If Lauderdale County decides to switch to curbside garbage pick-up, it won't be until after Christmas, Board of Supervisors President Hank Florey said Wednesday.
"We don't want to make a change with all the extra garbage of wrapping paper and bows during Christmas," Florey said. "There won't be any changes until next year, if we decide to go with door-to-door pick-up."
County Engineer Neal Carson said the county is currently reviewing the lowest bids for door-to-door pick-up, making sure that they understand exactly what each bidder is offering for the money.
"We're looking at the containers, things like that," he said. "Making sure we're on the same page."
Lauderdale is one of few counties in Mississippi that still uses the "green box" system of waste disposal, in which residents take their garbage to unmanned dump sites placed throughout the county.
The green box sites have been caused safety concerns for many residents, while others, like Bailey resident Sandra Winham, say they don't like them because they're just plain gross.
Some county officials want to get rid of the green boxes to put more "green" in the county's coffers. The county's sanitation fund is currently deeply in the red, and, Florey said, "It looks like roadside pick-up will be cheaper."
Still, not everyone is for the change. Many, including Causeyville resident Jody Walters, have expressed concern that leaving garbage in roadside containers will attract stray animals.
Others worry that the cost of roadside pick-up will go up after the first contract term is expired.
The board took into consideration proposals from several waste disposal companies for roadside pick-up and container rental. The low bidder was Arrow Disposal, which bid $9.10 a month per resident for once weekly pick-up plus the use by each resident of a 96 gallon waste container.
Residents currently pay $100 a year plus a four mill of property tax levy to use the green box system.
This amount, Florey said, will not change until next fiscal year no matter what decision the board makes about roadside pick-up. The amount was set before the bids were made and state law requires that it not be changed mid-year.
Florey said the county could change rates after this fiscal year is complete, but not necessarily for the worse.
According to County Administrator Mike Sumrall, there are several scenarios in which going with one of the low bidders on roadside pick-up could eventually result in a lowering of the tax levy for sanitation.
In one scenario — accepting the proposal Arrow disposal for once-weekly pick-up and container rental — the county could bring in, at the current $100 a year plus four mills rate, $300,000 more per year in sanitation fees than they spend.
"When you consider that," Sumrall said, "maybe in three or four years when we get that (current sanitation debt of about $1.2 million) wiped out, we could lower that levy a little bit."
But some residents are skeptical that any lowering of rates will occur. At a recent board meeting, county resident Ray Huffmaster presented the board with a petition asking that the garbage issue be put to a public vote.
Florey said the number of signatures on the petition were "far below" what was needed to force a vote - 25 percent of the county's registered voters. But District 5 Supervisor Ray Boswell appealed to the board to do what the petitioners asked anyway.
"I don't see how this board can refuse putting it on the ballot for these people," he said.
No other board member, however, expressed the same sentiment.
The proposals are all being considered by a sanitation committee, and the committee will make recommendations to the board during a work session.
Florey said the soonest the issue might come to a vote is during the first board meeting after Christmas. That meeting will take place Monday, January 4 at 9 a.m. in Raymond P. Davis county annex building on 5th St.
Local News
Garbage vote not til after Christmas
- Local News
-
-
Local law enforcement officials honored
State Rep. Greg Snowden said he remembered as a child looking up to those "men in blue."
He said police officers in uniform were larger than life, riding in their patrol cars and carrying guns to protect and serve the population. Today, he said he is still in great admiration of the men and women who put their lives on the line every day so that citizens can feel safe. -
MPD probes vehicle crash
Evidence of a mother's desperate attempt to save her children from harm were spread all over a car lot — and could be seen on her as well in the form of bruises, cuts and scrapes.
Tuesday night, a vehicle with three children inside crashed through a plate glass showroom floor window damaging four new cars and totaling the vehicle the children were in. -
Skeleton found in residence
Members of the forensics team of the Mississippi Bureau of Investigation (MBI) were called to a dilapidated home in Chunky to probe the discovery of a skeleton.
-
Police search for robbery suspects
Two men who reportedly robbed a woman at gunpoint in the parking lot of a local bank are still being sought.
Mike Vick, public information officer with the Meridian Police Department, said the two men approached a woman about 8 p.m. Tuesday at the ATM of Regions Bank on North Hills Street. Vick said one of the suspects was armed with a handgun and after taking an undetermined amount of cash and the victim's car keys, the two suspects fled on foot. -
City cuts payment to Watkins
The Meridian City Council voted unanimously Tuesday to cut their monthly payment to David Watkins, project developer of Meridian's new police station, by $9,999 until work resumes on the project.
The order, made during the Meridian City Council meeting Tuesday morning, included a mutual agreement between the councilmen and Watkins to reduce the project developer's monthly consultant fee of $10,000 to $1, effective Tuesday. -
Crews work on gasoline pipeline
If you hear a loud, booming sound early today, between 4 a.m.-10 a.m., there is no cause for alarm.
Workers with Plantation Pipeline will be performing maintenance work on their 30-foot gasoline pipeline in the Meridian area to accommodate the widening of Highway 493. The location of the work activity will be at Highway 493 North and Oak Hill Baptist Church, just inside the city limits. -
Team Spirit
-
High Honor
The flowers and balloons Crestwood Elementary School Principal Kimberly Kendrick received at school Monday were not an early Valentines' Day gift.
Kendrick has been named Meridian Public School District's 2012 Administrator of the Year – an announcement that both surprised and wowed the 17-year veteran educator when made by MPSD Superintendent Dr. Alvin Taylor. -
Master Dance Class
-
Digital system promises better communication
Hopefully in the near future you won't hear someone in the emergency services ask over the radio, "Can you hear me now?"
A digital communications system, one which is being pushed by the Federal Communication Commission (FCC), is a few months away and, in some cases, is already in the testing phase in Lauderdale County. - More Local News Headlines
-





