Massive fire turns Marcal Paper plant into an icy skeleton


Drone video captures the charred and smoldering remains of the historic Marcal Paper plant in Elmwood Park Bergen County. (Video by Andre Malok | NJ Advance Media for NJ.com)

‘Amazing’ no one hurt battling 10-alarm fire that devastated iconic building


Anthony Attrino reports for NJ.com:

Firefighters continue to douse hot spots in the smoldering remains of the Marcal Paper plant in Bergen County on Thursday after a wind-swept 10-alarm inferno collapsed the building, forced evacuations and closed nearby schools.
But miraculously, no one – not a firefighter, not a single worker – was injured in the massive blaze, Elmwood Park officials said in an update Thursday morning.
“No injuries reported to me, which is amazing with a fire of that magnitude, the weather conditions as they are and were,” Elmwood Park police chief Michael Foligno, who noted the significance of the company that employs 200 people in the town.
“Devastating,” Foligno said. “That was the main hub for employment for a lot of people for a lot of years – generations, families.”
The facility that has been a longtime community landmark with its red neon sign, he said.
“That’s an iconic building,” Foligno said. “You’ll see a lot of people talking about coming home from a long trip and seeing the Marcal sign lit, letting you know you’re home. It’s going to be hard for everybody.”
Firefighters battled gusty winds and freezing temperatures, bringing the blaze under control by 2 a.m. If it hadn’t been for the wind, Foligno said he expected the fire would have been relatively minor.
“All of a sudden the winds really started blazing,” Foligno said. “The fire just took off from there.”
The fire is not believed to be suspicious, though investigators and the arson squad won’t be able to examine the scene until firefighters finish picking apart rubble and dousing hot spots. A demolition crew is on standby for when it’s deemed safe. About 90 percent of the footprint of the plant was destroyed, Foligno said.
“We’re trying to get the scene as safe as possible before we go in,” Foligno said.
Foligno said some firefighters are being sent home as officials reduce the size of the perimeter.
Five homes were evacuated for a couple of hours. Some residents stayed at the recreation center, which has been used as a warming center while others stayed with family members.
“When the fire was really blazing and the structure was still standing because of the height and the wind it was (shooting) burning embers onto those properties.”

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Inside the Northeast’s largest food-waste recycler




















Photo credit: Cole Rosengren

The company recently opened its latest farm-based anaerobic digester, with more on the way. CEO John Hanselman explains why his business works where others have failed.


Cole Rosengren reports for Waste Dive:

Up a steep dirt road in Haverhill, Massachusetts, past a set of old farm buildings, sits one of the newest anaerobic digesters in the country. It’s the fourth facility of its kind from Vanguard Renewables, with many more on the way.

On a bright and brisk December afternoon, a tanker truck has pulled up to empty its liquefied organic contents into the underground receiving pit. The system can process up to 120 tons per day, but it will take multiple days for the slurry to actually make it into the adjacent digester domes.
First, it will be held in a 15-foot-deep tank and screened for contaminants, adjusted for acidity and “blended” before getting fed into the system. Keeping the colony of methnoagenic bugs that feast on it even-keeled is key to the operation’s success — a crash could result in extended downtime.

 

Photo credit: Cole Rosengren

Walking around the site, you can barely perceive odors — and that’s by design. Following the expensive downfalls of other sites around the country, Vanguard has taken extra precautions.

“We may be overzealous, but you can’t underestimate the impact of food waste,” said CEO John Hanselman.

It also helps that Vanguard’s “farm-powered” model is designed to come with automatic community benefits. While Hanselman said the six-year-old company’s original plan was to focus on energy production, their scope has since expanded to include much more.

A small adjacent building contains a 1 MW engine capable of generating up to 7,700 MWh of electricity per year from the resulting methane. In addition to a 20-year power purchase agreement with the city of Haverhill, Vanguard is providing free heat to the multigenerational family business — Crescent Farms — that hosts it on their land. The AD facility also handles all of their manure, creates enough liquid fertilizer for them to swear off synthetic material entirely and makes an animal bedding byproduct that has reportedly led to higher quality milk yields among the cows.

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Vanguard was named “Organics Recycler of the Year” by the NWRA in 2018 and enjoys growing regional recognition. However, it still has a relatively low profile on the national scale — something sure to change once the company opens a new digester in Vermont, three more in Massachusetts, three in New York and five de-packaging facilities throughout the Northeast.

Following the tour, Waste Dive sat down with Hanselman to discuss expansion plans, his outlook on industry competition and how Vanguard’s approach fits into broader national trends.

Read Waste Dive’s Q&A here 


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Non-profits get larger share of NJ preservation funding

Groups’ share of open-space funds goes from 2 percent to 10 percent, and from 3 percent to 4 percent for farmland preservation

farmland

Tom Johnson reports
for NJ Spotlight
Lawmakers appear to have settled on a mechanism for allocating constitutionally dedicated funds to preserve open space, farmland, and historic structures for the next fiscal year and beyond.
In a bipartisan vote, the Senate Environment and Energy Committee last week agreed on how to spread at least $155 million among state and local governments, nonprofit groups and others who typically vie for a piece of corporate business taxes allocated to preservation projects each year.
The legislation (S-2920) largely retains how funds have been apportioned in the past with some notable tweaks, primarily to allow nonprofit groups a larger piece of the funding for open-space acquisition and development, as well as farmland preservation.
Another significant change this year is that the share of corporate business taxes allocated for preservation efforts has been boosted from 4 to 6 percent, increasing the annual funding allocation by about $60 million.
The legislation (S-2920) largely retains how funds have been apportioned in the past with some notable tweaks, primarily to allow nonprofit groups a larger piece of the funding for open-space acquisition and development, as well as farmland preservation.
Another significant change this year is that the share of corporate business taxes allocated for preservation efforts has been boosted from 4 to 6 percent, increasing the annual funding allocation by about $60 million.
Still, the overall funding falls short of what had been spent in past years when — relying mostly on borrowing — the state would devote up to $200 million on open space and farmland projects.

‘Fiscally conservative approach’

Sen. Bob Smith, the chairman of the committee and sponsor of the bill, urged advocates to back the new approach. “This is a pay-as-you-go, fiscally conservative approach,’’ said the Democrat from Piscataway.
Sen. Chris (Kip) Bateman, a Republican from Somerset County, agreed. “This is not perfect, but everyone should be happy,’’ he said.
Overall, 62 percent of the funding will be targeted for acquisition and development of lands for public recreation and conservation purposes; 31 percent will go for farmland preservation and 7 percent for historic preservation.
In one other notable change, at least 10 percent of state acquisition funds will be used for the Blue Acres program, an effort geared to buying up flood-prone properties as a buffer against future flooding. Under the new arrangement, Blue Acres is to be folded into the traditional Green Acres program, which funds state and local acquisitions as well as park and recreational projects.

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And you thought it was getting cold in NJ and PA…

Woman in scarf and hat in snow. Photo credit: Anthony Souffle/TNS/Newscom

Jillian Hansen, a senior at the University of Minnesota, walks to class yesterday Anthony Souffle/TNS/Newscom

Daniel Cusick reports for E&E News
MINNEAPOLIS — Minnesotans awoke this morning to sunshine and the coldest temperatures in a generation, testing the state’s capacity for stoicism amid the most extreme polar vortex since 1996.
Thermometers in the Twin Cities dropped to minus 28 degrees Fahrenheit before dawn, and overnight wind chills made it feel like minus 55 at the Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport.
The National Weather Service in Chanhassen, Minn., just outside Minneapolis, posted a photo early today showing its Nimbus digital thermometer reading: minus 30.
Overnight temperatures in northwest Minnesota dropped to minus 42, while wind chills fell to minus 64 in the city of Park Rapids, approaching temperature records dating to the 19th century. Several communities in southern Minnesota broke low temperature records set in the 1950s.
Thousands of power outages were reported last night, and Minneapolis-based Xcel Energy, the state’s largest electric utility, warned that demand for home heating was placing a strain on its natural gas supplies. About 150 customers in the Princeton area about 60 miles northwest of Minneapolis lost heat, utility spokesman Matt Lindstrom said, and were given hotel rooms for the night.
The utility suggested residents in some parts of the state lower their thermostats and supplement their home heating with electric space heaters.
Hawaii native Charles Henry stayed at a shelter last night in St. Paul and said he was grateful to have a place to stay out of the cold.
“That wind chill out there is not even a joke,” he said. “I feel sorry for anybody that has to stay outside.”
At least one death in Minnesota was attributed to the cold snap, but it occurred on Sunday in Rochester, before the extreme temperatures set in yesterday evening.
Schools across the state remained closed for a third consecutive day, and the U.S. Postal Service said it would not deliver mail in Minnesota, citing concerns about mail carriers’ safety. Similar mail delivery postponements were issued in parts of Illinois, Iowa, Michigan, Nebraska, North Dakota, Ohio, South Dakota and Wisconsin, according to the Associated Press.
The situation in other major Midwestern cities was little better.
In Chicago, deteriorating conditions led to the cancellation of 1,300 flights at O’Hare and Midway airports, and Amtrak canceled all trains to and from Chicago’s Union Station.
Commonwealth Edison reported about 7,000 power outages in the city’s southern suburbs extending into northwest Indiana.
Nearly 400,000 Chicago children will not attend public schools today or tomorrow. In Milwaukee, public schools remained closed for a fourth consecutive day as temperatures flirted with record overnight lows last night, and Mayor Tom Barrett suspended all nonessential city services.
The governors of Illinois, Michigan and Wisconsin declared states of emergency. “I want to make sure all state assets are available, including the Wisconsin National Guard if needed, to help communities across the state and keep people warm and safe,” Wisconsin Gov. Tony Evers (D) said.
Temperatures moderated slightly in the eastern Great Lakes. Detroit reported temperatures of minus 6 degrees this morning, while northeast Ohio registered a pre-dawn low of minus 8 and wind chills in the negative 20s.
Meteorologists said the coldest temperatures could be yet to come, as the slug of high Arctic air remains draped over the Great Lakes, affecting conditions as far south as Atlanta, where the Super Bowl is set to be played — indoors — on Sunday. In north Georgia and the southern Appalachians, wind chills early this morning were in the single digits.

Climate change and the polar vortex

Robust debates about the role of climate change in polar vortex events have also heated up over the last few days, fueled in part by President Trump’s provocative tweets conflating weather and climate.
On Monday, the president noted the wind chill forecast for the “beautiful Midwest,” adding: “People can’t last outside even for minutes. What the hell is going on with Global Waming [sic]? Please come back fast, we need you.”
Scientists say the two phenomena — global warming and polar vortexes — are not mutually exclusive. In fact, indications are that a slug of exceptionally warm air penetrated the upper Arctic last month, causing the polar vortex to split, with one mass of super-cold air drifting southward over North America (Climatewire, Jan. 30).

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How small cities are fighting to save recycling

Hardships caused by China’s global recycling industry disruptions have been particularly acute in small U.S. cities and towns over the past year. But in the face of adversity, a number of them have devised solutions to keep recycling programs alive — at least to some degree.

Katie Pyzyk reports for WasteDive:

While cities crunch the numbers and try to find economically feasible ways of retaining a recycling program — reverting to a depot drop-off system in lieu of curbside collection, for instance — citizens are also stepping up. From organizing parking lot glass recycling events to biking around town picking up material, local businesses and citizens are finding their own ways to contribute.


“This is the secret to success, looking at it from a grassroots, community-based level,” said Laura Leebrick, community and governmental affairs manager for Oregon-based Rogue Disposal & Recycling.


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The large and small of it


While the entire North American recycling industry has felt some effects of China’s scrap import bans and restrictions, municipal pain has, for the most part, been realized in the form of increased collecting and processing service fees. Smaller cities, however, are feeling the brunt of the blow — their curbside collection programs have derailed, and some have folded altogether.

Thus far, most large cities have been able to protect their residents from the worst of the China-related fallout. But small cities, especially rural ones, have less margin, as recently highlighted by the Pew Charitable Trusts. They may feel pressure to simply end curbside collection rather than wait the weeks or months necessary to ride out the storm – especially because that storm may not pass.

Small municipalities now have to decide what to do “given the reality of China and that it’s not changing,” said Mike Durfor, executive director of the Northeast Resource Recovery Association (NRRA). “People have figured out this is a long-term deal.”


“Everyone is being impacted — it’s just taking a longer time to affect larger cities…. It’s a trickle-down effect,” explained Harsit Patel, business services manager for Harrisonburg,
Virginia’s Department of Public Works. Harrisonburg lost curbside recycling in Feb. 2018 when its contractor, van der Linde Recycling, pulled out due to unfavorable market conditions. The contractor had “hoped for things to turn around, but they never did,” said Patel, adding that Harrisonburg “didn’t have a choice” but to end curbside collection.


The changes affect small cities more “because of our limited budgets,” said Brian Steadman, public works superintendent in Milton-Freewater, Oregon. The city was among the first to end curbside recycling early last year when it lost a contractor as a result of market conditions.


Milton-Freewater managed to re-launch a recycling program in the form of a material drop-off depot with an attendant. That option allowed the city to keep the same rates for customers, rather than incur a massive expense or operate at a loss and hike rates to find a viable curbside collection solution.


“Curbside is so costly with just the physical handling of it.… But most of our citizens are very pleased with what we’re offering right now, and it’s working well,” Steadman said.

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Another reality is that small cities simply don’t have the same volume of recovered material as big cities, making their curbside programs less economically viable. Small cities often lack alternative service options if they lose a recycling contractor, and soaring transportation costs make collecting recyclable materials in spread-out areas a less feasible venture than in large, dense cities.

In some cases, the issue doesn’t necessarily lie with a municipality’s size, but rather “its geographical location and also politics,” said Kristan Mitchell, executive director of the Oregon Refuse & Recycling Association. “I think it depends on the geographical location: How far away are you from a market? And how much is your community willing to pay?”

Medford, Oregon was also among the first cities to end traditional single-stream curbside recycling. Medford and neighboring cities are “quite distant from the Portland metro region, which is where recycling processors, the MRFs, are located in the state of Oregon,” said Rogue’s Leebrick.


The distance to processors and the low volumes of material generated “really put us in a pinch when China first started making its intentions known,” she said. “We knew we were in for a rough ride, but we didn’t know how rough it was going to be.”


Credit: Alan Levine

Root of the problem

Although many are quick to blame China for cutting off a viable marketplace in which U.S. recyclers could sell their materials, industry experts indicate a significant portion of the problem rests directly inside domestic curbside collection bins: single-stream contamination.

Harrisonburg operated its own curbside program prior to contracting with van der Linde, and Patel noted that at the time, there was “a lot of contamination.” Current markets tolerate less contamination than in the past, and prices rely heavily on material being clean. Therefore, when Harrisonburg lost its curbside service and launched a drop-off program, leaders decided to focus on recycling quality “before we entertain any new options,” said Patel.

Milton-Freewater leaders find that the small expense of having a full-time worker assist residents with putting the correct materials in the bins pays off in contamination reduction. “We’re getting very, very minimal contamination because any time our depots are open, they’re manned,” Steadman said.

“Our prior contractor would collect anything in a recycling tote and throw it in the back of their rig, which implanted in our citizens’ minds that we took plastic,” said Krista Gannon, Milton-Freewater public works assistant/project aide. The state of Oregon mandates that all municipalities with a population over 4,000 provide some type of recycling program and requires that certain materials (not including plastic) are recycled.

“The last year that our contractor was collecting it, they were actually throwing it away,” Gannon said.

Rogue Waste Systems also reports that having a drop-off attendant and limiting its single-stream program has cut contamination. After months of research, Rogue launched a scaled-back curbside commingled program last year that accepts only four material streams: corrugated cardboard, tin and aluminum cans, newspaper and HDPE milk jugs.


Rogue also expanded its manned depot drop-off program for segregated materials such as glass and mixed paper.  Those two materials are what many recyclers nationwide consider the heart of the contamination problem right now.

“Glass shouldn’t be in single-stream recycling. It’s a great recyclable material … but the only way to do it is separately,” Durfor said. “It’s the same thing with mixed paper. That’s a huge problem for recycling because probably 40% of single-stream is mixed paper, by weight.”

“Why have costs to recycle continued to climb over the last three years? It’s because of contamination. China answered that question once and for all,” Leebrick said. “This is how we can ride it out in a more responsible way while we figure out how to develop domestic processing and mills for a wider range of fibers and plastics.”


Credit: Taber Andrew Bain

Grassroots efforts

Harrisonburg’s recyclables drop-off program began with one collection point and has since expanded to include a mobile collection event at the weekly downtown farmers market. Keeping some sort of recycling program, as it turns out, wasn’t just a priority for municipal leaders; community members also started stepping up with grassroots efforts to help others recycle under the less convenient conditions.

A few groups take recyclables to a depot for neighbors who are unwilling or unable to make the trip. Harrisonburg resident Art Fovargue, who launched a neighborhood network to take residents’ recyclables to the drop-off center, posts notices on social media asking neighbors to bring their recyclables to his home before he goes.

“I hate to see a lot of people driving there individually and wasting the gas to take their one or two bins of recycling … I’m just a concerned citizen,” Fovargue said. “I feel it’s important to make our contribution, and of course it saves landfill space.”


Patel also pointed out a community nonprofit’s grassroots collection effort in Harrisonburg.


“Their concept is neat because they’re [getting around by] using bicycles. It’s completely zero emissions — the least carbon footprint possible. We [at the city] don’t have a way of doing that,” he said.


Residents are also finding ways to adjust to the loss of their curbside program in Milton-Freewater. “The first few weeks or months, we got a lot of complaints. But now … the people who want to recycle are just happy they have a place to go,” said Steadman. Similar to Harrisonburg’s informal community collection networks, “I do think there are probably some neighbors helping each other out like that,” he said.


“Yes, that’s what’s happening here, too… A lot of people are doing that,” Leebrick affirmed of Medford and neighboring communities.

Local businesses are also helping community-wide recycling efforts stay alive, with grocery stores in Medford sponsoring glass recycling drop-off events in their parking lots. “That may not work in urban areas, but in rural areas, everyone goes to the grocery store,” Leebrick said.

Credit: Rogue Disposal & Recycling

Keeping up the momentum

Leaders in each city must do what’s best for their own community, Patel said. “If you cut [recycling programs] off completely, it’s always difficult to re-educate your citizens and to go back to some type of recycling program.”

Rogue Waste Systems recognized that difficulty and opted to continue collecting. At the same time, it worked with the state Department of Environmental Quality to landfill the recovered materials for a time, which “we did not like at all as a long-term option,” Leebrick said. “But we, at that time, wanted to make sure people didn’t completely lose faith in curbside recycling and disconnect from it entirely, so we opted to keep collecting.”

The costs associated with educational programs when launching — or relaunching — a recycling program can be more prohibitive than some small cities anticipate. Recycling professionals recommend weighing the long-term costs of restarting a canceled program as well as the short-term cost increases associated with market changes.


“If you can figure out a way to limit your costs now by having a program within your budget means, at least do something to keep it in your citizens’ minds,” Patel said. When markets stabilize and “you have the ability to go back to curbside or a little more robust program … it’s not a huge learning curve to ramp it up again.”


“For the small towns, if they have a source-separated system in place — where the residents do the labor to separate it — it’s not perfect, but it’s a lot better,” NRRA’s Durfor observed.

For example, Rogue’s scaled-back commingled collection system, which emphasizes contamination removal, is viewed as a success, considering processors “have been accepting 100% of our material,” Leebrick said.

Durfor recommends that small cities anticipate their needs as far as 25 years down the road and invest in appropriate infrastructure now.

“Does it take time to put it in? Sure. Does it cost manpower? Sure. Is it better than throwing [material] away? Absolutely!” said Durfor. “If they can bale [separated materials] and ship them out in full loads, they’ll be fine.”

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Drink at your own risk. EPA won’t set PFOA, PFOS limits

EPA PFAS sign. Photo credit: Hannah Northey/E&E News

EPA in October 2018 held a discussion on per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances, or PFAS, in Michigan. Hannah Northey/E&E News








Cecelia Smith-Schoenwalder and Corbin Hiar 
report for E&E News:
EPA will not set a legal limit for two PFAS chemicals in drinking water, angering environmentalists and lawmakers.
An EPA spokeswoman did not deny a report from Politico, citing unnamed sources, about the expected action but said a PFAS-related plan is “currently undergoing interagency review.”
“EPA will be prepared to discuss the contents of the plan as soon as interagency review is complete, and the plan is public,” the spokeswoman said in a statement.
Per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances, or PFAS, are a family of thousands of chemicals that have been used in products ranging from nonstick cookware to firefighting foam. Health effects of exposure may include increased risk of cancer and problems with growth, learning and behavior in infants and children.
The two chemicals that apparently won’t be regulated — PFOA and PFOS — have been linked to kidney and testicular cancer.
Without limits under the Safe Drinking Water Act, utilities would not be required to test for the chemicals and make sure they aren’t present in what people drink.
Environmental groups expressed outrage.
“If these sources are right, the EPA is essentially telling the more than 110 million Americans whose water is likely contaminated with PFAS: ‘Drink up, folks,'” said Environmental Working Group senior scientist David Andrews.
More than 1,500 drinking water systems across the country could be contaminated with the chemicals, according to EWG research.
“It is absolutely unconscionable for the Trump administration to refuse to even start the process of setting a limit on these poisonous chemicals,” said Erik Olson, the Natural Resources Defense Council’s senior director for health and food.

Action on the Hill

The decision, if EPA stays the course, may lead to action on Capitol Hill, where lawmakers on both sides of the aisle have been pressing the agency to address PFAS.
Last week, while launching a bipartisan PFAS Task Force, several lawmakers talked about bills to introduce. If EPA, as reported, is declining to strictly regulate PFAS, those measures could soon emerge.
“I am currently pushing legislation, as well as with others, that would add to the Safe Drinking Water Act an enforceable standard for PFOS,” said Rep. Brendan Boyle (D-Pa.), referring to a type of PFAS that industry phased out of production in 2015.
“It’s kind of hard to believe, but the standard that is there now is voluntary and any cleanup that happens is voluntary,” he said.
Rep. Dan Kildee (D-Mich.), the task force’s co-chairman, added that “virtually all of the legislation that many of us had introduced in the last session either is being introduced or already has been introduced.”
Kildee is currently co-sponsoring H.R. 535, from Rep. Debbie Dingell (D-Mich.), which calls for EPA to designate PFAS as hazardous substances under the Superfund law. The agency would reportedly do that for some — but not all — types of PFAS.
Last Congress, Kildee introduced or backed three piece of PFAS legislation:
  • H.R. 6835, which sought to make it easier for federal agencies to work with states on addressing PFAS contamination.
  • H.R. 7284, which would have required a nationwide survey of perfluorinated compounds.
  • H.R. 6993, which aimed to provide additional services to veterans exposed to PFAS on military bases.
When it comes to oversight of EPA, Dingell announced at the task force launch that the Energy and Commerce Committee she serves on was planning a hearing devoted to PFAS (E&E Daily, Jan. 24).

Wheeler confirmation

EPA’s actions on PFAS could complicate the confirmation of acting EPA Administrator Andrew Wheeler, nominated to lead the agency on a permanent basis, and Peter Wright, Trump’s pick to lead the solid waste office.
Work that Michael Dourson, a failed nominee to lead EPA’s chemicals efforts, did on PFAS led North Carolina’s two Republican senators to break ranks in 2017 and effectively derail his confirmation (Greenwire, March 20, 2018).
After Dourson’s defeat, EPA attempted to get out in front of the PFAS issue. It held a summit with state regulators and made a series of regulatory commitments. Now, deadlines for those promises are fast approaching or have already passed (Greenwire, May 22, 2018).

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