The Monklands Residents Against Pyrolysis Plant (MRAPP) team are reporting success with a unanimous vote to oppose incineration.

A special meeting of North Lanarkshire Council’s Planning and Transportation Committee was held at the Motherwell Civic Centre to consider an incinerator application from Shore Energy.

The Committee voted unanimously to reject the application by Simon Howie’s company to build a pyrolysis incinerator in the Carnbroe/Shawhead area of Coatbridge, on the site of a former Shanks McEwan landfill.

Mr Howie intends to appeal to Scottish Government and campaigners are ready to give evidence in opposition to the scheme. More details are available from the Green Alternatives to Incineration in Scotland website.

The Coatbridge victory represents the fifth Scottish incinerator to have been refused planning consent in the last 6 months. In each case the companies are in the process of appealing to Scottish Ministers, meaning a local public inquiry by the Government ‘Reporter’.

There are more applications in the pipeline. See http://www.gainscotland.org.uk/proposed-facilities.shtml for details.

The people of Abernethy are facing the toughest struggle of all, because they are two miles downwind of a proposed incinerator at Binn Farm that received planning consent in 2006.

U.S. National Labor Relations Board Finds Covanta Energy “Overwhelmingly” Violated Workers’ Rights

An Administrative Law Judge of the U.S. National Labor Relations Board has found Covanta Energy and its SEMASS subsidiary guilty of numerous federal labor law violations, including by withholding nearly $1 million in bonuses and wage increases from 140 workers at the SEMASS plant in West Wareham, Massachusetts in retaliation for the workers exercising their right to form a labor union.

The ruling by Administrative Law Judge David I. Goldman requires Covanta to repay to workers the money illegally withheld with interest, and to bargain with SEMASS workers’ union over terms and conditions of employment before making any changes.  Covanta’s illegal conduct caused employees to lose between 8% and 11% of their annual compensation during 2009.

The March 26, 2010, decision involves the administrative phase of numerous charges pending against Covanta.  In addition, the NLRB has petitioned a U.S. federal court in Boston for an injunction against Covanta’s illegal conduct.  If the court rules against Covanta, the company will be required to immediately comply with the order, even while the administrative case continues through the NLRB process.  The injunction petition is still pending.

Gary P. Sullivan, President of Local 369, Utility Workers Union of America, AFL-CIO, hailed the NRLB decision.

This Union has long known that Covanta viciously punished these workers because they organized and demanded dignity and a voice in the workplace, This ruling lets the rest of the world know that, without question, Covanta broke the law and will have to put things right.

The NLRB decision is one more step in the Union’s campaign for justice for Covanta employees. SEMASS workers formed a union in May 2008 under the banner of UWUA Local 369. In the nearly two years since that vote, the employees’ efforts to negotiate a first union contract have been obstructed by Covanta’s illegal conduct.

The unfair labor practices at issue in Judge Goldman’s decision occurred in February 2009, and the Union immediately filed charges with the NLRB challenging the illegal conduct. The decision is available online.

MARCH/APRIL 2010

INTRODUCTION

If we believe that climate change is a serious threat to our planet, we can’t avoid the fact that CO2 is a major contributor to that threat. It seems preposterous that our Council should be proposing and supporting a technology – incineration – that actually adds to CO2 emissions and are still seriously considering locking us into a 25 year contract based on this outdated technology. Continue reading »

Food Standards Agency: Harm from incinerators not ruled out.

In an e-mail message passed to UKWIN we read:

From: Mortimer, David
Cc: Chris James EA ; David Mudge EA ; Kevin Baker ; Justin McCracken ; Judy Proctor EA
Sent: Monday, March 29, 2010 3:51 PM
Subject: RE: Reiterate question on proof of evidence of no harm from incinerators

Dear XXXXXXXXX

Unfortunately, it would not be possible to generate evidence of the type you seek.

On the other hand, there is no evidence that a properly regulated incinerator, abated in line with current regulation, will have an adverse impact on food production. If I considered there to be a risk to local food production, I would have recommended additional monitoring. I do not think this is necessary but I have offered to advise on a suitable programme if others wish it.

Otherwise, I do not have anything further to add to the comments I provided you with on 21 January.

Regards
David Mortimer
Senior Scientific Officer, Environmental Contaminants
Food Safety: Contaminants Division
Food Standards Agency

The request for information to which he refers as being unanswerable was as follows:

As you all keep insisting that incinerators do not harm any living thing, and they are quite safe.

So you must have the proof of evidence of what you are stating. With your insistence that incinerators do no harm to any living thing, then we wish to see the evidence that you must have, on how incinerators which have been up and running in a RURAL FARMING AREA, especially dairy farming areas, in either the UK or even the EU, have not caused any contamination of that land what so ever, in those ten or so years. And, dairy farming is still continuing and the farmers are making an annual profit, with no farmers being made to close down and go out of farming.

If the EA, FSA, or HPA do not have this information, how we ask, can you insist that your incinerators do no harm to any living thing?

According to local activists Project Transform, the incinerator partnership between Coventry City Council, Solihull Metropolitan Borough Council and Warwickshire County Council, is in the process of collapsing. Continue reading »

On Saturday 20th March, Chesterfield will play host to a gathering of anti-incineration campaigners from around the country when the United Kingdom Without Incineration Network (UKWIN) holds its Annual General Meeting (AGM) at the church on Spencer Street.

UKWIN is a network of 110 campaigners and campaign groups from throughout the UK. Many of these will be represented at the AGM, where they will listen to guest speaker Alan Watson deliver a presentation tracing the history of the anti-incineration movement.

Alan Watson will deliver a presentation tracing the history of the anti-incineration movement

Alan Watson will deliver a presentation tracing the history of the anti-incineration movement

Mr Watson, Director of Public Interest Consultants, is a recognised expert on waste treatment and disposal, and a former a member of Environmental Protection Advisory Committee for the Environment Agency in Wales. He previously worked for the Department of the Environment and was the senior specialist on Industry and Pollution for Friends of the Earth.

Participants will also be treated to a presentation from waste statistician Keith Kondakor about current trends in waste reduction and how to use waste data to support anti-incineration campaigning.

UKWIN’s National Coordinator, Shlomo Dowen, will explain how his High Court victory means campaigners can use the Audit Commission Act to reveal the financial arrangements behind large waste contracts.

This year’s AGM will be hosted by the local Chesterfield, Derbyshire and Derby groups.

Julie Harrington of Chesterfield Against Incineration (CAI) explains:

The event is particularly timely as a decision by Derbyshire County Council on whether to refuse planning permission for an incinerator in Chesterfield is imminent.

The planning application from the Wales-based firm Cyclamax, for a hazardous, commercial waste incinerator on Dunston Road, Chesterfield has generated an over-whelming level of public opposition from both residents and businesses, with over 11,000 objections to date, as well as opposition from every parish, town, borough and district council in the area.

The event will be an opportunity for local waste campaign groups to compare notes with others from throughout the UK. UKWIN’s National Coordinator, Shlomo Dowen, is looking forward to the event.

Gatherings like this one are always uplifting for those involved. They combine the serious work of campaigning and the joy of being with like-minded people.

According to Friends of the Earth’s Keith Kondakor:

Incineration is a false solution. Using the Earth’s finite resources more efficiently and cost-effectively demands more reuse, recycling and composting. Burning valuable materials is economic madness. We have just started on a recycling revolution in the UK that is diverting waste from landfill more quickly, more safely and less expensively than these costly, wasteful and unloved incinerator projects.

CAI’s Julie Harrington adds:

UKWIN has been a very valuable source of information and a great source of support for the campaign group, providing access to well-researched data and evidence on a range of safer and greener alternatives to gasification/incineration; experts on incineration processes and their environmental impacts; and case studies from councils across the country that have already ruled out incineration as an option in their waste strategies.

We encourage anyone interested in the subject to attend the AGM and benefit from the vast amount of knowledge and experience that UKWIN has gathered on these controversial and potentially health-damaging technologies.

Why incineration is a very bad idea in the Twenty First Century
by Paul Connett, PhD Continue reading »

A decision of sorts has emerged from the Secretary of State for Communities and Local Government regarding the Rivenhall Airfield Public Inquiry into an incinerator proposal. Continue reading »

Bribe Communities to accept Waste Incinerators says industry lobby group with parliamentary sponsors or so it appears… Continue reading »

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