Minutes 08-13-84 MINUTES OF SPECIAL CITY COUNCIL MEETING HELD IN
COUNCIL CHAMBERS, CITY HALL, BOYNTON BEACH, FLORIDA,
AUGUST 13, 1984 AT 7:30 P. M. RE SITE BEING PROPOSED BY
PALM BEACH COUNTY SOLID WASTE AUTHORITY
Present
Mayor Carl Zimmerman
Vice Mayor Robert Ferrell
Councilma~ Nick Cassandra
Councilman James R. Warnke
Peter L. Cheney,
City Manager
Mayor Zimmerman called the meeting to order at 7:35 P. M.
and introduced Timothy F. Hunt, Jr., Executive Director,
Palm Beach County Solid Waste Authority, Suite 2C,
5114 Okeechobee Boulevard, West Palm Beach, Florida 33409.
Mr. Hunt told the hiStory of the Solid Waste Authority,
which was established by the Legislature in 1974, and
stated that it was unique in the united States at that time
and remains unique in that it is composed of all elected
officials (4 elected City officials and 3 elected County
officials).
The principal job of the Authority is to plan for and imple-
ment a Countywide solid waste management. The Authority has
limited jurisdiction, meaning they could establish a minimum
collection criteria, but the Solid Waste Authority has
decided to stay out of the collecting business.
Mr. Hunt referred to land fills and said 1/3 of Boynton
Beach creates the entire waste of the Glades area. He
called attention to the increased amount of waste every day
and the impact it has on the County.
Mr. Hunt said the first thing they did was evaluate all of the
collection systems in Palm Beach County and through that
devised a system that indicated that over the next 20 to 30
years collection vehicles should not have to travel more
than 10 miles one way. He talked about equipment, vehicles,
and loads.
In 1979, the facilities' plan adopted by the Authority and
the State of Florida stated the Comprehensive Plan would
include the construction of coastal transfer stations along
the 1-95 corridor to serve the populated cities that border
both sides of the corridor. It included two major new land
fills (Lantana and Dyer Boulevard) at that time. Now it is
Boynton Beach. Mr. Hunt told of the cost of recycling and
land fills.
Mr. Hunt said they have recommended that all land fills in
Palm Beach County be completely lined. One land fill would
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MINUTES - SPECIAL CITY COUNCIL MEETING
RE SOLID WASTE AUTHORITY PROPOSED SITE
BOYNTON BEACH, FLORIDA
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serve the northend of the County, and one would serve the
southend, replacing Lantana. In addition, they would have
four vegetative waste sites, like Boynton Beach land. Two
would be in the south and two would be in the north, to
handle landscape debris from homeowners and lawn maintenance
people.
Mr. Hunt also told of their evaluations of energy recovery.
Because of the growth in Palm Beach County, the basic organi-
zational facilities have not changed. They are now
recommending three coastal transfer stations: one in the
north, south central, and one in the south. The one in
Delray Beach would be the southern one. The one in the
north would be the first major facility site, and Mr. Hunt
told about this site.
With closure plans going in at Dyer and approval plans for
closure at Lantana, Mr. Hunt said they turned their efforts
to the two major facilities needed in Palm Beach County.
With Lantana being one of these, this is very critical to
Boynton Beach because all of Boynton's waste goes to Lantana
and will have to go to this facility. If this facility is
not brought on the line by the time Lantana closes, Mr.
Hunt said the City will have a long haul.
Mr. Hunt informed the Council that the site they selected is
at the Southwest corner of Lantana Road and 1-95. The land
fill is west on Lantana Road. Mr. Hunt said they are in the
process now of negotiating for the land.
Councilman Cassandra asked if that facility would have the
same configuration as the one in Delray. Mr. Hunt replied
that it will not because this is a rectangular piece of
land. What is in Delray now will be eliminated in the next
12 months.
Councilman Cassandra pointed out that the transportation
concept is where we take the City trucks and unload them
onto the Solid Waste Authority's trucks. Starting with
this facility, Mr. Hunt said all transfer stations are built to
be entirely in a closed building. He told Councilman
Cassandra he will not be able to see what goes on. Trucks
will come into the site, get weighed, go inside a door, and
inside a building, dump their loads, and go outside another
door. They will get compacted or loaded into a 75 to 100
foot transfer trailer, and the transfer trailer will use
one of the major corridors to the disposal site.
Mr. Hunt explained the Delray facility and the reason for
its problems. Councilman Cassandra informed him they have
MINUTES - SPECIAL CITY COUNCIL MEETING
RE SOLID WASTE AUTHORITY PROPOSED SITE
BOYNTON BEACH, FLORIDA
AUGUST 13, 1984
problems with odor. Mr. Hunt assured Councilman Cassandra
they would not have any odor with the new facility because
inside of the building there will be very large vent fans
that will trap everything inside and draw them out. Also,
Mr. Hunt said it is against the law to keep refuse in a
transfer station overnight. The Delray facility will be
entirely replaced with a completely enclosed building in the
next 12 months.
Mr. Hunt continued that they are looking for an alternate
to the site they selected in case there is an environmental
condition that will prevent it from being permitted, designed,
and contracted. He showed where they will have to locate
transfer facilities.
A Consultant was hired to seek out the sites. He was given
the criteria that the Solid Waste Authority needed a net of
350 acres (310 acres for the land fill, and 40 for the
recovery facility) with no buffer at all. Based on what is
happening all over the United States, it would take a 40%
increase on the minimum net, so Mr. Hunt said they were look-
ing for 500 to 600 acres of land in order to create a
substantial buffer within their boundaries all around the
operation, and he explained some reasons. One is the law
reads that if you are generating leakage from your land fill
in an uncontrolled manner, you must legally stop it at the
foot of the land fill.
Mr. Hunt told of the Lantana land fill and the development
around it and pointed out the need of accessibility to sites
from major roads. Major roads here are Atlantic Avenue,
Boynton Beach Boulevard, Hypoluxo Road, and Lantana Road.
The north/ south arteries are 1-95, Congress Avenue,
Military Trail, and State Road 7, and maybe one of these
days Mr. Hunt said there would also be Jog Road and Lawrence
Road. They also need access to power lines and transmission
lines. In this area, they have the Boynton Canal with a
brand new transmission line on the north side of the Boynton
Canal from the lift station on Military Trail. There is a
major transmission line running west of State Road 7 and
another transmission line running down Clint Moore Road. It
costs $200,000 to $300,000 a mile to build a transmission
power line, so they have that to consider from an economic
standpoint.
Councilman Cassandra noted Mr. Hunt talked about containing
it because of the boundaries they are allowing themselves.
He asked what that will do to the City's water supply.
Mr. Hunt answered that State law requires that you underline
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MINUTES - SPECIAL CITY COUNCIL MEETING
RE SOLID WASTE AUTHORITY PROPOSED SITE
BOYNTON BEACH, FLORIDA
AUGUST 13, 1984
across from a land fill with single lining. The Authority
has directed them, from a design standpoint, to include two
liners. In places around the United States where liners have
been put in, no breaks have been detected in them. Mr. Hunt
said they are putting in two liners on the assumption that
human error may cause a break in the upper liner. Then you
would have a second liner.
There is no State or Federal law requiring that a land fill
be lined. They are preparing a proposal to the Authority to
underline with soil cement rather than a plastic lining on
the assumption they are going to create leakage and you want
to collect and treat it rather than allowing it to discharge
by itself. He stated they are in an industry that Ks new
and informed the Council one thing the land fills will pro-
duce is large quantities of DOD concentrations that will get
into the water.
Councilman Cassandra questioned whether the soil cement will
be an enclosure type thing or an aqueduct type thing. Mr.
Hunt replied it is very similar to using clay. You can mix
it at different grades to get greater concentrations.
Councilman Cassandra asked who inspects the trash transferred
to a land fill. Up until two months ago, Mr,'-~ replied
no one inspected the trash. With the expansion of the City
and new industry coming in, Councilman Cassandra wondered if
it was possible they had hazard waste of some form or shape
and how they could control that problem.
Two months ago, Mr. Hunt said they started inspecting random
loads of trash. Some people will knowingly send hazardous
waste in small quantiities to a land fill. For example,
homeowners throw out paint thinner cans. Raid cans can be
considered hazardous. Homeowners probably have more hazards
in their garages than a business does. Mr. Hunt told of
industries that store hazardous waste and transport it out
of state. Their filters were found in the land fill.
Mr. Hunt stated they are doing a separate assessment on
hazardous waste. It is to be done by July of next year, and
a separate criteria will be set up to handle hazardous waste
under State law. The ones that are hard to catch are the
municipal trash drivers who are picking up the trash, and
they are inspecting as many as a dozen trucks a day. The
transfer stations will allow them to inspect trash on the
floor before it gets near a land fill. There will be
spotters checking for these items.
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MINUTES - SPECIAL CITY COUNCIL MEETING
RE SOLID WASTE AUTHORITY PROPOSED SITE
BOYNTON BEACH, FLORIDA
AUGUST 13, 1984
Mr. Hunt said a man was told to do an independent study,
independent of them, so he created his own study committee.
Many of the people on his committee were adamantly opposed to
this site and fought it for two years. Public Works
Directors and Dick Simmons, City Manager of West Palm Beach,
were on the committee. They evaluated 16 sites and different
departments talked to them. Mr. Hunt said they tentatively
designated the site south of Boynton Road in the agricultural
area. They confined the area of investigation to Boynton
Road on the north, Clint Moore Road on the south, the turn-
pike on the east, and the catchment area. ~J~r. Warnke asked
what Mr. Hunt meant by the "catchment area." Mr. Hunt
replied, "The conservation area."
Mr. Hunt said the memorandum which was handed out is on the
agenda for Wednesday's meeting, and he is to reevaluate
these and compare everything to Site 8, which was selected.
He stated he will recommend to the Board that the presenta-
tion of formal recommendations be deferred for thirty (30)
days, which will allow him time to finish the evaluation.
He is also asking for policy guidance from the Board.
Mr. Hunt is going to ask the Board if they do wish or do not
wish that he look at areas immediately adjacent to residen-
tial development. Site #10, immediately south of Holiday
City and west of Boynton Beach, is a site used for agri-
culture but less extensively than other acreage. It was next
to a residential development and offered by a land owner.
Aside from Holiday City, it was the better site.
Secondly, Mr. Hunt wants the Board to provide him the guidance
to stay away from agricultural lands in accordance with the
County's Land Use Plan, if at all possible.
A1 McGregor, McGregor Realty, 110 South Federal Highway,
Boynton Beach, asked if the Committee that is recommending
this site had those three items to go by. Mr. Hunt said they
did not, and that was why he was asking for them.
Mr. Hunt showed two agricultural reserve areas and told about
them. He wants the direction to stay away from productive
agricultural land, if at all possible.
Thirdly, between Clint Moore Road and Boynton West Road on
the north, there are only two currently unused pieces of land.
One has enough acreage, but there would not be any buffer,
and it is within 1/2 mile of an established residential area.
The other one is large enough until he subtracts all of the
wetlands on the site, the FP&L transmission line easement,
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and the easements for State Road 7 in case no~ enough acreage
is left.
Essentially, in the area they asked Mr. Hunt to look at,
there is nothing if they want him to stay away from productive
agricultural land and residential dwellings. If the Board
goes along with these three guidelines, which will expand the
search area to the Broward County line, Mr. Hunt hoped to be
in a position to give a recommendation in September or, at
the latest, in October.
Mr. Hunt said they would end up with three transfer stations
along the eastern coast, two major facilities, and maybe a
transfer station at a facility in the Glades, and he explained.
He said the floor space and compaction capability can handle
over 1,000 tons a day. Mr. Hunt informed the Council they
have selected a refuse dry fuel for the recovery plant. It
processes waste to give much higher fuel value, is less
damaging to equipment, affords the opportunity to recycle,
cuts down on air pollution, and gives a cleaner ash. They
expect to reduce their dependence on land fills by 70%.
Between the two sites, there will be enough acreage for the
time when we will be forced to experience a large hurricane.
14 million yards of trash was generated in Mobile, Alabama in
two days.
Councilman Cassandra followed Mr. Hunt's reasoning for stay-
ing next to the Turnpike because of roads, population, etc.
With expansion going on, he asked why Mr. Hunt did not go more
out west and asked if it was because of wetlands and environ-
mental reasons. Because we have a 45 mile coast here, Mr.
Hunt said we have a natural divide traveling on State Road
80. North of State Road 80, once you get west of State Road
7, you are in nothing but wetlands. South of here, excluding
Wellington and one mile west of State Road 7, you have Conser-
vation Area 91. Also, there is no water out there. All of
the water that serves the agricultural interests comes from
Lake Okeechobee, and Mr. Hunt went into detail.
Councilman Warnke called attention to the area just west of
441 and north of Boynton Road and said the canal that runs
approximately from the Faith Farm west is an easement from
the Lake Worth Drainage District. To the west of the high
line is a County reserve shellrock area. There is a huge
complex of Indian mounds. Mr. Hunt said that site "bit the
dust" very early because of dead Indians and wetlands. It
is also subject to sink hole development.
Councilman Warnke said our City has been discussed for reverse
osmosis for canal water. The main canal comes from that
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MINUTES - SPECIAL CITY COUNCIL MEETING
RE SOLID WASTE AUTHORITY PROPOSED SITE
BOYNTON BEACH, FLORIDA
AUGUST 13, 1984
area. Councilman Warnke asked if any studies had been done
for possible pollution of the canal. Now that they are
stopped at Boynton Road, Mr. Hunt did not think the City had
anything to worry about. Had they been on Site 10, the
Authority would have a very serious environmental assessment
on its hands.
It doesn't affect the City's canal and maybe the City's wells,
but Councilman Warnke wondered about the wells of Delray
Beach. As he said, Mr. Hunt repeated they will end up lining
the trash fill and collecting all the waste material that
passes through the trash and treating it before it is dis-
charged by deep well or put into a sewer system. The
Department of Environmental Regulations and Department of
Health developed regulations and are supposed to protect the
public. The new land fills they designed are designed to
exceed Federal and State standards.
Mr. Hunt told of studies and tests they did at the Lantana site.
He showed the Council photographs. Three were of vegetative
waste sites. None of them were in isolated areas. Mr. Hunt
told what could be found at trash sites.
Councilman Cassandra read about ash being toxic. Mr. Hunt
replied there are two kinds of ashes that come out of a
combustion facility (bottom ash and fly ash). Bottom ash
does not pose a pollution problem and is not toxic. The
problem is fly ash. In most combustion facilities, the gases
that rise from combustion are pulled and electrostatically
precipitated down like powder with electrically charged
devices to suck it out. Depending on the quality of com-
bustion, you can end up with concentrated heavy metal. If
the ashes are left in that state by themselves, you could,
depending on chemical analysis, come up with toxic waste.
It is difficult to tell what you will get until you burn it.
Mr. Hunt told of testing garbage. One thing that has known
problems are the plastics. Whether or not you get them in
the air pollution control devices depends on controlled
combustion in the system and the temperatures. If you are
not careful how you proceed with combustion, you can end up
with a lot of chlorides. That is why they have the double
lined land fill.
Mr. McGregor asked Mr. Hunt to explain how they build a
liner. Mr. Hunt showed a land fill and said you berm all the
way around it to a height of five or six feet. First, you
have to smooth off the bottom, put a layer of sand and grub
it clean so you have no roots. Then you put one or two feet
of a small bed of clean sand (dredge sand). They are putting
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RE SOLID WASTE AUTHORITY PROPOSED SITE
BOYNTON BEACH, FLORIDA
AUGUST 13, 1984
down 30 mill PVC liner which comes in strips 100 yards wide.
You lay it in the ground up over the lip of the berm from one
side to the other side and overlay each strip, then come back
with an adhesive glue like Crazy glue and strip it. The Lab
analyzes it. You end up with a barrier. Then you come back
with two more feet of dredge sand and push it in from one
side and continually work it out. In their case, they took
old tires and ended up with a floating cushion across the top.
Next, you put in your municipal garbage and start the same
way, at the edge, dump it inside and push it, etc. Then you
have a whole bed across the base of the land fill. By doing
that you protect the liner from being cut, torn, or punctured.
Puncturing a liner is of concern to everybody, and Mr. Hunt
talked about monitoring walls.
Councilman Warnke referred to toxic waste and asked where it
goes to. Mr. Hunt replied the only people who can permit a
hazardous waste facility are in the Federal Government. The
State of Florida will be able to permit within the next year.
Right now, there are only two facilities in the southeast.
One is in Alabama, and the other one is in South Carolina.
The State of Florida now requires all counties to do a
hazardous waste survey of all small generators. The Solid
Waste Authority has that responsibility in Palm Beach County,
and Mr. Hunt explained the program. As part of the assess-
ment, each County has to identify two possible hazard sites.
If they fail to do that, the Cabinet of the State of Florida
can designate those sites.
Don Zyto, Vice President and Senior Banking Officer, Barnett
Bank, asked how many dump trucks a day they generate to a
land fill. At Lantana, Mr. Hunt said they get 500 to 600
trucks a day. Once the transfer station sites are in, the
number will be cut to less than 300 and he explained.
Councilman Warnke ascertained there is only about 1/4 of the
County we can use. Out of a 2400 square mile County, Mr.
Hunt advised they have 600 square miles to work with. The
environmental laws prevent them from going out west.
Mr. Hunt confirmed Councilman Cassandra's statement that the
people concerned about Site 8 have another thirty days before
the Board gets Mr. Hunt's recommendation. Mr. Hunt said he
requested a 30 day deferment. If the Board adopts the policy
considerations, then agriculture would not be the prime
target but a target of last resort. They already eliminated
environmentally sensitive land. If you take the position
you are not going to put something adjacent to a developed
MINUTES - SPECIAL CITY COUNCIL MEETING
RE SOLID WASTE AUTHORITY PROPOSED SITE
BOYNTON BEACH' FLORIDA
AUGUST 13, 1984
area, that only leaves one undeveloped land, which is an
agricultural land.
Councilman Cassandra asked how much acreage is available
further south. Mr. Hunt replied they are looking for a
parcel with a minimum of 600 acres of land. He did not think
there was a piece of land anywhere in the strip from 441 to
the Turnpike. Councilman Cassandra gathered when Mr. Hunt
wanted the 30 days he wanted further area to look at and
wanted the boundary line in the southend to drop further
down. Mr. Hunt wanted it to go at least to 441.
Councilman Warnke referred to 20 Mile Bend and did not think
that was a solution. Mr. Hunt answered, "Not unless you
want to add about 200 or 300 additional tractor trailers for
that road." He gave an example and said there are 70,000
people out there. Mr. Hunt also pointed out the haul time.
Every truck and trailer costs $100,000 and $1.15 a mile to
operate plus the driver and liability exposure. They are
trying to keep the cost down to something that is reasonable.
Mr. Irving Russo, 8210 Whitewood Cove East, Lake Worth
33463 asked if any rail transport was considered. Three
Consultants looked at it, and Mr. Hunt advised that from an
economic standpoint, it is worse than driving trucks and
trailers out there. However, a reason for the sites along
the corridor is an anticipation that some time down the road
the rail business may be viable, at least for scrap metal
possibilities.
Since they started this, City Manager Cheney asked how many
sites in Palm Beach County Mr. Hunt had looked at for one
thing or another. Mr. Hunt guessed they were around 80 now.
He told Councilman Cassandra he did not get to "not adjacent
to residential yet."
Councilman Cassandra asked what made Mr. Hunt come down here
and eliminate the other 79. Mr. Hunt replied they dropped
about 30 of them when they selected the north site. He showed
the distribution of the sites and locations of waste basins.
Councilman Warnke could understand adjoining neighbors and
DuBois Farms objecting to this site. Mr. Hunt replied that
it is hard to define how far away a site ought to be because
people are protective of their homes. He could almost
guarantee that from Southern Boulevard south, there is no
place in Palm Beach County where you can site a facility
like this and have more than a mile between an existing
established residential area and its boundaries.
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RE SOLID WASTE AUTHORITY PROPOSED SITE
BOYNTON BEACH, FLORIDA
AUGUST 13, 1984
If one mile from a developed residential community becomes
one of the guidelines, Mr. Owen Anderson, Chamber of
Commerce, asked Mr. Hunt if, for practical purposes, Site 8
would be eliminated. Mr. Hunt replied it would have to be.
One mile from a residential development is not one of
the policy guidelines, but it is not to be immediately adja-
cent to a residential development.
If they adopt the one that says productive agricultural lands
should not be considered, Mr. Hunt said everything from
Boynton Road to Delray West Road would be eliminated. Then
City Manager Cheney pointed out he would be looking at the
east side of Four Points and the west side of 441. Mr. Hunt
replied, "No." There is some type of productive agricultural
activity." There is a little piece of land west of Atlantic
Boulevard extended, but that is the one with the FP&L ease-
ment and wetlands'.
City Manager Cheney asked if one of the criterion is set to
go. If they provide him with the criteria he asked for, Mr.
Hunt replied there are two or three pieces of property that
could fall in there. He was not saying it would fall in
there under the same conditions, as there may be some trade
offs. If they want not to be next to a residential area
and not to take active agriculture out of production, Mr.
Hunt said the City will have to pay a penalty for that. The
penalty would be higher costs for disposal.
City Manager Cheney asked for what purpose the higher costs
would be and whether it would be to take it somewhere else.
If you move out of this zone, Mr. Hunt said you cause a
distance. If they move down, City Manager Cheney observed
they would be moving into West Boca Raton, and they will be
saying they do not want it in West Boca Raton. That was why
Mr. Hunt asked that the search area be extended. Not one
possibility he will have will be acceptable to everybody.
City Manager Cheney noted Mr. Hunt was saying with that cri-
teria there really is not any land in that area that meets
both of those desirable criteria.~ That was why Mr. Hunt
said agricultural land should not be considered, if
possible.
Mr. Hunt said he will'be forced to look at the productivity
of land and use that as a comparison and show the Board what
their options are. Their options will be nothing but a series
of trade offs. City Manager Cheney determined the City has
to become realistic because the City produces garbage every
day and it has to go somewhere.
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RE SOLID WASTE AUTHORITY PROPOSED SITE
BOYNTON BEACH, FLORIDA
AUGUST 13, 1984
Councilman Warnke asked if the Southwest corner of Boynton
Road and 441 was considered. Mr. Hunt replied there was not
enough acreage. Councilman Cassandra referred to a wide
area of acreage, and Mr. Hunt said the problem there is that
everybody west of Royal Palm Beach drinks water from their
own 30 or 35 foot deep private wells. There is no aquifer.
If for some reason, there would be a break in the land fill
and you contaminated that sand bed area, Mr. Hunt said you
would wipe out everybody's well. The area looks unpopulated
but the very reason there is no development out there is the
same reason you cannot put the facility there.
Mr. Charles Lee Andrews, West Palm Beach, said at a power
generation plant they use a diked in reservoir for cooling.
Mr. Hunt informed him the Solid Waste Authority will not.
He indicated a site and said they will draw it up from the
ground water underneath the existing land fill or take it
from the regional wastewater plant. He showed another site
where they will take it from the aquifer.
Next Meeting
Mr. Hunt informed Councilman Warnke the next meeting will be
at the County's Governmental Complex on Wednesday, August 15,
1984 at 8:30 A. M.
ADJOURNMENT
The meeting properly adjourned at 9:00 P. M.
CITY OF BOYNTON BEACH, FLORIDA
Vice Mayor
~Rg~ ~~~C~o~un c i lman
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MINUTES - SPECIAL CITY COUNCIL MEETING
RE SOLID WASTE AUTHORITY PROPOSED SITE
BOYNTON BEACH, FLORIDA
AUGUST 13, 1984
ATTEST:
/ City Cler~
Re . :~ _61,~ / ~. ~,~9~1
C°~Td~°ngTaS~sr~tary ~
Councilman
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PALM BEACH COUNTY
SOLID WASTE AUTHORITY
ITEM:
AuEust 9, 1984
TO:
FROM:
SUBJECT:
Solid Waste Authority Board
Timothy F. Hunt, Jr.
Executive Director
South County Class III Trashfill & Future Resource Recovery
Facility Site
At the July Authority Board meeting, site #8 was tentatively selected by
the Board for' the subject uses. However, the Board further directed Staff to
provide additional evaluation of alternate sites for possible consideration.
All such sites were to be compared to Site #8 and the search area was establish
as follows:
SOUTH
WEST
NORTH
EAST
- Clint Moore Road
- Conservation Area I
- Boynton Beach Blvd
- Florida Turnpike
Furthermore, Staff was to report back to the Board at the August meeting.
During the course of the past three weeks, Authority Staff has accomplishec
the following regarding this alternate site evaluation:
1. Completely re-evaluated the consultant site evaluation study,
which we found to be comprehensive, thorough and completely
in accordance with the directions provided by the Board.
2. Ordered the most currently available photography of the search
area.
3. Reviewed available documentation regarding land use policies,
soils, ground and surface water and environmental contraints.
4. Met or talked with the following:
a). County Planning & Zoning Dept.
b). Department of Environmental Regulation
c). County transportation engineers
d). Representation of the Agricultural Community
and representatives of the Conservation Area.
e). Real Estate Interests
5114 Okeechobee Blvd,/Suite 2C /West Palm Beach, Florida 33409 /Telephone (305) 471-5770
PAGE ~2
South County Class III Trashfill
5. We have also flown over the entire area.
However, Staff has not completed its evaluation to the extent that all
affected groups and agencies have not yet been contacted and advised of our
project efforts on this subject site. Furthermore, we have not completed
compliation of or data and information for a comprehensive presentation and
recommendation to the Board.
Authority Staff needs further policy direction from the Board in order
to provide a thorough and meaningful evaluation of possible alternative sites.
Specific policy considerations:
1. No site immediately adjacent to residential communities should
be considered.
2. Avoidance of P~odUctive agricultural land in accordance with
County land use policy, if possible.
3. Expansion of the evaluation area, south to the Palm Beach/Browa~d
County border.
RECOMMENDATION:
Postpone discussion of the South County Class III Trashfill
site for at least 30 days and approve the three (3) above
stated policy guidlines.