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Candia News

Candia News by the Hooksett Banner

Opening of new transfer station goes well

BY TOBY HENRY

Solid Waste Committee member Amanda Soares helps Candia resident Paul Partridge sort his recyclables during the first weekend of business of the new Candia recycling center on Sunday, Aug. 31. -Toby Henry PhotoThe new recycling center on Deer Run Road opened its doors to scores of people the last weekend of August as local residents made their first drop-offs of bottles and paper that officials say could be a new money maker for the town.

“I think that because of the holiday weekend, it’s been a pretty smooth transition for our employees here,” said Solid Waste Committee Chairman Paul McHugh.

“There’s probably a lot of people away this weekend, but the people that have showed up are very receptive to recycling. Now, we’ve got to recycle everything -- but it’s money.”

McHugh was joined by fellow committee members Amanda Soares, Al Couch, selectmen Chairman Fred Kelley and others to help answer the public’s questions and to help ease the transition from the “town dump” and incinerator on New Boston Road to the new facility.

Most of Candia’s plastic will now be sorted, bailed and sold, and by Sunday afternoon, Aug. 31, many of the large concrete holding bins at the center already contained growing mountains of cans, paper and other recyclables.

The opening of the center came after nearly four years of discussion, work and public voting that included a failed vote for a much larger regional recycling center three years ago. Although officials said the Labor Day weekend had a relatively low resident turnout compared to a typical weekend at the now-closed incinerator, Soares said more than 150 people had dropped off trash by noontime on Sunday, and those who did come brought fairly significant amounts of recyclables with them.

“It’s my first time here, and it seems pretty efficient and wellorganized,” said Paul Partridge.

“I wasn’t really sure of what to expect, but there’s a nice flow of traffic ... and I think it‘s a good arrangement compared to what we had before.”

At the incinerator, residents used to wait for a place to park and then throw their metal and cans in various dumpsters set up around the crowded property. But at the new center, the layout is less congested, and drivers pull their vehicles up to a two-lane second-story area and simply drop their cardboard, paper, glass and other materials down into the bins.

The final stop on the way out is the large red compactor trailer, which McHugh said can hold up to 10 tons of regular household trash. While residents and committee members gave the new center high marks for its improved traffic flow, center operator Chuck Whitcher said some residents would occasionally get boxed in and have to wait for an exit until residents parked to the front, side or rear drop off their recyclables and leave.

“They’d have to wait a few minutes, and some people were bothered by it, but others were very patient and understanding,” Whitcher said.

The occasional odd item did not have an apparent drop-off location, and in one example, Soares held on to a worn-out dry ice pack for one resident and disposed of it later in a receptacle designed for objects containing chemicals. Additionally, officials said some similar items like common house light bulbs and fluorescent bulbs have to be disposed of in different ways.

While the regular light bulbs can be thrown out with regular trash, the fluorescent bulbs, which contain mercury, are put in a separate area to be recycled later on. Soares said the items that generated the most questions were kitty litter -- it now goes in with regular trash and not construction debris -- and Styrofoam, which also goes in the household trash compactor.

Residents questioned on Sunday morning said they were pleased with the new center, although a few expressed concern that the town had not sent out fliers beforehand to remind them to sort out their plastic, particularly the ubiquitous clear plastic water bottles. Paul Gagnon was one of several to say that an informative newsletter mailing would have been a good reminder for residents to begin sorting out their plastic, and McHugh said an extensive multi-page hand-out will be made available soon.

During opening weekend, information was available at the center in the form of a flier, and most residents questioned said they were able to figure out what to do without much of a problem. Walter Ingaharro said there will probably be a learning curve as he and other residents learn how to best use the two parking lanes as they access the concrete bins.

“Oh, give me a couple weeks,” he said. “I think that for right now, a lot of people are going to be confused about the parking.”

Published Wednesday, September 10, 2008 2:19 PM by Hooksett Editor

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