This article shall be known as the "Ulster County Solid Waste
Management Law."
The Ulster County Legislature finds that:
A. In 1991, the County of Ulster and the Ulster County Resource Recovery
Agency (hereinafter the "Agency") prepared a local solid waste management
plan pursuant to the provisions of Environmental Conservation Law
§§ 27-0106 and 27-0107 in order to define the County's
policies with respect to solid waste management. It is the policy
of the County, in accordance with the solid waste management policies
of the State of New York, to reduce the amount of solid waste generated;
reuse material for the purpose for which it was originally intended
or recycle material that cannot be reused; recover energy from solid
waste that cannot be economically or technically reused or recycled;
and dispose of solid waste that is not being reused, recycled or from
which energy is not being recovered by land burial or other means
approved by law. This article is intended to advance and support the
policies expressed in the local solid waste management plan.
B. The Agency's mission is to provide an efficient, economical and environmentally
sound solid waste management system in and for the County of Ulster.
The Agency strives to carry out the principles of New York's solid
waste hierarchy in its work, emphasizing reuse of materials, reduction
of municipal solid waste (MSW), and the carrying out of an effective
and user-friendly recycling program, with landfill disposal of MSW
that cannot be reused, reduced or recycled. The Agency also provides
a pilot organics composting project, and holds household hazardous
waste and electronics recycling events for the residents of the County.
Municipal dropoff centers for disposal of solid waste and recycling
developed by the Agency offer County residents a convenient alternative
to private collection contracts. The Agency routinely negotiates contracts
with area solid waste collection firms for disposal of MSW at its
two conveniently placed transfer stations, and long hauls through
private contractors the processed waste to permitted landfills in
New York State.
C. Together with the preparation of the local solid waste management
plan, the County adopted Local Law Number 8 of 1991 (the Ulster County
Mandatory Source Separation and Recycling Law) and Local Law Number 9 of 1991 (the Ulster County Solid
Waste Management Law) with the intent that the provisions of each law should
complement the other in the management of solid waste and recyclables
collection and disposal in the County.
D. Section 4 of Local Law Number 9 of 1991 provided for the restriction
of competition in solid waste disposal to the extent that waste generated
or brought within the County of Ulster could be directed to a solid
waste facility designated by the Agency, as authorized by Public Authorities
Law § 2050-t(3). Enforcement of Section 4 of Local Law Number
9 of 1991 was suspended following judicial decisions calling similar
provisions in the laws of other communities into question on constitutional
grounds. In 2007, the United States Supreme Court affirmed the power
of local government to direct the flow of solid waste and recyclables
to public facilities, and this amendment to Local Law Number 9 of
1991 is adopted to advance the goals of the Ulster County local solid
waste management plan in a manner conforming to the standards established
by the Court.
E. Local Law Number 8 of 1991 (the Ulster County Mandatory Source Separation
and Recycling Law) has been amended on two occasions: by Local Law
No. 8 of 2007 and Local Law No. 4 of 2010. The most recent amendment
set forth in Local Law No. 4 of 2010 sets forth findings and legislative
purposes with respect to County policy on recycling and solid waste
management which the Legislature hereby reaffirms and adopts as additional
findings and purposes for this amendment.
F. In addition, the Legislature finds that the establishment of a requirement
for an occupational license for persons engaged in the collection
of solid waste and recyclables in Ulster County, together with the
reinstitution of flow control over the disposal of solid waste generated
within the County will assist the County and the Agency in fulfilling
the goals of the local solid waste management plan. The license and
flow control requirements established herein are intended to enhance
the ability of the Agency to gather information relevant to the generation,
type and quantity of waste and recyclables in the County; assist in
the environmentally sound and economical disposal of solid waste;
provide sufficient user revenue to the Agency to administer the operation
of an integrated solid waste management system; reduce the subsidy
provided by Ulster County taxpayers to the solid waste system; and
assist the County and the Agency in the enforcement of environmental
laws and regulations.
G. The Legislature further finds that the amendments contained herein
will assist the Agency in establishing a structured disposal fee for
all haulers operating within the County and thereby encourage competition
among haulers, for the benefit of all consumers of solid waste services
within the County.
This article is adopted pursuant to § 120-aa of the
General Municipal Law, § 10 of the Municipal Home Rule Law,
§ 2050-t(3) of the Public Authorities Law, and Article 27
of the Environmental Conservation Law.
As used in this article, the following terms shall have the
following meanings:
AGENCY
The Ulster County Resource Recovery Agency created under
Chapter 936 of the Laws of 1986 of the State, as amended.
COLLECTION
The pick-up, collection or delivery of solid waste to a hauler
at the point of generation.
CONSTRUCTION AND DEMOLITION DEBRIS or C&D
Uncontaminated solid waste resulting from the construction,
remodeling, repair and demolition of utilities, structures and roads;
and uncontaminated solid waste resulting from land clearing. Such
waste includes, but is not limited to, bricks, concrete and other
masonry materials, soil, rock, wood (including painted, treated and
coated wood and wood products), land-clearing debris, wall coverings,
plaster, drywall, plumbing fixtures, nonasbestos insulation, roofing
shingles and other roof coverings, asphalt pavement, glass, plastics
that are not sealed in a manner that conceals other wastes, empty
buckets 10 gallons or less in size and having no more than one inch
of residue remaining on the bottom, electrical wiring and components
containing no hazardous liquids, and pipe and metals that are incidental
to any of the above.
COUNTY
The entire County of Ulster as constituted and existing under
the Laws of the State.
DISPOSAL
The post-collection delivery of solid waste to any location
for processing, transfer, transportation, or any permanent disposition.
GENERATOR
Any person or legal entity that produces solid waste including
regulated recyclable materials requiring off-site disposal.
HAULER
Any person engaged in the business of collecting, storing,
and transporting municipal solid waste, including recyclable materials,
except where otherwise designated in this article.
MUNICIPALITY
Any county, city, town, village, improvement district, public
authority, or other municipal corporation established by law.
MUNICIPAL SOLID WASTE or MSW
That solid waste which is generated at residences, institutions,
businesses, or other properties, exclusive of construction and demolition
debris and recyclable materials that have been separated from MSW.
PERSON
Any natural person, individual, partnership, copartnership,
association, owner or manager of a business, commercial or industrial
establishment, joint venture, corporation, trust, estate, institution,
not-for-profit organization or any other legal entity, including a
municipality or any other waste generator.
RECYCLABLE MATERIALS
Any solid waste that exhibits the potential to be returned
to the economic resource stream in the form of raw materials to be
used in place of virgin materials in the manufacture of new products.
SOLID WASTE
All materials or substances discarded or rejected within
the County of Ulster as being spent, useless, worthless, or in excess
to the owners at the time of such discard or rejection, including,
but not limited to, garbage, refuse, industrial and commercial waste,
sludges from air or water pollution control facilities or water supply
treatment facilities, rubbish, ashes, contained gaseous materials,
incinerator residue, demolition and construction debris and offal,
but not including sewage and other highly diluted water-carried materials
or substances and those in gaseous form, source, special nuclear or
by-product material within the meaning of the Atomic Energy Act of
1954, as amended, and waste which appears on the list of hazardous
waste promulgated by the Commissioner of Environmental Conservation
pursuant to § 27-0903 of the Environmental Conservation
Law.
SOLID WASTE MANAGEMENT FACILITY
Any facility, plant, works, system, building, structure,
improvement, machinery, equipment, fixture or other real or personal
property which is to be used, occupied or employed for or is incidental
to the collecting, receiving, transporting, storage, processing or
disposal of solid waste as more fully defined in Public Authorities
Law § 2050-b(16).
This article shall be implemented, administered, and enforced
by the Agency. In order to carry out this responsibility, the Agency,
acting consistently with the purposes of this article, shall be empowered
to do the following:
A. Establish, revise, amend, and repeal rules and regulations as it shall deem reasonable, necessary and proper to carry out the responsibilities and requirements of this article pursuant to §
304-38.
B. Designate solid waste management facilities that may receive, process,
transfer, transport or dispose of municipal solid waste.
C. Issue summonses, notices and administrative complaints to persons
in violation of the provisions of this article, adjudicate alleged
violations, impose civil penalties and license suspensions and/or
revocations as provided herein, and take all lawful action to enforce
the provisions of this article, including but not limited to applications
to courts of competent jurisdiction.
When specified in this article, the Agency may, from time to time, promulgate rules and regulations consistent with the provisions of this article in order to effectuate the purposes hereof. The procedure for rule making shall be the procedure set forth in §
304-11 of Article
II, Recycling (the Ulster County Mandatory Source Separation and Recycling Law).
Pursuant to Title 13-G of the Public Authorities Law of the
state, this article takes precedence over and shall supersede any
inconsistent provisions of any local law enacted by any municipality
within the County.