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Last night the Kodiak Island
Borough Assembly met for a work session and discussed waste management within
the borough. Nick Szabo is the chair of the Solid Waste Advisory Board and
spoke about the need for more reuse and recycling within the community. He said
those will be the borough’s best defense against growing quantities of solid
waste, but more education and outreach is needed within the community. Szabo
said Threshold Recycling Services has an outreach program in place, and a good
option for the borough would be to jump on board with those efforts. He
suggested contributing about $6,000 to Threshold to help with their current
outreach efforts, and implement new ones. Borough Mayor Jerome Selby said
borough staff will definitely look into the financial contribution, but they
would need to know exactly what the money would be used for before it was
allocated.
Another
topic Szabo touched on was the idea of solid waste collection stations in
Kodiak. He said the borough has discussed these before, but nothing has been
done.
-- (Solid Waste 1 :48 “The present situation is not the … have
them located.”)
Selby
said he wasn’t sure if now was the best time to look at the collection stations
in all of Kodiak, but maybe start with one particular area.
-- (Solid Waste 2 :46 “Personally
I think we have ... from my perspective.”)
Assemblywoman
Louise Stutes said she didn’t feel comfortable limiting the solid waste
advisory board, or SWAB, and felt the issue should be addressed for all areas
of Kodiak.
-- (Solid Waste 3 :28 “To limit SWAB and say now … saying
just the flats.”)
A
number of advisory board members attended last night’s work session, one being
Rob Baer (Bear). While new to the board, Baer referenced borough goals from
years past and questioned the reality of their fruition if waste management and
collection does not change.
-- (Solid Waste 4 :46 “I’m new to the SWAB, just … needs
to happen.”)
No
formal decisions were made during the meeting, but the assembly did give the
nod for the advisory board to start researching different collection stations
and draw up some tentative plans for what they might look like in Kodiak. All
agreed with Baer in that a change in procedure does need to occur to help
minimize solid waste and encourage reuse and recycling.
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