
Garbage Imperialism Must Stop
Let's Force Cities to Keep Wastes in Their Own Backyards
By David Morris
Published in the Los Angeles Times, May 18, 1987
(Copyright, The Times Mirror Company; Los Angeles Times 1987, all Rights reserved)
The garbage wars have begun. The
well-publicized odyssey of the wandering garbage barge from Islip,
Long Island in New York, is but the latest in a series of skirmishes
that threaten the very political fabric of this country.
We live in an era of garbage imperialism.
Washington tries to barge its sludge to Haiti. (Haiti declines
to be dumped on, even by the capital of the free world.) San Francisco
tries to toss its trash over the mountains in Yolo County. (The
county refuses.) Philadelphia dumps its incinerator ash in Ohio,
but local opposition forces the city to terminate that arrangement.
This summer the City of Brotherly Love expects to start sending
its ash to Panama.
The national waste disposal game
looks more and more like a deadly version of musical chairs. Essex
County, N.J., wants to send 4,000 50-gallon drums of radium-contaminated
soil to Nevada. Gov. Richard H. Bryan angrily declared that his
state is "not going to be a nuclear dumping ground for the country."
Meanwhile, a federal judge in
Boston holds that city liable for polluting Boston Harbor with
70 tons of sludge a day. The Massachusetts Water Resource Authority
applies for a permit to dispose of its highly toxic sludge off
the coast of New Jersey. Rep. James J. Florio (D-N.J.) ironically
echoes Gov. Bryan, arguing that his state's coastline should not
become "the dumping ground for every state in the region."
Our highways are becoming clogged
with vehicles carrying increasingly deadly wastes. The Congressional
Office of Technology Assessment estimates that more than 1.5 billion
tons of hazardous wastes are moved each year, more than half by
truck. Last fall rail cars began hauling the melted core of the
Three Mile Island reactor across nine states. Forty shipments
will move nine tons during the next 20 months from Pennsylvania
to Idaho. "We're concerned for people living along the route,"
said Eric Epstein, of TMI Alert, a Pennsylvania watchdog group,
"but it's a relief. We were afraid of becoming the graveyard for
the radioactive waste."
And the federal Superfund has
turned out to be just a way to pay for scooping up polluted soil
in one place and depositing it in another.
Communities that seek legal relief
from garbage imperialism meet with little success. A federal judge
denied Gov. Bryan's request for an injunction in the Nevada dumping
case. In 1982 the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that New Jersey had
no right to stop Pennsylvanians from dumping their garbage in
the Garden State. When New York City banned trucks from carrying
radioactive waste through its congested streets, the U.S. Supreme
Court overturned the ordinance. The right of localities to protect
their citizens, the court maintained, is outweighed by the constitutional
right of commerce to move freely across state boundaries.
Garbage wars stem from our refusal
to take responsibility for our own wastes. They will end when
we force ourselves to take that responsibility. We should enact
federal and state legislation to require that all wastes be disposed
of within 10 miles of their generation. This would apply to mines,
factories, households and office buildings.
Such legislation would have two
salutary effects. First, it would significantly improve decision
making by imposing the costs as well as the benefits of commerce
on the same community. Those who reap the rewards would accept
the risks. You want nuclear power. Fine. You handle the radioactive
wastes. You want to burn your garbage. Fine. You handle the hazardous
ash residue. You want to be the site of industrial facilities.
Fine. You clean up the heavy metals.
The second benefit is that communities
and businesses would be forced to seek lasting solutions to the
waste disposal problem. No longer would we spend considerable
financial, political and scientific resources to discover safe
ways to move our wastes far away. Instead, we would first look
for ways to reduce waste and recycle the ones we must produce
into useful products.
By focusing our energies in this
way we can all but eliminate our waste disposal problem. The amount
of garbage that must be buried could be reduced by up to 80%.
By changing our manufacturing methods we could reduce by up to
99% the amount of toxic wastes generated by industry. Indeed,
European engineering schools already teach "low and no-waste"
design approaches. Innovative sewage treatment systems that remove
heavy metals are now commercially available.
But innovative solutions will
never be implemented if we can pursue the easier path of shipping
our problems to someone else's backyard. Regrettably, our politicians,
while increasingly aware that a civil war threatens over this
issue, do not seem to be learning the right lesson. For them the
proper course is to find a community that will be a willing receptacle.
Oceanic experts foresee that in
the short term a primary use of the oceans will be for waste disposal.
Seventy percent of the globe is water. More important, fish don't
vote.
David Morris is a founder of the
Institute for Local Self-Reliance, a Washington-based think tank
specializing in municipal issues.
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