Politics & Government

Middle Point Operators Say City, County, The Source Of Landfill Toxins

Should the case continue, they have also asked that Rutherford County be named as a defendant.

(Tennessee Lookout)

By Anita Wadhwani, Tennessee Lookout

October 11, 2022

In their ongoing dispute with the city of Murfreesboro, operators of the Middle Point Landfill are now blaming toxic pollutants found in runoff from the landfill and in nearby waterways on a city-run wastewater treatment plant and a landfill operated by Rutherford County.

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In August, the city of Murfreesboro filed suit against BFI Waste Systems and its parent company, Republic Services — the nation’s No. 2 trash disposal company. The lawsuit alleges the landfill is responsible for the presence of PFAs in nearby East Fork Stones River, which flows into Matthews Lake.

PFA’s are highly toxic chemicals linked to cancer, thyroid disease, ulcerative colitis and other ailments.

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Republic Services, in a response filed last week, counters that the city itself is a “significant source of any PFAs found in the Middle Point Landfill.” The response suggests that contaminated sludge from the Murfreesboro Wastewater Treatment Plant contains PFAs and that Rutherford County Landfill is the likeliest source of some contaminants. The county landfill uses the Middle Point Landfill to treat and discharge its wastewater.

The lawsuit is merely the latest battle between residents of Murfreesboro and the landfill. For years, residents complained about odors in their rapidly growing suburbs nearby. Last year, the complaints crystalized into organized opposition to plans that would expand the landfill’s 207-acre footprint by nearly 100 acres. The expansion would have prolonged an estimated 7 years of remaining life at the site by upwards of 25 more years.

The fate of the landfill, which is the main destination for household waste from one-third of all Tennessee counties, could have far reaching implications far beyond Murfreesboro residents since there are few known alternatives for the trash generated by more than a million Tennessee residents.

Middle Point’s operators are asking a federal judge to dismiss the lawsuit entirely. Should the case continue, they have also asked that Rutherford County be named as a defendant as a result of its alleged contaminants — a result that could put the city in the uncomfortable position of suing the county.

Now more than ever, tough and fair journalism is important. The Tennessee Lookout is your watchdog, telling the stories of politics and policy that affect the people of the Volunteer State.

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