https://www.sgvtribune.com/ci_19842194?source=rss_viewed

County Sanitation Districts spokesmen Sam Pedroza explains the new truck-train transfer method while over looking the waste by rail facility at the Puente Hills Landfill in North Whittier on Wednesday, Jan. 25, 2011.
County Sanitation Districts spokesmen Sam Pedroza explains the new truck-train transfer method while over looking the waste by rail facility at the Puente Hills Landfill in North Whittier on Wednesday, Jan. 25, 2011.

For more than two decades, local trash engineers have been planning for the day when the Puente Hills Landfill near Hacienda Heights would close, and thousands of tons of municipal garbage would ride the rails to Imperial County.But the $450 million trash train, also known as waste-by-rail, is being derailed by a sluggish economy. The dream of San Gabriel Valley cities seeing all their stinking garbage leave the Valley for a landfill in the middle of nowhere is likely to be postponed, officials at the county Sanitation Districts said last week. Continue reading

From December 8, 2011.

https://www.latalkradio.com/Players/Breathe-120811.shtml

Wayde Hunter’s segment starts at the 7:50 mark of the audio file.  You can move the cursor along to that point to skip to it.  Warning it does last for 23 minutes but it contains a lot of information.

Note: At the time of the interview, Mr. Hunter was member of the GHNNC, the North Valley Coalition of Concerned Citizens Inc., and a concerned resident.  He was not representing the SCL-CAC.

Jan. 24 — One of the dirtiest and most demonized portions of the municipal waste stream may soon be diverted from its centuries-long decomposition site: landfills.Developing a recycling solution for used disposable diapers, a biological amalgam of complexity, has been a top priority of the global research and development team at TerraCycle Inc., a Trenton, N.J.-based company whose mission is to create innovative solutions for any waste stream headed to the landfill.

TerraCycle´s team of scientists, led by Ernie Simpson, global vice president of research and development, is about to put a clothespin on its formula that will render dirty diapers into a material suitable for plastic lumber, pallets and outdoor furniture. Continue reading