the use of plastic products in general, as well as food 120
and fabric waste, and promoting the reuse/recycling of fabrics. Emerging contaminants 121
of concern were discussed as well. 122
• The first short-term goal is to research existing bans on single-use shopping bags and 123
develop a resolution to go to the Legislature by the end of the year. 124
• EMC table at Earth Day celebration had quite a few visitors. Brian thanked Maureen 125
Bolton, Tom Shelley, and Cait Darfler for volunteering their time to staff it. 126
127
Water Resources Council Liaison: Michelle Henry 128
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• Postdoctoral fellow Shannan Sweet gave a presentation on her work examining the 130
long-term effects on agriculture and water resources from the 2016 drought in New York 131
State. Shannan works in the NatureNet program under soil ecologist David Wolfe at 132
Cornell. 133
• The study took a three-pronged perspective: historical data, surveys and interviews with 134
farmers, and agricultural crop irrigation modeling. Low snowpack and low streamflow led 135
to drought. 136
Executive: Brian Eden 137
• Today (May 10th) marks the 47th birthday of the Tompkins County EMC. 138
• The Climate Solutions Summit takes place Saturday, May 19th, in Syracuse. 139
• Volunteers are needed to help carpool guests to the O.D. von Engeln Preserve for the 140
May 12th UNA field trip. 141
• Susan Riley reported that Cornell is hosting its public forum on the Earth Source Heat 142
geothermal program at The Space at GreenStar on May 17th at 5:30 pm. 143
Staff Report – Scott Doyle 144
145
• He and Kristin McCarthy will coordinate with Brian on revising and compiling the new 146
member packet. 147
• Scott distributed the EMC Communication Guidelines to everyone as a refresher on the 148
Council’s policy. 149
150
Authorization for Standing Committee Status: Waste Reduction 151
• Michelle Henry moved to authorize formation of the Waste Reduction Standing 152
Committee. Cait Darfler seconded the motion, which was approved unanimously by the 153
members present. 154
• On Susan Allen-Gil’s suggestion, Tom Shelley read aloud the Committee’s mission 155
statement. 156
157
Cayuga Lake HABs Plan Update 158
• The Cayuga Lake Watershed Network has new CSLAP sites; they will also be 159
monitoring for emerging contaminants, such as microplastics. 160
• They still need volunteers to take water samples on the north end of the lake. 161
• The hydrilla website is being updated. 162
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Bylaws Revision Discussion 164
• No report. Dooley Kiefer wasn’t feeling well and couldn’t attend the meeting. 165
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Municipal Reports and Member Announcements 167
• Michelle relayed that construction of the Millard Hill solar project in Newfield is 168
under way. 169
• The Dryden Solar Project was challenged by another Article 78 lawsuit against 170
the Town Planning Board last week; Brian attended. 171
• Vlad Micic said two new sidewalks, one along Danby Road from the Ithaca City 172
line to Ithaca College, and another on Trumansburg Road, will be paved 173
sometime in the next year. 174
• Don Smith is taking a class on mapping invasive species and wondered which 175
committee could benefit from that knowledge. Members suggested he check out 176
either the UNA or Environmental Review Committee. Scott recommended that he 177
attend a meeting of each to determine which is more to his liking. 178
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Adjournment 180
Action: Chair Brian Eden adjourned the meeting at 6:00 p.m. 181
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These draft minutes will be formally considered by the EMC at its next monthly meeting, and 183
corrections or notations will be incorporated at that time. 184
Prepared by Kristin McCarthy, Tompkins County Planning and Sustainability Department. 185
Approved by EMC: 06/14/2018. 186
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