Neal Milner: The Impossible Task Of Building A New Landfill On O驶ahu
Don驶t be fooled by the mayor’s announcement about a Wahiaw膩 site. It驶s far from a done deal.
By Neal Milner
December 19, 2024 · 7 min read
About the Author
Don驶t be fooled by the mayor’s announcement about a Wahiaw膩 site. It驶s far from a done deal.
Kids love garbage collectors. When the truck shows up on garbage day, one garbage truck driver describes it like this: 鈥淢oms hold babies at the door, toddlers wait at the window and sometimes a whole family will come out to watch and wave.鈥
鈥淚t makes you ,鈥 he said.
Honolulu Mayor Rick Blangiardi should be so lucky. When it comes to garbage, the mayor is no rock star. He鈥檚 between a rock and a hard place. For the city administration, garbage day is garbage duress.
After years of trying, the city still has not found a site to replace O驶ahu鈥檚 only landfill, which is scheduled to close for good in 2028.
Without a new landfill there will be no place to put garbage. Period. And there are no acceptable alternatives right now. Period, plus exclamation mark.
As about selecting a site, “If there was a path that the whole island supported, then that is the path that we would have chosen, but it wasn鈥檛 that simple because the path simply does not exist.鈥
鈥淎nd this is important,” he continued. 鈥淭he city must construct a new landfill, there is no path forward for us that does not involve the creation of a new landfill on O驶ahu.鈥
This O驶ahu landfill situation indicates how hard, maybe even impossible, it is to use democratic processes to deal with an imminent and critical environmental crisis.
Garbage And Democracy
The basic political processes that normally make democracies work are in this case working against solving the problem.
For democracy to work, officials have to follow established rules that have been set and nested in our society. They may be excellent rules appropriately reflecting public values and democratic norms, but the fact remains they have made this problem impossible to solve.
Last week the city did kind of, sort of, choose a site in Wahiaw膩, but right now that鈥檚 not even close to a done deal because it remains iffy whether that site meets the rules. On the surface, it does not. More on this later.
Finding the right landfill site is stymied due to two circumstances that under the right circumstance can make policymaking easier: One of these is about science, the other is about politics.
The is well developed and used worldwide. It takes all the relevant site selection criteria, analyzes it statistically and comes out with a list of acceptable sites, which are typically displayed in a colorful map that鈥檚 easy to understand.
And, drum roll please, there you have it. A list of acceptable sites based on the criteria provided, ready for the public to weigh in on.
In the O驶ahu case, however, there is plenty of good, state-of-the-art science that doesn鈥檛 act as Hank the Helper.聽It acts as The Grim Reaper.
There is no list of the best options because there is no list at all. There is not a single site on the island that meets the criteria.
The Wahiaw膩 site the city has semi-selected comes the closest but arguably 鈥 and there sure will be arguments, which have begun already 鈥 fails because it does not meet the gold standards of location science.
Politics: Not Enough Tools In The Toolbox
鈥淒ire鈥 and 鈥渋mminent,鈥 two words that are poison to politicians. 鈥淲e gotta do something right now!鈥 is much scarier than, “Let鈥檚 take a look to see if there is anything we need to do.鈥
Deferring a decision is a tool. Like any tool, it can be used for good purposes as well as bad ones.
Remember how many times the Honolulu City Council deferred deciding on vacation rentals? Just last week, it did the same with the vacant house tax bill. Now, there are both good reasons and bad reasons for those two decisions, each of which gave the council breathing space.
The Wahiaw膩 site is distant-galaxy far from a done deal.
In the landfill case, though, the city is up against a hard deadline. The existing site can probably be used for maybe four years. The estimate is that it will take eight years to build a new landfill. Other alternatives, like shipping our garbage elsewhere, are very expensive and legally complex.
A lot of the usual that鈥檚-government-at-work delays drive people crazy, but the consequences are typically not so immediate. So, we still don鈥檛 have a new stadium yet. Not such a big thing. Or a completed rail system. Or even affordable housing. For better or worse, the public adjusts.
Siting a landfill is a cut above.
A Stark Look At Where We Stand
First of all, the deadline for solving this is firm, so firm that under the circumstances it will be hard to meet even under the best circumstances.
Second, there are no good alternatives to building a landfill. Producing less waste is definitely a good idea, but the reduction won驶t be enough to solve the immediate problem.
Third, the selection criteria won鈥檛 change. Maybe they should. They read like a wish list for a group trying to keep affordable housing out of its neighborhood.聽A new landfill can鈥檛 be on conservation land or federal land. There has to be a half-mile buffer from residential property, schools and hospitals. Because of water criteria about which the Board of Water Supply is being very militant, it has to be away from tsunami inundation zones and the Wai驶anae Coast.
When everything is sacred, compromise and flexibility are impossible.
Fourth, the Wahiaw膩 site is distant-galaxy far from a done deal. The city claims it can build the landfill in a way that meets the water requirements, but there are no specifics yet. In addition, big surprise, politicians representing the site area already have objections.
Finally, if the Wahiaw膩 site is contested, it could end up in court. Courts are not saviors as much as they are ponderers. Litigation takes time. That鈥檚 to the advantage of those who want to stymie the site.
And that鈥檚 what I mean when I said the landfill selection process is a threat to the capacity of democracy, because really, democracy is doing its job here: rule-following, accountability, obeying the law. But that鈥檚 making the challenge impossible to meet.
Deliberation is an essential part of democracy. It’s good people doing their job as citizens and representatives of citizens.
But, hey, we got an environmental disaster on our hands, and it is imminent.聽People in Hawai驶i have gotten used to a serious crisis suddenly disappearing, as in the Thirty Meter Telescope.
The need for a new landfill site is different.聽It鈥檚 not going away.聽And that means it may end up in your own backyard in spite of everything.
Civil Beat鈥檚 community health coverage is supported by , Swayne Family Fund of Hawai驶i Community Foundation, the Cooke Foundation and .
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ContributeAbout the Author
Neal Milner is a former political science professor at the University of Hawai驶i where he taught for 40 years. He is a political analyst for KITV and is a regular contributor to Hawaii Public Radio's His most recent book is Opinions are the author's own and do not necessarily reflect Civil Beat's views.
Latest Comments (0)
Opala1. Cancel contract with Covanta HPower needs to be locally operated and maintained, eliminate our kala from leaving Hawai芒聙聶i nei2. Convert the shutdown AES fluidized bed coal burning power plant next door to HPower into an opala burner.3. Ship opala from Kaua芒聙聶i, Hawai芒聙聶i Island, & Maui County, send back the ash to these islands.4. Sort all opala, resource recovery of all plastics, metals, clothing and all other resources that can be recovered.Opala is an issue for all Hawai芒聙聶i nei. Lining a new landfill will NOT prevent leaching of any liquid into our environment, to state that there is no risk or minimum risk is an outright lie to us.
Keoni808 · 4 weeks ago
Politicians are punters. They punt. Here in HIlo, the sewer problem is a catastrophe. The only sewage treatment plant in HIlo serves less than 20 percent of the area. Cesspools and septics are a problem, but with construction being the build all/safe all, houses keep coming up. It脢禄s not hard to see that Hilo is essentially built on a lava flow. The soil base is not that deep at all, but we continue to build build build. And whenever there is strong rain for a few days, all beaches and places on the HIlo side will have signs posted for increase of (fecal) bacteria levels. There is no relieve in sight because the punters punt.
2liveque · 4 weeks ago
The best method of obtaining permission of the public to use a site is the use of a negative auction. Let any given community identify a site and a fee to be divided up annually among the community in order to obtain permission. The entire population using the site would be taxed to provide the payments. I live downtown and will agree to having a landfill built in Bishop Square so long as the state pays each resident within five blocks of the site a payment of one million dollars annually. If the cost of the landfill construction is $200 million, the one million using residents of Oahu would have to fork over $200 each for the construction along with the annual cost of managing the landfill plus the annual cost of paying our 50,000 residents the one million dollars each year. This method allows other members of other communities to offer similar sites and payments so long as they are below the best offer already made.
Blandis · 4 weeks ago
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