GCS News - Los Angeles, California
Los Angeles Times
Greig Smith to lead six-country trip to study trash
facilities.
By David Zahniser,
May 30, 2008
Only days after Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa said he would
leave town in June for a trip to Israel, a city councilman from the San
Fernando Valley announced Thursday that he would spend an entire month
looking at trash conversion facilities around the globe.
Councilman Greig Smith said he and other city officials would travel
to Canada, Japan, Israel, France, Germany and Spain as part of a
fact-finding mission waged by the city's Bureau of Sanitation. They will
also visit Bakersfield.
Each destination has at least one facility whose technology may be
adopted by Los Angeles in the next two years. Smith, an enthusiastic
supporter of "trash to energy," said his colleagues have already
suggested three potential locations for such garbage conversion plants,
including one near Los Angeles International Airport and another near
Griffith Park.
"Los Angeles will be the leader in America in converting trash to
energy," Smith told a breakfast crowd at the Los Angeles Current Affairs
Forum.
Villaraigosa leaves for Israel on June 11, taking Councilmen Dennis
Zine and Jack Weiss, among others. Smith departs the next day and will
take aides from his office and aides to Councilmen Tony Cardenas and
Bill Rosendahl.
Smith has focused heavily on efforts to divert trash from landfills,
in large part because of his efforts to close Sunshine Canyon Landfill
in Granada Hills. Smith cited Germany as a country that has a moratorium
on new landfills and reuses nearly all of its trash.
The $250,000 trash trip will be paid for with fees from Sunshine
Canyon Landfill, said Enrique Zaldivar, who heads the Bureau of
Sanitation. The agency has reviewed competing proposals for processing
the city's garbage and hopes to open its first waste conversion plant by
December 2010.
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