Politics & Government
Even Without State Funding, Recycling Likely to Continue Here
County official says Walker's plan to end mandate and drop state funding show he 'does not understand' importance of recycling.

In the 17 years since local recycling programs were mandated by the state of Wisconsin, the practice has grown up from a feel-good initiative that many grumbled about into an environmental and economic framework that most people take pride in.
So waste managers and public works directors throughout southeastern Wisconsin were caught off-guard by Gov. Scott Walkerβs budget proposal to eliminate the recycling requirement for counties and municipalities, along with all state funding to support such programs.
βWe donβt have a plan for this,β said Karen Fiedler, solid waste supervisor for Waukesha County. βWe expected there would be some cuts but no one anticipated elimination of the whole program.
Find out what's happening in Menomonee Fallsfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
βWhy he selected this program is a mystery to us.β
County has public-private partnership
In Waukesha County, 25 municipalities arrange to have recyclable materials collected and delivered to a central processing center owned by the county and managed by the private company FCR Recycling.
Find out what's happening in Menomonee Fallsfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Fielder said that the public-private partnership supports about 20 private-sector jobs for FCR, as well as many more among the contractors hired by the municipalities.
Ultimately, she said, the program collects more than 21,000 tons of materials each year with a value of more than $1 million in sales to the paper, glass, plastics and metals industries. State grants to the county and municipalities for the program totaled $1.3 million.
βWe already have an economic model,β Fiedler said, βand the markets have been strong.
βThe big question is, βHow are these materials going to be collected and transferred to the market?β Itβs an economic issue.β
Falls expected to continue recycling
Menomonee Falls βhas a very strong recycling process,β said Public Works Director Arlyn Johnson, βand it would likely continue. There is a great conservation ethic attached to it and to the benefits of recycling.
βThatβs not only keeping materials out of the landfill, but also recovering and reusing materials in manufacturing new products.β
Johnson said the village has typically received $90,000 a year in state grant money to support the recycling program, which would amount to 22 percent of the recycling budget of $408,000 for 2011.
The village also recovers $55,000 in revenue through recycling rebates β its share of the proceeds from the sale of materials. The balance of the program budget comes out of the $97.48 residential tax for waste collection.
Menomonee Fallsβ collection contract is with Waste Management.
DNR will help with transition
At the state level, Ann Coakley, director of the Bureau of Waste and Materials Management of the Department of Natural Resources said: βWe do realize the tie to private business. Recycling is still cheaper than landfilling, and the DNR still has a strong recycling education program focused on collecting and reusing.
βSo, nothing has changed with us, and will work with our stakeholders to make a transition.β
Coakley said that in 2009, the state grant program paid out $27.9 million to communities and that the total cost of recycling to all communities was $108.2 million. She did not have a figure for how much of that amount was recovered through sale of the material because the markets fluctuate.
The Sierra Club was instrumental in creating the recycling law, which was passed in 1990 but went into effect in 1994. Cherie Briscoe of the Great Waters Group, which represents metro Milwaukee-area counties, was among those who lobbied for the law.
βThe governor is playing a shell game by taking funds that were paid through taxes on landfill waste created specifically to help communities set up and operate recycling programs,β Briscoe said. βIt has been a mandate that works, and most communities have been able to neutralize its cost with the help of the recycling fund dollars.
βIt has also helped to discourage people from being wasteful.Β
βThe taxes paid have supported good jobs that ultimately produce new products as well as conserving valuable resources and educating our children and families about conservation," he added. "This is another example of false economy that will not only hurt communities,Β it will take away jobs that have been particularly good for low-skilled individuals.Β Recycling has been, and continues to be, a win-win environmental and energy-saving program for all of us.β
Official: Walker making a mistake
Fiedler, of Waukesha County, said that the recycling mandate accounted for the collection of more than 400,000 tons of materials in Wisconsin last year, which she considered a remarkable savings in landfilling at a relatively low price.
βIt seems that (Walker) does not understand recycling in Wisconsin, the way the system works,β Fiedler said. βNormally, you wouldnβt want to mess with a system that works. Once you short-circuit that process, it is difficult to rebuild.
Β βI think the governor has seriously miscalculated the peopleβs investment in this program.β
Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.