Illinois County Works with EAC to Develop 20-Year Solid Waste Management Plan

Waste360 Staff, Staff

June 14, 2016

1 Min Read
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For the first time in four years, the recycling rate in McLean County, Ill., dropped in 2015. In an effort to improve the recycling rate, Normal, Ill.-based EAC is working with Bloomington, Normal and county leaders to develop a 20-year solid waste management plan.

The plan, which is due in 2017, will feature new strategies to include waste streams that aren’t currently being recycled, such as construction and demolition materials and organic waste.

The Pantagraph has more details on this plan:

McLean County's recycling rate fell in 2015 for the first time in four years, but a proposed long-term plan would improve the rate and get the county to its long-term goal.

Only 36.5 percent of municipal solid waste generated in the county was recycled last year, down from 37.7 percent in 2013 and 2014, according to Ecology Action Center data. The county's goal is 40 percent.

But the Normal-based EAC is working with Bloomington, Normal and county leaders on a 20-year solid waste management plan due in 2017 that will help, said EAC Executive Director Michael Brown.

That process is driven partly by the impending closure of the McLean County Landfill, which is set to fill up next August. Then, waste disposal costs will go up because waste will be transported to more-distant landfills, including Pontiac.

Read the full story here.

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