{"id":40257,"date":"2019-04-24T19:00:00","date_gmt":"2019-04-25T02:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.kentreporter.com\/news\/king-countys-landfill-is-going-to-get-bigger\/"},"modified":"2019-04-24T19:00:00","modified_gmt":"2019-04-25T02:00:00","slug":"king-countys-landfill-is-going-to-get-bigger","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.kentreporter.com\/news\/king-countys-landfill-is-going-to-get-bigger\/","title":{"rendered":"King County’s landfill is going to get bigger"},"content":{"rendered":"
King County’s last remaining landfill will get even larger after the county council voted on April 24 to extend the landfill’s life and expand it in a 5-2 vote.<\/p>\n
The decision will create a ninth cell at the landfill, which will be filled with garbage at a cost of around $270 million. This option has been roundly opposed by neighbors who have continued to show up at King County Council meetings and who again voiced their concerns at the April 24 meeting.<\/p>\n
Council members Reagan Dunn and Kathy Lambert both voted against the plan.<\/p>\n
“I’m going to vote no today because I want to protest the monolithic pile of garbage,” Dunn said.<\/p>\n
The plan also included provisions for county staff to complete a study identifying alternate ways to deal with the county’s trash, including shipping it to other landfills, creating a waste-to-energy plant and creating technology to break down the garbage in the landfill. Lambert, who has been an advocate for a waste-to-energy plant, voiced her unhappiness with the decision of the council.<\/p>\n
“To plan anything other than the best in the world is just not good enough,” she said. “This plan does not do enough to respond to the neighbors around the landfill.”<\/p>\n