Transform Don’t Trash NYC

- by Gavin Kear­ney (Envi­ron­men­tal Jus­tice Direc­tor, New York Lawyers for the Pub­lic Inter­est) & Eddie Bautista (Exec­u­tive Direc­tor, New York City Envi­ron­men­tal Jus­tice Alliance)

New York City’s homes and busi­ness­es gen­er­ate any­where from 6 to 8 mil­lion tons of mixed sol­id waste every year – more than any oth­er city in the coun­try. And the man­ner in which it man­ages that waste is rife with injus­tice – a few NYC com­mu­ni­ties of col­or play host to numer­ous truck-inten­sive trans­fer facil­i­ties, while oth­er com­mu­ni­ties of col­or as near as Newark and as far as Vir­ginia and Ohio then receive NYC’s waste for land­fill­ing and incin­er­a­tion. For over a decade we have been work­ing with envi­ron­men­tal jus­tice advo­cates and oth­er allies in NYC to address these issues. We have achieved some impor­tant incre­men­tal vic­to­ries over pitched oppo­si­tion. But much remains to be done. 

Ulti­mate­ly, if it is to do right by Envi­ron­men­tal Jus­tice (EJ) com­mu­ni­ties, NYC needs to great­ly dimin­ish the amount of mate­r­i­al it exports for dis­pos­al and build local recy­cling infra­struc­ture while min­i­miz­ing com­mu­ni­ty impacts, cre­at­ing a safer work­place for waste work­ers, and reduc­ing envi­ron­men­tal harms.  To build the will for this with­in the City we are work­ing to expand the local dis­cus­sion around sol­id waste to encom­pass work­er well-being, eco­nom­ic devel­op­ment, cli­mate change, fair treat­ment for small busi­ness­es, and, of course, envi­ron­men­tal jus­tice. This is the focus of our cur­rent, ongo­ing cam­paign for sol­id waste reform – Trans­form Don’t Trash NYC.

Back­ground

Recy­cling rates in NYC are woe­ful — about 15% for res­i­dences and at most 25% for busi­ness­es, mean­ing that every year mil­lions of tons of NYC waste is unnec­es­sar­i­ly buried or burned. With­in NYC, col­lec­tion trucks haul this waste to trans­fer sta­tions in a few com­mu­ni­ties of col­or and long-haul trucks haul it back out. About three-fourths of all waste han­dled in New York City goes to just three com­mu­ni­ties of col­or in the South Bronx, North Brook­lyn and South­east Queens. 

Res­i­dents in these low-income com­mu­ni­ties of col­or are inun­dat­ed with thou­sands of waste-relat­ed diesel truck trips every day, as well as oth­er envi­ron­men­tal bur­dens such as pow­er plants, Super­fund sites, and truck-inten­sive dis­tri­b­u­tion cen­ters. The human costs of this over­bur­den­ing can be seen in health out­comes such as asth­ma hos­pi­tal­iza­tions and car­dio­vas­cu­lar dis­ease, and in day-to-day hard­ships like inces­sant noise pol­lu­tion and soot that forces res­i­dents to keep win­dows closed even on the hottest days.

His­tor­i­cal­ly, much of NYC’s waste was buried or burned with­in city lim­its (or if you go back a bit fur­ther, dumped into the sea). The cur­rent state of affairs can large­ly be traced to May­or Giuliani’s polit­i­cal­ly moti­vat­ed deci­sion to close the Fresh Kills land­fill on Stat­en Island, one of NYC’s last Repub­li­can strong­holds and a source of key sup­port for his can­di­da­cy. The land­fill clo­sure was under­tak­en with no alter­na­tive plan in place. In response, pub­lic and pri­vate haulers turned to the pri­vate sec­tor and in a short peri­od of time the con­di­tions in NYC EJ com­mu­ni­ties described above arose. 

EJ Orga­niz­ing Around Waste and New York City’s 2006 Sol­id Waste Man­age­ment Plan   

In this post-Fresh Kills con­text emerged NYC’s first and only City-wide coali­tion of EJ groups focused on garbage jus­tice – the Orga­ni­za­tion of Water­front Neigh­bor­hoods (OWN). OWN released a report in 2000 that artic­u­lat­ed an alter­na­tive waste man­age­ment plan for NYC that would sig­nif­i­cant­ly increase recy­cling while retro­fitting the City’s marine trans­fer sta­tions (MTSs) – the facil­i­ties that had barged waste to Fresh Kills pri­or to its clo­sure. Unlike pri­vate trans­fer sta­tions, the MTSs were fair­ly sit­ed through­out all of NYC’s five bor­oughs, would reduce reliance on long-haul trucks, and would be man­aged by the City, which pro­vid­ed the oppor­tu­ni­ty to min­i­mize emis­sions and ensure account­abil­i­ty to local neighbors.

A sig­nif­i­cant vic­to­ry for local EJ advo­cates came in 2006. After two years of hear­ings, com­mu­ni­ty forums and debate, the New York City Coun­cil and the May­or passed a Sol­id Waste Man­age­ment Plan for the City that embraced OWN’s call for retro­fitting City MTSs. In the process of imple­men­ta­tion, the Plan will ulti­mate­ly take hun­dreds of waste haul­ing trucks off the streets of EJ com­mu­ni­ties every day and elim­i­nate mil­lions of diesel truck miles in and around NYC every year by tip­ping waste at facil­i­ties clos­er to its point of gen­er­a­tion and by replac­ing long-haul trucks with barges and rail­cars. This was a sig­nif­i­cant vic­to­ry for EJ advo­cates who had fought for years to address the dis­crim­i­na­to­ry sit­ing of waste and oth­er facil­i­ties in NYC. It was the first time that the City had embraced the con­cept of “fair share” for the sit­ing of munic­i­pal infra­struc­ture and the Plan passed in the face of incred­i­bly stiff, well-resourced oppo­si­tion from com­mu­ni­ties that cur­rent­ly bear no respon­si­bil­i­ty for the waste they gen­er­ate, most notably from the afflu­ent Upper East Side of Manhattan.

It was only a par­tial vic­to­ry, how­ev­er. While the Plan would advance fair­ness in facil­i­ty sit­ing and sig­nif­i­cant­ly reduce truck impacts from the col­lec­tion and export of waste, it wouldn’t do near­ly enough to address NYC’s over-reliance on land­fill­ing and incin­er­a­tion. It did lead to invest­ment in a new recy­cling facil­i­ty that has allowed the City to expand its res­i­den­tial recy­cling col­lec­tion, but as not­ed above NYC has a long way to go on this front and needs con­sid­er­ably more infra­struc­ture if it is going to improve upon its low recy­cling rates. EJ orga­ni­za­tions, envi­ron­men­tal groups, pub­lic health orga­ni­za­tions and oth­ers sup­port­ed the Plan as an impor­tant, hard-fought step for­ward, rec­og­niz­ing that there was much more to be done.

Mixed Suc­cess­es in Fight­ing “Waste to Energy”

Over the last sev­er­al decades, local EJ advo­cates and allies have suc­cess­ful­ly fought numer­ous efforts to site incin­er­a­tors in and around NYC. In the recent past, shills for new­er tech­nolo­gies have reg­u­lar­ly poked around NYC com­mu­ni­ties of col­or in search of unwit­ting orga­ni­za­tions that might sup­port their effort to site a new facil­i­ty or con­vert and exist­ing one. Fis­cal­ly con­ser­v­a­tive orga­ni­za­tions have also tout­ed incin­er­a­tion as a prefer­able alter­na­tive to the City’s col­lec­tion and export sys­tem where envi­ron­men­tal con­trols, a union work­force, and increas­ing­ly dis­tant dis­pos­al options have increased the cost of land­fill­ing and one promi­nent main­stream envi­ron­men­tal group has expressed open­ness to the idea. 

Under the Bloomberg admin­is­tra­tion, the City itself also seri­ous­ly con­sid­ered pilot­ing “new and emerg­ing” tech­nolo­gies for han­dling waste. In 2006, a con­sul­tant for the City released a report rec­om­mend­ing that sev­er­al tech­nolo­gies be con­sid­ered for appli­ca­tion in NYC, includ­ing gasi­fi­ca­tion, plas­ma gasi­fi­ca­tion, and pyrol­y­sis. The report made this rec­om­men­da­tion even though its authors were unable to sat­is­fy two core eval­u­a­tion cri­te­ria – an inde­pen­dent tech­ni­cal review of the tech­nolo­gies and an inde­pen­dent review of envi­ron­men­tal impacts. 

Based on these rec­om­men­da­tions, in 2012 the city issued a Request for Pro­pos­als (RFP) involv­ing these tech­nolo­gies. The RFP called for appli­ca­tions for demon­stra­tion projects sit­ed with­in or with­in 80 miles of NYC. The 80 mile radius was seen by many as an effort to skirt poten­tial sit­ing bat­tles with­in the City where any pro­pos­al would like­ly require land use changes and thus City Coun­cil approval. Local EJ groups and envi­ron­men­tal allies quick­ly mobi­lized against the RFP, hold­ing demon­stra­tions out­side a brief­ing for prospec­tive appli­cants and at City Hall. We also met with key City offi­cials on sev­er­al occa­sions and, with crit­i­cal assis­tance from GAIA, were able to show City offi­cials that these tech­nolo­gies were dan­ger­ous and unre­li­able and that, con­trary to con­ven­tion­al wis­dom, more sus­tain­able cities in Europe were actu­al­ly mov­ing away from rather than embrac­ing them. Accord­ing to city offi­cials, indus­try respons­es to the RFP but­tressed our argu­ments lead­ing one offi­cial to con­fide that they were deal­ing with “snake oil sales­men.” The RFP’s via­bil­i­ty was also dimin­ished when the City released a report of pre­ferred NYC sites that includ­ed the for­mer Fresh Kills land­fill gen­er­at­ing swift and intense local oppo­si­tion lead­ing the City to with­draw the site from con­sid­er­a­tion. Ulti­mate­ly the City aban­doned the RFP and we were thrilled.

A year lat­er, the City announced that it had final­ized a con­tract with Cov­an­ta for the export and incin­er­a­tion of waste from two of its new MTSs, includ­ing the Upper East Side facil­i­ty men­tioned above.  Even though the City had pre­vi­ous­ly defined its sus­tain­able waste man­age­ment goals as “diver­sion from land­fill­ing,” this move came as a sur­prise to us giv­en the recent aban­don­ment of the RFP. Although EJ groups in NYC fought for the MTSs as a way to reduce bur­dens in their com­mu­ni­ties, at the end of the day we had lit­tle abil­i­ty to shape where that garbage would be sent — the City’s con­tract­ing author­i­ty is broad and requires no review or approval role by the City Coun­cil. For EJ groups in NYC, this only under­scored the urgent need to dra­mat­i­cal­ly reduce the amount of waste export­ed to oth­er EJ com­mu­ni­ties for dis­pos­al. Giv­en the parochial nature of waste pol­i­cy in NYC, we also knew that we had to do so in a way that offered tan­gi­ble local benefits.

Trans­form Don’t Trash NYC – Push­ing for Com­pre­hen­sive Sol­id Waste Reform

Over the last year and a half or so, we have built a coali­tion of EJ groups, labor, main­stream envi­ron­men­tal­ists, and oth­ers to tack­le reform of NYC’s “open” com­mer­cial waste sys­tem. In this sys­tem each of the more than 200,000 busi­ness­es in NYC indi­vid­u­al­ly con­tracts for its waste removal from one of 200+ licensed haulers. As a recent report of our coali­tion details, the prob­lems in this sys­tem are legion — exces­sive reliance on land­fill­ing and incin­er­a­tion and atten­dant cli­mate and pub­lic health impacts, redun­dant col­lec­tion routes that cre­ate mil­lions of unnec­es­sary diesel truck miles each year, work­er exploita­tion includ­ing low wages, wage theft, and unhealthy work­ing con­di­tions, and an over­all lack of account­abil­i­ty or abil­i­ty to effec­tive­ly mon­i­tor this sprawl­ing and chaot­ic mar­ket, to name a few. 

In place of this sys­tem, we are push­ing for an exclu­sive zone col­lec­tion sys­tem sim­i­lar to those recent­ly adopt­ed in cities like Los Ange­les and San Jose. Under such a sys­tem haulers would com­pete for exclu­sive col­lec­tion rights with­in spe­cif­ic zones of the City and in return be expect­ed to make com­mit­ments to reduc­ing and recy­cling waste, reduc­ing truck emis­sions and vehi­cle miles trav­elled, and improv­ing work­er com­pen­sa­tion and safe­ty. Although the cam­paign is rel­a­tive­ly young, we’ve had some impor­tant suc­cess­es, includ­ing suc­cess­ful­ly advo­cat­ing for the City to include a zero waste goal in its recent­ly released sus­tain­abil­i­ty plan, and have gained sup­port from key elect­ed officials. 

In expos­ing these grim real­i­ties that escape the aware­ness of most New York­ers, we are high­light­ing the broad impacts of NYC’s waste export. But to build the sup­port we need to move it, we are focus­ing heav­i­ly on the local ben­e­fits of reform – reduced truck traf­fic and diesel emis­sions, improved work­ing con­di­tions, trans­par­ent prices for small busi­ness­es that rewards reduc­tion and recy­cling, increased effi­cien­cy, and eco­nom­ic development. 

Chal­lenges in Build­ing Cross-Com­mu­ni­ty Solidarity

While sol­i­dar­i­ty across EJ com­mu­ni­ties is crit­i­cal, years of advo­cat­ing for more just waste man­age­ment in NYC have dri­ven home just how nar­row­ly self-inter­est­ed pol­i­tics can be. A prime exam­ple of this has been the oppo­si­tion to the MTS on Manhattan’s Upper East Side (UES) men­tioned ear­li­er. While there may be indi­vid­ual excep­tions, by and large the fight around the MTS has nev­er been about one com­mu­ni­ty seek­ing to pre­vent its waste from bur­den­ing anoth­er. In fact, it has been the oppo­site. It has been one afflu­ent com­mu­ni­ty fight­ing to con­tin­ue to bur­den oth­er com­mu­ni­ties with its waste. 

UES oppo­si­tion to the new marine trans­fer sta­tion, which is being built over the East Riv­er, has been incred­i­bly deep-pock­et­ed, no few­er than eight unsuc­cess­ful law­suits have been brought by pri­vate law firms to pre­vent this facil­i­ty from hap­pen­ing to date. Oppo­si­tion groups have paid for numer­ous pub­lic rela­tions firms, lob­by­ists, and researchers over the years and have even bought adver­tise­ment on local TV sta­tions to get out their mes­sage (last year, lob­by­ing dis­clo­sure reports revealed that a start-up three per­son fash­ion law firm had donat­ed $690,000 to the main oppo­si­tion group, Pledge 2 Pro­tect, rais­ing ques­tions about whether the firm was act­ing as a pass-through to shield mon­eyed inter­est from pub­lic scruti­ny and to main­tain a veneer of grass­roots activism). 

This oppo­si­tion has also been cal­lous. Oppo­nents of the facil­i­ty have tried to co-opt the envi­ron­men­tal jus­tice frame despite their tremen­dous resources and even though the medi­an income around the facil­i­ty is $91,000/year (com­pared to a medi­an income of $21,000/year in the South Bronx area that hosts nine pri­vate trans­fer sta­tions and oth­er pol­lut­ing facil­i­ties). Upper East Side oppo­nents have also had the gall to accuse life­long EJ advo­cates of racism. At a City Coun­cil hear­ing last year, one UES leader tes­ti­fied that sup­port­ers of the facil­i­ty could only be moti­vat­ed by an inter­est in “sock­ing it to white kids” and anoth­er called out local EJ lead­ers as “hyp­o­crit­i­cal­ly racist” in his Huff­in­g­ton Post blog. 

And although oppo­nents have recent­ly begun to see a shared inter­est with Chester res­i­dents, they have been remark­ably indif­fer­ent to how oth­er com­mu­ni­ties are impact­ed by the waste they gen­er­ate, eager­ly latch­ing on to any pro­pos­al that could be viewed as an alter­na­tive to their facil­i­ty. For exam­ple, they have pushed out a num­ber of reports advo­cat­ing for the con­tin­ued over­bur­den­ing of oth­er NYC com­mu­ni­ties with trans­fer sta­tions, claim­ing that impacts on the UES will be unac­cept­able and cat­a­stroph­ic while sim­i­lar, but greater impacts in less afflu­ent com­mu­ni­ties of col­or are accept­able and can be mitigated. 

UES oppo­nents have also enthu­si­as­ti­cal­ly embraced incin­er­a­tion so long as the waste isn’t trans­ferred in their com­mu­ni­ty first. In a 2014 report, Pledge 2 Pro­tect crit­i­cized the City for fail­ing to “take advan­tage of the safest, most sus­tain­able waste-to-ener­gy tech­nolo­gies,” includ­ing those that use com­bus­tion as a means to “cre­at­ing a tru­ly sus­tain­able sol­id waste man­age­ment sys­tem.” Sim­i­lar­ly, at a recent hear­ing, Coun­cil Mem­ber Ben Kal­los, who rep­re­sents the UES, was asked about the fact that his district’s waste is cur­rent­ly incin­er­at­ed in Newark. He respond­ed that “New Jer­sey… is not a bor­ough [of New York City] as far as I’m aware” and thus had no legit­i­mate claim to be treat­ed fair­ly. Coun­cil Mem­ber Kal­los went on to say that New Jer­sey res­i­dents “enjoy” incin­er­at­ing Manhattan’s waste because they get paid to do so.

None of this is raised as a crit­i­cism of folks fight­ing the long-term burn­ing of NYC waste at the Chester incin­er­a­tor. Over the years we have cer­tain­ly sought to build strate­gic part­ner­ships with orga­ni­za­tions that may not share our val­ues but have inter­ests that align. But it does point out how tricky these alliances can be and how impor­tant it is to rec­og­nize them for what they are. Undoubt­ed­ly there are indi­vid­u­als on the UES who sin­cere­ly embrace the peo­ple of Chester’s cause, but just as undoubt­ed­ly, past behav­ior shows that most oppo­nents of the UES facil­i­ty would aban­don this cause in a heart­beat if the City found a way to get waste to Chester that didn’t take it through their com­mu­ni­ty first. 

Ulti­mate­ly, we agree with folks at the Ener­gy Jus­tice Net­work and oth­ers that the most effec­tive way that NYC can stop send­ing its waste to be burned in com­mu­ni­ties of col­or is to move toward zero waste, an idea that we’ve been able to get some long over­due local traction.


Posted

in

by


EJ Communities Map

Map of Coal and Gas Facilities

We are mapping all of the existing, proposed, closed and defeated dirty energy and waste facilities in the US. We are building a network of community groups to fight the facilities and the corporations behind them.

Related Projects

Watch Us on YouTube