As for the actual rate of recycling and diversion of waste from landfills, it’s fairly dismal. Communities around Portland, home to ecomaine, one of the state’s largest recyclers, are diverting anywhere from a third to half of their waste from landfills. A few coastal towns and even some island communities also reported relatively high rates, from 27 percent in Stonington to 52 percent in Vinalhaven.
In much of the state, however, almost all of the waste is being landfilled. Bangor recycled just 6 percent of its municipal solid waste last year. Lewiston reported rates of 18 percent; in the far north, Limestone was at 13 percent. A number of towns said they no longer had recycling programs at all.
If you’ve been following recycling in Maine, these numbers won’t surprise you. As The Monitor reported in January, between 2018 and 2022, the amount of municipal solid waste landfilled in Maine shot up 47 percent, from 388,629 tons in 2018 to 569,911 tons in 2022.
“I’ll just come right out and say it: It’s easier to throw away trash than it is to recycle it,” Susanne Miller, director of the Bureau of Remediation and Waste Management at the Maine DEP, told lawmakers at a briefing earlier this year.
Maine is taking steps to change this. Earlier this month, after several years of development, the citizen board that oversees DEP finalized rules intended to reduce the amount of packaging waste produced in the state, a program known as extended producer responsibility for packaging, or EPR. Maine already has a number of EPR programs that have been in place for years, including for paint, mercury thermostats, batteries and unused drugs,
An important goal of this new program, which DEP staff expect to implement within the next two years, is also to collect better data and to help offset the cost of recycling. To get reimbursed, communities will have to report recycling and diversion figures annually, and will be required to participate in cost studies and audits of their recycling stream.
The big question, of course, is how many municipalities will participate. In the most recent recycling survey, communities were asked whether they were interested.
The answers were mixed. Larger towns mostly supported the idea (with the exception of South Portland, whose director of public works said “no” even though town officials have advocated for the plan in the past). Many smaller communities were interested but said they needed more information, or worried about the additional costs.
“It will depend how much additional work is required to manage the program,” wrote Erik Street, director of public works in Yarmouth. “Limited resources and staffing make it difficult to take additional programs on.”
Many left the answer blank. |