HomeMy WebLinkAboutC.054.93010_1155IREDELL COUNTY BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS
REGULAR MINUTES
JUNE 17. 2003
The Iredell County Board of Commissioners met in Regular Session on Tuesday,
June 17, 2003, at 7:00 p.m., in the Iredell County Government Center (Commissioners' Meeting
Room), 200 South Center Street, Statesville, NC.
Present were:
Chairman Steve D. Johnson
Vice Chairman Godfrey Williams
Doug Madison
Marvin Norman
Sara Haire Tice
Staffpresent: County Manager Joel Mashburn, County Attorney Bill Pope, Finance
Director Susan Blumenstein, Solid Waste Management Director Ron Weatherman, and Clerk to
the Board Jean Moore.
CALL TO ORDER by Chairman Johnson.
INVOCATION by Commissioner Norman,
PLEDGE OF ALLEGIANCE
ADJUSTMENTS TO THE AGENDA:OTIO by Chairman Johnson to approve the
following agenda adjustments.
Deletion: Economic Development Closed Session - G.S. 143-318.11(a) (4)
Addition: Announcement of a Vacancy on the Mitchell College Board of Trustees
VOTING: Ayes - 5; Nays - 0.
APPOINTMENT BEFORE THE BOARD
Mr. Jim Woodie Presents the Three -Year Update to the Ten -Year Iredell County
Solid Waste Management Plan & Requests that a Resolution be Adopted Approving the
Update: Jim Woodie, with the Municipal Engineering Company, said the Ten -Year Solid Waste
Management Plan was mandated by the State of North Carolina and three-year updates were
required. He said the plan included all of the municipalities in the county, and it described
methods of source reduction, collection, recycling/reuse, and educational components for the
general public and school-age children. Woodie said the county's method of disposal was a
Subtitle D landfill, and the site accepted some "specialty" wastes such as tires, white goods,
motor oil, household hazardous wastes, and lead acid batteries. Mr. Woodie said disaster
response materials or "green wastes" were also accepted when flooding, hurricanes, or severe
storms occurred in the area. He said that in a year's time, 170,000 tons of solid waste were
disposed of at the landfill, and this ranked Iredell County as the 111h highest waste management
facility in the State. Mr. Woodie said there had been a 7.3% reduction in waste disposal since the
county's plan was adopted in 1997. He also said the county had a litter control officer who
helped in the prevention of illegal dumping and littering.
OTIO by Commissioner Tice to adopt the resolution approving the three-year update
to the Ten-year Solid Waste Management Plan.
VOTING: Ayes - 5; Nays - 0.
RESOLUTION
TO CONTINUE PARTICIPATION IN THE
IREDELL COUNTY SOLID WASTE PLAN
WHEREAS, better planning for solid waste will help protect public health and the environment,
provide for an improved solid waste management system, better utilize our natural resources, control the
cost of solid waste management; and