UNION-TRIBUNE
EDITORIAL
No on Prop. B ...
... means
handling
Let's talk
trash. Each year
That sort
of hypocrisy belongs out on the curb, awaiting the sanitation engineer.
Bag that
rumor, too, for it's hype. The odds that
This rumor
is only the latest of the hyped criticisms bruited by opponents of the
The
landfill owners' pledges of funding to widen the roadways and of dedicating
more than 75 percent of the acreage to habitat preservation refute the latter.
Arguing all this has made Proposition B the county's most expensive ballot
measure ever. At last report, the Pala Band has poured about $2.5 million into
it; the landfill owners, $1.8 million. As long as the lever
on the tribe's 2,000 slots get pulled, it will make big bucks. And fill
big Dumpsters. If the landfill proceeds, its owners will make money too,
perhaps enough to recoup the $20 million they've put into it over 15 years of
meeting ever stricter requirements to get it built.
That
there's money to be made in trash seems to gall some landfill opponents. But
the county lost boodles trying to handle trash itself, meaning county residents
lost money. Another private landfill increases competition here, helping to
keep costs down. Hence, the earlier passage by 68 percent of a proposition
approving the
If passed,
Proposition B would reverse not only that previous vote but the progress made
in fulfilling it. The result: a return to square one, with more years of
fighting to site and build a landfill, more years of noisy opposition in North
County NIMBYists, and who knows but more outcry from neighbors near and far at
North County's sending its trash into their back yards.