Jersey firm to close 105-year old paper mill in MA

Rising energy cost are being blamed for the planned closing of Haverhill Paperboard Corp., which has employed generations of families since it opened in the Merrimack Valley town of Haverhill, Massachusetts in 1902.

A total of 142 full-time and 32 part-time employees will be affected by the closing.

Officials at Haverhill Paperboard said the skyrocketing cost of natural gas and electricity needed to run the mill’s machinery, as well as excess industry capacity for their products, prompted the decision to close.

Haverhill’s mayor said he was told the company was shifting operations to South Carolina where they can take advantage of less-costly coal fuel to run their equipment.

Closing the historic plant, which opened in 1902 as the Haverhill Box Board Co., also will have implication’s for the area’s paper recycling programs. The plant currently takes in some 3,000 tons of recyclable paper goods annually from neighborhoods and the city recycling center and turns it into multilayer products, such as book covers and foldable cartons for the food and gift industries.

Haverhill Paperboard is owned by The Newark Group Inc., an international company based in Cranford, N.J. It operates paperboard, recycled fibers and industrial plants in Newark, NJ, York, PA, North Hoosick, NY, Fitchburg, MA, Salem, MA, Webster, MA and other domestic locations in Alabama, Louisiana, Florida, Ohio, Wisconsin and California. The company also operates plants in Spain and Germany.

MORE:

Haverhill Paperboard Turns 100 BoxBoard Containers International

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NYC says ‘Bag It’ to state recycling bill

Have opponents of New York City’s plastic bag recycling law found a way to subvert it?

City Council Speaker Christine Quinn (D-Queens) thinks so. So do the Environmental Defense Fund and the Natural Resources Defense Council.

They’re all calling on Govenor David Paterson to veto a bill which would supersede a city law on plastic-bag recycling set to take effect in two weeks.

Andy Darrell, New York Regional Director for the Environmental Defense Fund (EDF) and a member of Mayor Bloomberg’s Sustainability Advisory Board, says the state bill ” sets a dangerous precedent of handcuffing the state’s largest city to meet its huge solid waste challenges.”

He says that the city’s law applies to stores of 5,000 square feet or more and to chains under a common name, while the State bill only applies to stores 10,000 square feet or more. The 5,000 square feet is better suited to New York City, Darrell argues, since city stores tend to be smaller than in other parts of the State.

The EDF also notes that the States bill only applies to plastic carryout bags, while City Council’s law also requires the recycling of film plastic, such as package wrap, dry cleaning bags and newspaper bags.

City Council claims it was blindsided by the state legislation, which was introduced late last week in the Assembly and Senate.

A spokesman for the governor said the state bill hadn’t yet reached the governor’s desk yet and declined to comment any further.
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Top environmental & political news: June 23-27

Every day, we select a few of the top environmental and political stories appearing in our newsletter, EnviroPolitics, and post them to our website for free public use.

Click the links below to view stories for New Jersey, Pennsylvania, New York–and beyond– that appeared during the past week.

June 27 2008
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NJ builders win victory vs. open-space mandates

In a decision with broad implications for municipal planning in New Jersey, a state appellate court ruled on June 23 that towns cannot pass laws that force developers to save open space, build playgrounds and baseball fields, or pay for such upgrades.

The decision will bring to a halt a long-standing practice among many municipalities that have used such ordinances to provide for local open space and recreation facilities.

Environmentalists blasted the ruling and the New Jersey League of Municipalities declared it would fight the decision on two fronts: with an appeals to the state Supreme Court and the state Legislature.

The decision was a response to lawsuits filed by the Builders League of South Jersey against Egg Harbor Township and the New Jersey Shore Builders Association against Jackson Township in Ocean County.

Here are the Star-Ledger story on the decision and the Atlantic City Press version.

The case was successfully argued for the Builders League by Richard J. Hoff, shareholder at Flaster/Greenberg; with Matthew T. Stanger, a member of Flaster/Greenberg’s Real Estate Practice. Robert M. Washburn, of counsel at Flaster/Greenberg, serves as counsel to the Builders League of South Jersey. Here is their summary of the ruling.

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‘First State’ in offshore wind energy, too?

Delaware, known as The First State because it was the first of the 13 original states to ratify the U.S. Constitution, is on track to also become the first to meet some of its energy needs from offshore wind turbines.

Bluewater Wind Delaware, LLC, a subsidiary of Babcock & Brown, announced on Monday (6/23) that it had signed a 25-year contract with Delmarva Power to sell the utility up to 200 megawatts of power from an offshore wind farm to be built 11.5 miles off the coast of Rehoboth Beach in Delaware. The turbine mounts will extend 90 feet into the seafloor and 250 feet above the waterline. Each of the three blades will be 150 feet long.

The agreement didn’t come easily. For more than a year, Delmarva Power balked at the idea, despite pressure to sign from the state’s Public Service Commission, from project supporters in the state legislature and from numerous environmental organizations.

With the project stymied for months in the Legislature, Delmarva Power mounted a public relations campaign claiming the offshore project would increase the average consumer’s energy bills. Then the utility appeared to put a nail in Bluewater Wind’s coffin with a June 3 announcement that it had signed an agreement with Annapolis, Md.-based Synergics Wind Energy for the purchase of up to 100 megawatts of energy and renewable energy credits from land-based wind farms in western Maryland.

But polls have shown widespread support for the wind project and political bloggers continued to hammer at its critics, lamenting the potentially lost opportunity for Delaware to lock in stable energy prices for consumers and wean the state off fossil-fuel-based power production. With a final push from State Senate Majority Leader Anthony DeLuca, D-Newark, and Delaware Governor Ruth Ann Minner, Delmarva Power agreed to negotiate.

The final agreement is a compromise. Delmarva Power will buy about half of the amount of wind power suggested under an earlier proposal, and at a lower price per megawatt hour. The price drop is due to a reduction in the costs that Delaware customers will pay for renewable energy credits.

The agreement also required legislation to change the state’s Renewable Portfolio Standard to allow for a different handling of renewable energy credits from an offshore wind farm. But that posed little problem. On Wednesday, only two days after the agreement was announced, the Legislature passed a bill to do just that–Senate Bill 328–and Governor Minner signed it the same day.

With Delmarva Power agreeing to purchase 200-megawatts of the power produced by the wind farm, Bluewater Wind either will have to scale back it original plan to produce up to 600 megawatts or find other buyers for the power. The company says it will determine the final size of the wind farm within two years and will seek additional energy buyers in the meanwhile. It recently announced a deal to supply power to the Delaware Electric Municipal Corporation and to its nine municipal members.

Before starting construction, the company also must conduct numerous environmental studies and await adoption by the U.S. Department of Interior of final regulations regarding the leasing of land on the Outer Continental Shelf. Draft final regulations are currently being reviewed, according to Bluewater, by the President’s Office of Management and Budget (OMB).

Bluewater Wind is one of the companies that is seeking to construct a wind farm off the New Jersey coast to provide renewable energy to the Garden State. It also has expressed interest in offshore projects in New York and Rhode Island.

MORE:

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Top environmental & political news: June 16-20

Every day, we select a few of the top environmental and political stories appearing in our newsletter, EnviroPolitics, and post them to our website for free public use.

Click the links below to view stories for New Jersey, Pennsylvania, New York–and beyond– that appeared during the past week.

June 20 2008
June 19 2008
June 18 2008
June 17 2008
June 16 2008
Previous week

To receive free daily alerts when our Environmental & Political News page is updated, send a blank email to: eptopdailynews@aweber.com

Try EnviroPolitics, the daily environmental newsletter, Free for an entire month !

Top environmental & political news: June 16-20 Read More »