Politics & Government
Board Denies Landfill Expansion In Northwest Davidson County
Black residents have bitterly fought the landfill for decades, leveling accusations of environmental racism.

By Anita Wadhwani, Tennessee Lookout
March 25, 2021
Nashvilleβs Solid Waste Board has denied plans for the expansion of a controversial landfill that has, for decades, been the source of anger and frustration in Bordeaux, the largely African-American suburb northwest of downtown.
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The decision at the end of the four-hour meeting on Wednesday is not likely, however, to be the last say on the landfillβs future.
The Southern Services landfill currently takes in 90 percent of all construction waste generated in the rapidly developing city.
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With the massive wreckage wrought by the 2020 tornado and then the Christmas Day bombing later that year, landfill operators argued for a βmodest, short-term expansionβ of the 77-acre landfill by adding 17 more acres to extend the life of the decades-old site for 10 to 12 more years.
The expansion plan, board members concluded, was βinconsistentβ with the cityβs 10-year solid waste plan, which calls for Nashville to become a βzero-wasteβ city.
βHaving a landfill to increase construction and demolition (C&D) would go against the priority of diverting C&D,β the board found.
In previous community meetings, the board noted, residents had raised a series of objections to the landfill.
βHealth concerns, livability, home resale value were all mentioned. Those concerns are also environmental and economic as well as socialβ¦the plan itself is called the Achieving Zero Waste Plan, and this proposal does not move us towards of achieving zero waste.β
βTo approve this proposal would contradict the plan both in spirit and in letter.β
Waste Management officials argued that denying the plans expansion would create more of a negative environmental impact.
There is no other landfill in Davidson County that accepts construction and demolition waste. The next closest landfill that does accept the waste is 40 miles away, adding transportation costs and impacts on the environment in the form of greenhouse gases, said Don Gentilcore of Waste Management.
Gentilcore also noted that the cityβs only recycling facility for construction debris sits adjacent to the Southern Services landfill. Without a continued influx of C&D waste, those recycling efforts would cease, he said.
And, Gentilcore noted, the cityβs 10-year waste plan is behind schedule, slowed in part by the pandemic. The expansion would βbuy the city time.β
The dispute is not likely at an end. Waste Management has the option to file suit challenging the boardβs decision.
The Tennessee Department of Environment and Conservation, which as been criticized by local communities for siding with landfill owners, could overrule the boardβs decision.
On a separate track, Metro Councilman Jonathan Hall has pledged to bring legislation that would reject the expansion.
But that decision could, too, be subject to a challenge by both the courts and state environmental regulators.
The landfill currently has two to three years of life left before it reaches capacity.
Read more: Elected officials add voices to debate over landfill in Black neighborhood
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