2 minute read
Opinionnow
There are two sides to green waste facility story
Editor: I recently read comments from residents in Burnaby regarding the GROW (Green Recycling Organic Waste) facility proposed for Fraser Foreshore Park and was disappointed to only see one side of the argument (the opposition) voiced.
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As a Burnaby homeowner who lives near the park and often goes trail running along this proposed site, I thought I might offer some reasons why I’m not so quick to dismiss this project
While we can’t know the future with perfect certainty, it is extremely likely that Burnaby and the entire Metro Vancouver region will continue to grow in the coming decades The existing waste management infrastructure in the region is stretched to capacity, and solutions are needed now.
With respect and appreciation to my fellow Burnaby residents who suggest other waste facilities in other communities can handle our future waste we create in our Burnaby neighbourhoods, it might not be quite that easy Nor is it, in my mind, reasonable or ethical to expect Delta, for example, to continually be where all of our future growing organic waste ends up. Especially as the existing landfill there is reaching capacity and is to be decommissioned in 2037
These types of arguments against the GROW facility are similar to arguments we often make about social housing or shelters “I agree we need more social housing, but just not in my neighbourhood!” but at some point local leaders need to step up and say, “Yes, this is needed, and we are going to take responsibility; we are going to build it here”
New organic waste options are needed for Burnaby, and somebody needs to take responsibility, and a facility needs to be built somewhere
Being green or caring about the environment is definitely about protecting parks and riparian ecosystems, but it is also about carbon capture and storage, diverting from landfills, and creating organic fertilizer from green organic waste for our yards and gardens in a growing city I support seeing the taxes I pay and a portion of my jogging route and, yes, a small portion of marshlands, go towards us taking responsibility for dealing with our own local waste Perhaps it might even encourage us to consume and waste less as we consider the immediate impacts of our own personal choices. Our waste is our problem, and as such we perhaps shouldn’t be so quick to dismiss proposals to deal with it here locally
Wes Regan
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