On Tuesday evening, the Board of County Commissioners will hold a public hearing on recycling. There has been a change in the way the law is being interpreted which makes the current fee system questionable. Currently the county is divided into 3 sections. Some of the rural community pays for 2 of the 3R fees (availability and convenience centers) and the portion of the rural community that gets curbside collection on recycling pays for those same 2 + an additional fee of $38 for collections. A new funding source is needed for the curbside collections portion of the fee (a service that effects about 13,000 residents).
The county is considering 3 options to get around this legal issue. 1) go to a solid waste authority (like OWASA) that would be a separate operational and financial unit, 2) create 3 solid waste tax districts, or 3) eliminate curbside collection for neighborhoods outside of a city limit.
The tax district is the most feasible option. To continue offering curbside collection, they would impose a tax of roughly $0.011 (just over 1 penny) per $1,000 of tax valuation of our homes. For homes valued at around $300,000 the tax would roughly equal the current fee.
I value our county recycling program and hope that others do too. But there are many who don't and they have been relatively vocal. If you want to help save our curbside collections, I hope you will speak out. You can either attend the meeting Tuesday night (7:00 pm at the Southern Human Services Center) or you can send an email to the county commissioners: http://www.co.orange.nc.us/Email/MsgForm.asp?email=ocbocc&domain=co.orange.nc.us&name=County+Commissioners
If
you choose to speak up and you live in the rural curbside collection
area, please make sure you say so. We need for the county commissioners
to understand that those who receive the service value it.
Issues:
Comments
I live in White Cross and have curbside recycling. Almost 100% of the people in my general area put their recycling bins out on recycle day. When I drive along Dodson's Crossroads and Orange Grove Road (north of Dodson's Xroads) on recycle days, there are *many* (more than half of driveways) with recycle bins out.
Please do not generalize for areas outside the Southern Triangle. There are plenty of people in the rural areas that utilize curbside recycling. The convenience centers are not convenient for my area (driving several miles out of my way) not to mention that everyone doesn't want to load their trash/recycling into their cars.
Many people in the rural area I call home contract with Waste Industries to pick up their trash on a weekly basis. Drive around on trash day and see how many containers you see out.
"Orange County Voice" does not speak for ALL rural residents - you are a special interest group.
Thanks for the source - nothing has been disclosed publically and the commissioners are still trying to decide who should be taxed and what the tax should include. Of course, like other taxes, its common to initially set a low tax - and then increased every year. Unlike fire taxes which are capped at 15 cents, there's no limit to a solid waste district tax. There are 21000 families in the rural community - and 13,700 pay for curbside recycling. 9000 use it. So 2/3rd's pay for the service, less than half use it. So the assumption behind your numbers is that the same people who get the service today - including the 4,000 residents who don't use it, would continue to get it. And that the tax would only cover the curbside recycling fees - not the base 3R ($38) or SWCC fee ($20 and going up)Thanks for the clarification, Hopefully tomorrow's discussion will be similarly transparent. Bonnie Hauser
Oh- just to clarify -you're also assuming that the portion of the SWCCs ($2 million a year) that are funded from the general fund would not be shifted over to the new district tax. Bonnie Hauser
FWIW for those itemizing their federal income taxes a special property tax district results in a federal/state tax deduction while the solid waste fee does NOT
Terri there are 21000 (maybe more) households in the unincorporated part of the county. 13,700 pay for curbside recycling -- that's roughly 2/3rd 65% of those who PAY for the service actually use it, that's 9000 (13,700 * .65) 9000 is 43% of 21000 rural households (that's less than half). If you looked at the utilization rates, you'd find that the usage is concentrated in the communities near town - including the southern triangle, the areas between Chapelboro and Hillsborough. West of Carrboro. There are many options here. Since the county plans to continue the service through 2014 - why don't they just ask and see how many people want to opt out of the fee. Bonnie Hauser
It's a fallacy to include households who do not have the ability to use a service in that service's untilization rate. You are being deceitful to say less than half of rural households use the service because 7300 households do not have access to the service (and, presumably, SOME of them would use the service if they had access to it).
The fact is that 65% of households who CAN use the service do in fact use it. That's a pretty high rate. You are trying to minimize it by including households that cannot use the service in your argument.

Terri -what's your basis for the tax rate? There's been no agreement about ths scope of service covered by the district tax or who would be taxed. Btw - unlike a fire tax, there's no limit to the district tax rate. Since the towns haven't agreed to anything - are you assuming that they are in or out? The county can't tax town residents without permission from town leaders. Of course the the urban and multi-family programs are much larger than the rural program. . Since over half the unicorporated county doesn't use the service, why would residents want to pay a new tax? For most of us, it's easier to use the convenience centers. For those of you that use it, why don't you lobby for weekly service and pay a few bucks more?I can see how the Southern Triangle (District 1) would want curbside services. You're the only unincorporated part of the county that doesn't have a convenience center. Patterson, areas just west of Carrboro. and possibly the Hillsborough ETJs too. After that there's not much interest.Of course the easy option is to just let people who don't want the service to opt out. If a lot of people opt out, then there's really no basis to continue the program at all. Since nothing is happening until July 2014, the county has a year to see what the opt out rate is. Please source your basis for a tax rate - because there's been no information from the county or the towns on the scope of service or the size of the community covered by the tax. Bonnie Hauser