QUIGLEY RESPONDS TO SECOND LANDFILL MEETING REQUEST

Times-Tribune, Scranton, PA
By Robert Smith, Harrisburg Bureau Chief
March 26, 2015                              

Friends, we have another great announcement!  We will have another opportunity to ask the DEP important questions regarding the proposed landfill expansion!  John Quigley, secretary-designate for the Department of Environmental Protection told senators this morning that he would accommodate another public meeting.  

First, our sincere thanks to Senator Casey for helping our voices be heard!  He is representing his constituents and making a tremendous difference!  We continue to hope our other elected officials will be inspired to follow his lead.

We are thankful that John Quigley will accommodate this opportunity.   We have only had months to look over this very technical and complex application that will impact ALL the generations to come.  We are just starting to get experts involved who can help us understand its implications and we are in the process of requesting important health studies.  We embrace this opportunity to ask more questions and to get answers. We also absolutely need more time.  Time to wrap our heads around the full impact the landfill is having now and would have on our community if it expands. 

http://m.thetimes-tribune.com/news/quigley-responds-to-second-landfill-meeting-request-1.1853464

CHRIS KELLY: CASEY’S LANDFILL STAND A HEROIC ACT, LEADING BY EXAMPLE

We completely agree with Chris Kelly that U.S. Senator Bob Casey taking a stand and opposing the expansion of the Keystone Sanitary Landfill is a heroic act that deserves our huge thanks and is a refreshing example of representative government.  And if you want a recap of the zoning hearing this past Thursday night, Chris nails it.

Times-Tribune, Scranton, PA
Chris Kelly, Kelly’s World
March 22, 2015

Excerpts:
In a letter to the state Department of Environmental Protection, the Scranton native showed he is a true Friend of Lackawanna by standing up for his constituents and against the proposed expansion of Keystone Sanitary Landfill in Dunmore and Throop.

“I have been contacted by many constituents,” Mr. Casey wrote to acting DEP secretary John Quigley. “They have expressed significant concerns about the expansion, particularly with respect to environmental concerns, quality of life, health concerns, and congestion of traffic. … I share many of these concerns.”

The letter was typically understated, as were his comments at a Friday press conference. Bob Casey is no bomb thrower. A scribbler who expects him to say anything incendiary doesn’t know the man. I spoke to him by phone shortly before the press conference. About to do something extraordinary, he could have crowed. Instead, he was barely audible.

“Most of the concerns expressed were about the future, about our children,” Mr. Casey said of the 175 letters and emails he received from opponents of the expansion. “They were extremely personal.”

So was Mr. Casey’s decision to oppose the expansion. He is a senator, but also a citizen. A husband and father of four, his family lives in Scranton. He built a good life here and wants his daughters to have the same opportunity. Strip away the trappings of his office, and Mr. Casey is just another parent who doesn’t want to see the future dumped on.

Mr. Casey elected to do an exceedingly rare thing here in Our Stiff Neck of the Woods: Lead by example. The state DEP will ultimately decide whether the expansion is approved, but he felt it was his duty to take a stand. Other lawmakers who have hidden behind the DEP jurisdiction may soon find it harder to smile from the sidelines.

 Louis DeNaples is accustomed to dealing with officials who aren’t too bright but know when to play dumb. The Dunmore Zoning Board is his dream team. Thursday night, the board did his bidding at the direction of his attorneys.

Friends of Lackawanna, a nonprofit grassroots group, was prepared to present its case against the expansion at the first of three scheduled hearings. Mr. DeNaples’ attorneys, led by the icy Marc Jonas, convinced zoners to bar the testimony of an expert witness on landfill construction and planning. Among the opposition’s arguments is that the expansion violates the borough’s zoning ordinance, which sets the height limit for structures at 50 feet.

Keystone’s vertical expansion would rise 475 feet above ground level — a clear violation of the zoning ordinance if a vertically expanded landfill is legally defined as a structure. Keystone’s lawyers and Dunmore zoning officer Joe Lorince say no.

Friends of Lackawanna lawyer Jordan Yeager disagrees and presented J. Lawrence Hosmer, a civil/geotechnical engineer with Environmental Resources Management in Annapolis, Maryland. Mr. Hosmer has been in the business for about 43 years, specializes in waste management and has worked on hundreds of landfill projects in several states. He may be too qualified to testify before the Dunmore zoning board.

Mr. Hosmer might have made a case that the landfill’s vertical expansion qualifies as a structure, but he never got the chance. Because Mr. Hosmer had not specifically studied the Keystone landfill or the Dunmore zoning ordinance, Mr. Nolan argued Mr. Hosmer lacked “any knowledge” that would be valuable to the board.

That’s like saying a pilot who hasn’t flown every plane ever made knows nothing about flying. It’s an absurd argument, and would never fly before a judge, which is where this mess is surely headed. The zoners swallowed it whole, of course, effectively grounding the core of the Friends of Lackawanna case and prompting Mr. Yeager to accuse the board of violating his clients’ due process rights.

http://thetimes-tribune.com/news/chris-kelly-casey-s-landfill-stand-a-heroic-act-leading-by-example-1.1851479

U.S. SENATOR CASEY OPPOSES LANDFILL EXPANSION PLAN

Friends, we have great news!! This morning Senator Casey called a press conference and expressed his opposition to the expansion of the Keystone Sanitary Landfill! He said that he was there to be a voice for his constituents who have sent him over 300 letters.

He mentioned over-arching issues such as the health and safety of citizens, consideration of future generations and the opinion that our community has taken its fair share. He questioned the current regulations which do not limit how much one area or one community should have to accept. He mentioned that elected officials are the trustees of the Pennsylvania Environmental Rights Amendment, which provides a constitutional right for people across the Commonwealth to clean air, pure water, and to the preservation of the natural, scenic, historic and esthetic values of the environment.

We want to thank Senator Casey for being a voice for the citizens and having the decency and integrity to take a stand on this issue. We hope this will inspire our local and State elected officials to do the same. Thank you, Senator Casey!!

Times-Tribune, Scranton, PA
Kyle WInd, Staff Writer
March 20, 2015

Excerpt:

U.S. Sen. Bob Casey opposes Keystone Sanitary Landfill’s nearly half-century expansion plan and sees the proposal as more than just a local issue, the senator said during a Friday press conference at his Scranton office.

“In this case you have two communities that have already accepted a substantial share of solid waste, and there has to be some limit to that,” the Democrat said. “I would hope there could be an exploration of other options, other sites.”

Under current state law, there is not necessarily any end to how much waste individual communities like Dunmore and Throop can accept or to how high landfills can pile waste as long as the state Department of Environmental Protection approves an expansion.

That was a concern constituents raised in 175 letters and emails to Mr. Casey’s Scranton office, and at a recent DEP public meeting, where the agency spoke on the topic.

“We do not have regulations that regulate top-end height,” DEP Waste Management Program Director Roger Bellas told 600-plus attendees. “As long as the engineering is sound, it meets the slope standards. That’s how we make our determination. The only height restrictions would be either (local zoning) ordinances or if there were a harm associated with the visual aspect of the height.”

Mr. Casey said he does not have jurisdiction over state regulatory matters and rarely weighs in on local issues, but Keystone’s expansion was important enough to warrant his attention.

http://thetimes-tribune.com/news/u-s-sen-bob-casey-opposes-landfill-expansion-plan-1.1850947

BARBS TRADED AT LANDFILL ZONING APPEAL

Friends, it is difficult to watch the wheels of justice grind to a halt, but in this case, sadly, it was not surprising.  It may take a little time, but we will get the wheels rolling again.  We will not give up.  It is actually encouraging to see the opposition use any tactic they can to avoid arguing this case on its merits.  

Times-Tribune, Scranton, PA
Kyle Wind, Staff Writer
March 20, 2015

Excerpt:
The clashes escalated when Mr. Yeager tried to call J. Lawrence Hosmer, a civil/geotechnical engineer with Environmental Resources Management in Maryland, as an expert witness.

The consultant has been in the business for about 43 years and specializes in waste management, Mr. Hosmer told the zoning board. He has been involved with hundreds of landfill projects of all types, all the way from design and permitting to construction in many states.

However, when Mr. Yeager asked the zoning board to accept him as an expert witness, Mr. Jonas objected because he had not studied Keystone landfill or Dunmore’s zoning law.

Although Mr. Yeager planned to ask him general questions about landfills in an effort to establish Keystone is a structure under the zoning ordinance — a key part of the Friends of Lackawanna argument, the zoning board rejected the witness and agreed not to accept his testimony — eliciting a collective groan from the audience.

After that, the Friends of Lackawanna side indicated they thought the deck was stacked against them.

“If this board carries out this course of conduct where it denies our residents the ability to event put their case up and to even present a record … it would be a deprivation of the due process rights of the residents,” Mr. Yeager said.

The attorney then asked the zoning board if any of the members there on Thursday night have any prohibited conflicts of interest under the state Ethics Act, a question that drew laughter from the audience.

After an initial denial, Mr. Yeager read the definition of conflicts in state law to the board. Each of Chairman Dino Sabatell and members Terrence McDonnell, Gerard Longo, Carmen Scrimalli and Peter Sabia, Jr.said they did not have any banned business or family interests.

http://thetimes-tribune.com/news/barbs-traded-at-landfill-zoning-appeal-1.1850938

REMINDER: ZONING HEARING

Reminder - Friends of Lackawanna will be presenting their position to the Zoning Hearing Board Tonight, March 19th at 6:30pm at the Dunmore Community Center.

We encourage all Friends of Lackawanna to come out on Thursday night and hear our case. The hearing is open to the public, but should be noted that it is closed to public comment. The hearing on Thursday is the first of three Hearings for FOL and KSL to present testimony from experts regarding our opinion on zoning issues.

MEETING WITH GOV. WOLF’S CHIEF OF STAFF, KATY McGINTY

Friends, we have been very busy. Here is what we have been up to since winning the order for no bond:

Yesterday afternoon, a group of FoL core members met with Governor Wolf’s Chief of Staff, Katy McGinty. We gave a clear and succinct presentation of our position in opposition of the expansion of the Keystone Sanitary Landfill. Ms. McGinty gave us more time than allotted, took in all of our information (including a packet of all the letters you have sent), and agreed to another meeting in the near future in which we could present a more detailed summary of the facts we touched on at the meeting. It is a great step in the right direction and many thanks to Katy McGinty for these opportunities!

We have also been working tirelessly preparing for the appeal to the Zoning Hearing Board. Many thanks to all of the members helping with research! The first meeting is this Thursday at 6:30pm at the Dunmore Community Center. Please come out to show support for our appeal! Thanks!

ZONING BOARD HEARING & RECAP

Zoning Board Hearing: March 19th

Friends of Lackawanna will be presenting their position to the Zoning Hearing Board this Thursday night, March 19th at 6:30pm at the Dunmore Community Center.

A recap of events leading to this hearing:

November 2014: Dunmore Council negotiated and accepted a new Host Municipality Agreement with Keystone Sanitary Landfill. As part of this agreement, KSL requested an opinion from the Zoning Officer confirming that the landfill is a pre-existing use as a landfill, and that it is not a building under the current zoning ordinance pertaining to maximum building height.

December 2014: The Dunmore Zoning Officer confirmed KSL’s position that the landfill is a pre-existing use and that it is not a building under the current zoning ordinances.

January 2015: Friends of Lackawanna along with three names appellants filed an appeal to the Dunmore Zoning Officer’s Opinion.

February 2015: KSL filed a petition for bond in the amount of $1.2 Million claiming our appeal was frivolous.

March 10, 2015: Friends of Lackawanna defended their appeal in the Court of Common Pleas against KSL’s petition for bond.

March 11, 2015: Judge rules in favor of Friends of Lackawanna. No bond needed to pursue appeal.

March 19t, 2015: Friends of Lackawanna to present their case against the Zoning Officer’s Opinion.

We encourage all Friends of Lackawanna to come out on Thursday night and hear our case. The hearing is open to the public, but should be noted that it is closed to public comment. The hearing on Thursday is the first of three Hearings for FOL and KSL to present testimony from experts regarding our opinion on zoning issues.

Thanks!

LETTER TO THE EDITOR

Eugene, thanks for raising this questions.  It has been proven that seagulls carry drug resistant E.Coli according to this article:
http://www.medpagetoday.com/MeetingCoverage/ICAAC/28581

Times-Tribune, Scranton, PA
Letter to the Editor

Bird flu concern

Editor: The Wall Street Journal reported that highly contagious bird flu has infected turkey farms in Arkansas and Missouri.

Given that garbage landfills attract tens of thousands of seagulls, what assurance do we have that these birds are not introducing a risk of avian flu to Northeast Pennsylvania?

EUGENE OGOZALEK

SCRANTON

http://thetimes-tribune.com/opinion/letters/letters-to-the-editor-3-17-2015-1.1848924

AN OUTLOOK WITHOUT LANDFILLS

Michele Dempsey, a core member of Friends of Lackawanna, shares her visions for the future of Northeastern Pennsylvania at the 2015 Times-Tribune Economic Outlook Forum. Spoiler alert: Her visions don’t include landfills and she makes that abundantly clear in her opening and closing remarks!

Opening remarks: Page 24
Closing remarks: Page 97

https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/48182083/Times-Tribune%20Economic%20Forum%201-28-15%281%29.pdf

THIS IS OUR FUTURE--NOT LANDFILLS!

Pat Clark, one of the core members of Friends of Lackawanna, is featured in the Times-Tribune for creating an Entrepreneur and Startup Business Club at Dunmore Junior/Senior High School.  Our efforts are to ensure these bright kids want to start their businesses here in Northeastern Pennsylvania! This is our future, not landfills!  

Excerpt:
Pat Clark hoped his idea to start an Entrepreneur and Startup Business Club at Dunmore Junior/Senior High School would garner interest. He targeted 15-20 students to get it off to a good start.

It turned out there was even more demand than he realized: 100-plus students signed up — more than 20 percent of the student body.

“I never even thought that many kids would be interested,” Superintendent Richard McDonald said. “It’s great.”

  http://thetimes-tribune.com/news/business/the-new-school-how-to-start-a-business-1.1846441

LETTER TO THE EDITOR

Thank, Louis Palazzi, for insight on composting alternatives.  We can assure you that we are looking into alternatives, as well, including composting.  Much appreciated!

Times-Tribune, Scranton, PA
March 15, 2015

Composting solution

Editor: The proposed Keystone Sanitary Landfill expansion has pitted an area family, known for its community generosity and support, against a group of citizens concerned about the landfill’s impact on the environment.

No one, including the Department of Environmental Protection, has proposed any type of solution to appease both sides. Many states have stopped just dumping garbage and piling it up in favor of the more modern, environmentally sound practice of composting.

The refuse is dumped into large grinders, which reduce its size by almost seven-eighths. It is then mixed with engineered soil — at least half organic matter loaded with natural fungi and bacteria — that accelerates the decomposition process. This leaves plenty of room for more trash, which should offset the additional cost of the composting machines and special soil. The material is disposed of in the best way for neighboring towns and communities and has minimal environmental impact.

Perhaps if this option is explored, both sides could be satisfied and as Ben Franklin once said, “Now we can have our cake and eat it, too.”

LOUIS PALAZZI JR.

NEWFOUNDLAND

http://thetimes-tribune.com/opinion/letters/letters-to-the-editor-3-15-2015-1.1848224

NO BOND FOR FRIENDS OF LACKAWANNA APPEAL, JUDGE ORDERS

Friends, we are thrilled there is no bond and on Thursday the zoning appeal hearing will begin. We still have a mountain to move, but it just budged a few inches.

Excerpts:
Friends of Lackawanna will not have to post a $1.2 million bond to challenge a Dunmore zoning officer’s opinion regarding Keystone Sanitary Landfill, a judge ordered.

Visiting Senior Judge John L. Braxton denied the landfill’s petition that called the anti-landfill expansion group’s appeal “frivolous” and would have forced them to pay the $1.2 million within five days.

“This was the landfill throwing a Hail Mary pass in the first quarter,” Friends of Lackawanna attorney Jordan Yeager said in an email Friday. “It was a desperation play and it fell flat.”

“As a mother of two who is expecting a third, I am thrilled that this petition for bond was denied so we can proceed with our zoning appeal and our efforts to protect our future and our children’s future,” Mrs. Spanish said in an email.

Dunmore’s zoning hearing board will now consider the appeal. Public hearings are scheduled 6:30 p.m. March 19, March 26 and April 2 at the Dunmore Community Center.

http://m.thetimes-tribune.com/news/no-bond-for-friends-of-lackawanna-appeal-judge-orders-1.1848181

NO BOND!

Friends, we have GREAT NEWS!  We just received the Order and the judge has ruled NO BOND!  Therefore, we are not required to post a $1.2 million bond and we can continue with our zoning appeal.  We hope that this decision demonstrates that Friends of Lackawanna is making a difference, that it is possible to win, and that it will inspire more people to join the opposition to the KSL landfill expansion!

DID YOU KNOW?

Alliance Landfill has had FOUR Public Health Assessments since 2005?

FOL members, concerned citizens and some legislators have already made formal requests for a public health study to the Department of Health.   We urge others to do the same.

Send a letter to the Dept of Health to push forward this Public Health Study to determine any potential health impacts regarding the landfill and its surrounding areas and request that DEP await findings prior to their determination on the proposed expansion.

MAILING ADDRESS:
Pennsylvania Department of Health
Health and Welfare Building
8th Floor West
625 Forster Street
Harrisburg, PA 17120

Friends of Lackawanna spoke to Dickson City Neighborhood Watch last night.  We are happy to speak to any municipalities, neighborhood groups, or any other organization to educate them about the negative impacts the landfill expansion would have on our region.  Please reach out to us!  Also, please write to DEP to demand another public meeting–there are too many unanswered questions to allow this process to move forward!  

Times-Tribune, Scranton, PA
Luke Ranker, Staff Writer
March 11, 2015

Excerpts:
Friends of Lackawanna and a Throop councilman spoke to members of Dickson City Neighborhood Watch Wednesday about the proposed Keystone Landfill expansion.

“This isn’t a Dunmore or Throop problem,” he said. “You’ll be able to see it coming down Commerce Boulevard.”

 “It’s basically a giant garbage bag,” he said. “What’s going to happen when the bag breaks?”

He told the crowd DEP told the [Throop] borough solicitor that request would be denied because the DEP held a public meeting Feb. 25 at Dunmore Junior/Senior High School and extended a public comment period through April.

Rose Louryk, Dickson City councilwoman, said she was concerned about the landfill’s impact on the region’s health.

Friends of Lackawanna requested a health study, concerned about how the Dunham Drive landfill’s expansion proposal would impact a region whose cancer rates are about 7 percent higher than the national average, member Sharron Cuff said. Ms. Cuff told Ms. Louryk she and other concerned residents should write to the state Department of Health to help push that study forward.

http://thetimes-tribune.com/news/friends-of-lackawanna-discuss-keystone-landfill-at-dickson-city-neighborhood-watch-meeting-1.1847032

INCOMING DEP SECRETARY FIELDS LANDFILL QUESTIONS AT HARRISBURG HEARING

Friends, our letters are having an impact!!  Lawmakers and the incoming DEP secretary are discussing the KSL expansion because they have heard from you!  Special thanks to State Rep. Mike Carroll for making sure our voices are heard in Harrisburg! Please keep writing letters to the DEP and lawmakers now that the comment period has been extended–we are making a difference!

Times-Tribune, Scranton, PA
Robert Swift, Harrisburg Bureau Chief
March 11, 2015

Excerpt:
Lawmakers on the House Appropriations Committee weren’t the first to ask the secretary-designate for the Department of Environmental Protection about a proposed expansion of Keystone Sanitary Landfill in Dunmore.

John Quigley told the panel Wednesday he receives a couple dozen emails daily from area residents asking him to oppose the expansion.

Mr. Quigley said officials are midway through an 11-step process to review Keystone application’s for its overall environmental impact, along with a harms-versus-benefits analysis. A public comment period has been extended and his agency is at least a year away from making a permit decision.

“We will take every single comment into consideration,” said DEP deputy secretary Dana Aunkst.

State Rep. Mike Carroll, D-118, Avoca, urged Mr. Quigley to keep area residents first in mind as the landfill application moves through different phases.

http://thetimes-tribune.com/news/incoming-dep-secretary-fields-landfill-questions-at-harrisburg-hearing-1.1846662

LANDFILL OWNERS HIT FRIENDS OF LACKAWANNA WITH PETITION FOR $1.2 MILLION BOND

To paraphrase a line from a commenter on the Times-Tribune, this is a frivolous petition trying to stop a legitimate zoning challenge.  Why is KSL resorting to such tactics if they have a defensible zoning position?  One could infer that posting such a preposterous bond is intended to take power away from the people, especially since the permit is still in the DEP review period so the zoning appeal is not causing a delay and the damages they are claiming are for the design work done for the permit, which would not be lost IF they got the permit.  The idea that KSL is going to lose money because citizens with standing are exercising their right to appeal the zoning officer’s opinion is ludicrous and this petition is, quite frankly, dangerous to democracy.

Landfill owners hit Friends of Lackawanna with petition for $1.2 milllion bond

Times-Tribune
BRENDAN GIBBONS, STAFF WRITER
Published: March 11, 2015

Keystone Sanitary Landfill’s first legal strike against Friends of Lackawanna threatens to hit their weakest spot: their pocketbook.

Calling the group’s appeal under Dunmore’s zoning ordinance “frivolous,” attorneys representing the landfill owned by Dunmore businessman Louis DeNaples filed a petition late February in Lackawanna County Court to force Friends of Lackawanna to post a $1.2 million bond within five days of a judge’s order or give up their appeal.

Judge John L. Braxton did not rule Tuesday on the petition for bond after the five-hour hearing.

This appeal is the opposition group’s first legal challenge against the landfill’s proposed roughly 50-year upward expansion. Members challenged Dunmore zoning officer Joseph Lorince’s preliminary opinion that the borough’s height ordinance does not apply to the landfill. Dunmore’s zoning hearing board has not yet addressed the issue.

Keystone’s attorney Marc Jonas with Eastburn & Gray P.C., of Blue Bell, described the appeal as simply, “We just don’t like it and we want to stop it.” That doesn’t provide standing to appeal, he said.

Friends of Lackawanna’s attorney, Jordan Yeager, of Curtin & Heefner LLP, said the question is actually whether the section of state law allowing the bond in a frivolous appeal applies to the landfill expansion and whether the landfill can prove the appeal’s chance of success is “slight,” making it frivolous.

Mr. Yeager accused Keystone’s attorneys of trying to “distract the court” by casting doubt on whether the three members who appealed can see or smell the landfill from their homes.

“We have a very strong case that expansion is contrary to the black-letter zoning ordinance,” Mr. Yeager said. “The only way to make that case is the zoning appeal.”

Mr. Jonas, his colleague Michael Peters and Scranton attorney Jeffrey Belardi called landfill contractors from CECO Associates Inc. and Hershey-based ARM Group Inc. to the witness stand to prove the landfill’s visual impacts will be minor and the damages caused by delaying the expansion have already been significant.

In February, ARM Group surveyor Robert Kitchen drove to the homes of Friends of Lackawanna members Joseph James and Mari May, Edward and Beverly Mizanty, and Katharine and Todd Spanish to take photos from a perspective facing the landfill. The three families live in the Swinick development. The landfill is not visible in Mr. Kitchen’s photos outside their homes.

Mr. Kitchen then made photo illustrations of the post-expansion landfill that show a greenish mound barely peeking over rooftops and trees, except at the Spanish residence, where he argued neighbors’ trees prevent any view of the landfill now or after expansion.

The renderings came in the context of a broader line-of-site study, in which ARM Group’s civil engineers drew a 3-mile radius around the landfill’s future peak, then calculated where the landfill would be visible in the future. They found the expansion would be visible from 3.3 percent more land area in that radius, and 1.2 percent more of the population would see it.

On the witness stand, Ms. May agreed she couldn’t see the landfill from the perspective in the photo but said she can see it from her kitchen table, dining room, bedroom, bathroom and backyard.

When she mentioned smelling the landfill, Mr. Jonas objected, arguing Ms. May lives closer to a Waste Management transfer station serving the landfill than the landfill itself, and she can’t competently smell the difference among the transfer station, the landfill and neighbors’ garbage cans.

“We’re all competent to breathe in through our nose and distinguish between the odor of garbage and something else,” Mr. Yeager said.

Judge Braxton acknowledged Mr. Jonas’s point. “I’m not going to pretend she doesn’t live closer to the transfer facility,” he said.

Beverly Mizanty, another resident in the appeal, was also questioned on smell and sight impacts. Mr. Yeager presented a photo from Mrs. Mizanty’s back deck clearly showing the landfill.

As their only non-engineer witness, Keystone’s attorneys called landfill clerk Jackie Turnbull to prove the landfill has already incurred $1.2 million in damages from the delay. As evidence, they presented a series of check stubs and invoices to various contractors.

Mr. Yeager pointed out that the charges were for preparing the landfill’s permit application to the Department of Environmental Protection and had nothing to do with the residents’ appeal. “That’s not delay damages,” he said.

Despite the preemptive strike by the landfill that could derail it at the outset, Friends of Lackawanna’s appeal is still young. Dunmore’s zoning hearing board scheduled three public hearings at 6:30 p.m. March 19, March 26 and April 2, all Thursdays.

http://thetimes-tribune.com/news/landfill-owners-hit-friends-of-lackawanna-with-petition-for-1-2-milllion-bond-1.1846382

LETTER TO THE EDITOR

Great questions in today’s Letter to the Editor, Victor! We need more public meetings to get answers.

Times-Tribune, Scranton, PA
March 10, 2015

Landfill questions

Editor: I attended the recent state Department of Environmental Protection meeting at Dunmore High School on the proposed Keystone Sanitary Landfill expansion.

I was encouraged by the size and diversity of the crowd and that no one spoke for the expansion — all were against it. I was dismayed that the questions from the floor were all determined before the meeting started, so that I did not get to ask mine, which was why are the landfill and the state considering an almost 50-year proposal?

This would saddle almost three generations to come with a mountain of garbage, with little or no ability to control or change it. I will not be here in 50 years. Mr. DeNaples will not be here in 50 years. He says it’s his family’s business, but how much is enough?

This landfill should be capped in five years when its current contract expires, and the communities of Dunmore and Throop should ask themselves how they will replace the revenue from it, other than by raising

property taxes.

Another question I would like to pose is, has the DEP had contact with Gov. Tom Wolf’s administration about this issue? Everyone should contact Wolf’s office and ask them to look into this and write to the DEP against the approval of the permit.

VICTOR GRAMIGNA-ROBERTSON

THROOP

http://m.thetimes-tribune.com/opinion/letters/letters-to-the-editor-3-10-2015-1.1845603