Politics & Government

Harckham Calls For Public Hearing On Incinerator Permit

The permit for the Wheelabrator Westchester waste incinerator plant in the city of Peekskill has expired.

State Senator Pete Harckham is calling for a public hearing into whether the permit for Wheelabrator Westchester waste incinerator plant in the city of Peekskill should be renewed.
State Senator Pete Harckham is calling for a public hearing into whether the permit for Wheelabrator Westchester waste incinerator plant in the city of Peekskill should be renewed. (Google Maps)

PEEKSKILL, NY — A state senator is calling for a public hearing on the renewal of a permit for a waste incinerator plant in Peekskill.

The Title V air permit for the Wheelabrator Westchester waste incinerator plant in the city of Peekskill has expired and is being considered for renewal.

In a letter sent to Basil Seggos, commissioner of the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation, state Senator Pete Harckham said that the waste incinerator plant “… is in an Environmental Justice Community and contributes greatly to the environmental burden that residents face. Peekskill and the surrounding communities are host to several facilities that impact the environment, including Indian Point, the AIM pipeline and the Westchester Wastewater Treatment Plant.”

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Harckham said, in view of the environmental burdens that the residents face, the DEC should have a public discussion to hear their comments, concerns and questions.

In October 2019, Westchester County’s Department of Environmental Facilities extended the contract for the waste incinerator plant’s operation. First opened in 1984, the plant, located at Charles Point on Peekskill’s riverfront, is a waste-to-energy facility.

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According to Wheelabrator Westchester LP, the plant’s operator, it “processes” over 2,000 tons of waste each day, about 90 percent of Westchester’s daily trash total, and the resulting energy — 60 megawatts of electricity converted from steam — is enough to power more than 63,000 homes.

Wheelabrator Westchester is currently one of the nation’s oldest waste incinerator plants. According to the Natural Resources Defense Council, “Regardless of what is being burned (mixed municipal solid waste, plastic, outputs from “chemical recycling”), waste incineration creates and/or releases harmful chemicals and pollutants, including: air pollutants such as particulate matter, which cause lung and heart diseases; heavy metals such as lead and mercury, which cause neurological diseases; and toxic chemicals, such as PFAS and dioxins, which cause cancer and other health problems.”

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