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MASSENA The village soon may take out the trash at the Massena Central School District.
The Board of Trustees voted unanimously Tuesday night to approve a five-year garbage disposal contract with the district. The Board of Education will consider the proposal at its meeting Thursday.
If approved, the Department of Public Works will begin disposing of the districts garbage and recyclables July 1.
The district now has a $33,000-a-year contract with Casella Resource Solutions, director of operations William L. Seguin said. The new contract with the village will cost $43,500 a year for five years.
Mr. Seguin said the districts contract was expiring, and Casella wanted tens of thousands of dollars more in a new agreement. The district will purchase $20,000 worth of trash containers under the village agreement, as Casella previously had provided them.
The village contract and container purchases will cost less than Casellas proposal over a five-year period, Mr. Seguin said.
We researched it and their price was considerably higher, Mr. Seguin said. I truly believe this will save all the taxpayers in Massena with a five-year deal.
The village will pick up and dispose of solid waste from the district two days per week and recyclables one day per week. DPW will provide the school district with 325 to 350 recycling bins; Superintendent Hassan A. Fayad has been working with economic development specialist Jason A. Clark to land grant money to defray those costs.
Mayor James F. Hidy said solid waste discussions among him, Mr. Seguin and school Superintendent Roger B. Clough II began a while back. Mr. Fayad completed a cost analysis indicating the village would not lose money from the deal, he said.
His main objective was not to cost a nickel to the village to the point where I was going to crack him over the head with a chair, Mr. Hidy said.
Mr. Clough praised the agreement.
I think its a great proposition for the village and the district to come together, he said. This is a win-win for the village and the district.
Not everyone was certain of that Tuesday night. The contracts original terms called for the village and district to revisit it after two years and opt out then if necessary. Tuesday night, the village board bumped that down to one year.
Trustee Francis J. Carvel said the village needs to ensure it isnt losing money on the agreement and subsidizing the district.
Theres too many variables here, Mr. Carvel said. The figures to me just dont add up.
The village likely will use more than the five man-hours per week listed in the agreement, he said.
You could almost figure out were over $43,500 before we even start, he said.
The district would lose money if the village opted out at one year because of the investment on containers, Mr. Seguin said. Trustee Timothy J. Ahlfeld said the district still could use the containers even if the village stopped handling its garbage.
Trustee Albert C. Herb Deshaies said he would continue supporting the agreement next year if the service was not costing the village more than the district was reimbursing.
If its close, youve got a five-year deal, he said.