SUPPLEMENTAL
ENTRY OF 12/03/2019
“I
HAD NO IDEA WM AND CIFALOGLIO MARRIED”
Shortly
after I left home and ran away from the mighty fucking KINGS, as
always, the effects that I seemly have on humanity just by existing
and interacting within it, always go supernova and explore in quantum
force and that is putting it fucking major ass super politely, Mister
Tommy Jam-Jelly Row,
YO!!!!
THIS
GOOGLED INFO is mostly from the
PRESS OF ATLANTIC CITY.
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in the matter of the petition of waste management ... - Justia Law
Nov 29,
2012 - In March 2011, Waste
Management
and Cifaloglio
entered into an asset purchase agreement in which Waste
Management
agreed to purchase ...
Atlantic County Utilities Authority losing $1 million a month as ...
Dec 21,
2011 - Waste
Management
purchased the Cifaloglio
Inc. transfer station off Route 54 in Buena Vista Township for
$38 million, including equipment ...
Cifaloglio Buena NJ, 08310 – Manta.com
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PER
CURIAM
Appellant
Atlantic County Utilities Authority (Authority) appeals from a
final order of the Department of Environmental Protection
(Department), approving respondent Waste Management of New Jersey's
(Waste Management) purchase of a solid waste transfer station and
related assets owned by respondent Cifaloglio, Inc. (Cifaloglio).
We affirm.
In
March 2011, Waste Management and Cifaloglio entered into an asset
purchase agreement in which Waste Management agreed to purchase the
assets of Cifaloglio, including a transfer station/materials
recovery facility (facility) located in Buena Vista. The facility
is a "solid waste facility which receives incoming waste from
collection vehicles and, after removal of any recyclables,
transfers the waste residue to haulage vehicles for delivery to an
off-site final disposal facility." At the time of the
agreement, the facility received waste from the following counties:
Atlantic, Burlington, Camden, Gloucester, Ocean, Salem, Cumberland
and Cape May. Waste originating in Atlantic County was subsequently
delivered by Cifaloglio to the Authority's landfill in Egg Harbor
Township for final disposal.
In
April, Waste Management and Cifaloglio filed a joint petition
requesting the Department's approval of the purchase. Waste
Management subsequently submitted a revised operations and
maintenance manual for the facility. The manual stated that
"[m]arket conditions will dictate which disposal facility is
utilized, unless the origin of the waste is from a county that has
flow regulations; in which case the county waste flow regulations
will be followed," and that solid waste would be "delivered
to disposal facilities in accordance with the applicable solid
waste management plans of the service area." Attached to the
manual was a list of disposal facilities, all located in New
Jersey.
The
Authority sent an email to the Department on April 20, asking to be
"advise[d] . . . about any public comment format and schedule
for interested parties to provide input" during the approval
process. The Department replied that it would be sending the
transfer request documents to the Authority for comments and that
in addition, "[o]nce a decision has been made to approve the
transfer of ownership, a 30 day public comment period will be
opened to accept comments from anyone." The Authority sent the
Department a follow up email asking for the transfer request
documents in May. The Department replied that it would send the
documents after it had issued a determination of administrative
completeness to Waste Management, and that the Authority would then
have thirty days "to provide any comments regarding the
transfer."
In
June, the Department sent the Authority and the municipalities
served by the Cifaloglio facility copies of the Waste Management
application and a cover letter summarizing the proposed transfer of
ownership. The letter stated, "If you wish to provide
comments, it would be appreciated if your comments were submitted
to the Bureau within thirty (30) days from the date of this
letter." The Department received no comments.
In
August, the Department sent the Authority and other potentially
interested parties copies of the draft permit authorizing the sale.
The cover letter included information about the upcoming public
notice to be published in two newspapers on August 29, and stated
that
should this notice result in the scheduling of a hearing, a
subsequent notice of the hearing will be provided . . . . If the
action does not result in a public hearing, the public comment
period will close 30 days after the publication of this notice and
a final decision on the permit application will be taken in
accordance with N.J.A.C. 7:26-2.4(g)(19).
No
public hearing was requested or scheduled.
In
September, the Authority sent its comments on the transfer of
ownership to the Department. Those comments are not directly
relevant to this appeal. Significantly for the purposes of this
appeal, however, the comments did not include (1) any objection to
Waste Management's purchase of Cifaloglio's assets, (2) any
concerns related to market share or competitive pricing resulting
from the purchase, or (3) any objection to the manner in which the
Department had conducted the approval process up to that point.
On
October 12, 2011, the Department's Bureau of Solid Waste Compliance
and Enforcement issued a solid waste order approving Waste
Management's purchase of Cifaloglio's assets and issued the solid
waste facility permit.
The
order and permit required Waste Management to comply with the
approved district solid waste plan for the district in which waste
delivered to its facility originated. The district plan then in
effect for Atlantic County designated the Authority's landfill as
the sole in-state disposal facility for non-hazardous solid waste
generated within Atlantic County, but allowed delivery of solid
waste to a licensed out-of-state disposal facility.
In
email correspondence to the Department on October 18, the Authority
raised questions regarding Waste Management's operation of the
former Cifaloglio facility, noting that "the tonnage normally
accepted at [the Authority's landfill] [had] decreased by 50%."
According to the Authority, Waste Management was disposing of
non-hazardous solid waste at a site in Pennsylvania, which was
owned by a related entity, rather than at the Authority's site.
On
November 14, the Authority sent the Department a letter objecting
to the October order, requesting an "investigation into the
issues of artificial and discriminatory pricing and associated
anti-competitive practices," and "asking that [the]
subject waste be delivered to [the Authority] immediately" for
the purpose of "mitigating anti-competitive results" of
the order. The Authority claimed that the facility's waste
deliveries to its disposal site had dropped by seventy percent and
estimated "an annual loss of . . . $3,653,659 in gross
receipts, including $319,651 in host community benefits lost to Egg
Harbor Township," and an additional loss of $1,900,000 because
"Atlantic County waste that was previously serviced by
[Cifaloglio] and now serviced by [Waste Management] is being
delivered out of state."
The
present appeal was filed shortly thereafter.1 In February 2012,
while this appeal was pending, Atlantic County amended its solid
waste management plan to designate the Authority's landfill as the
only permissible site for disposal of non-hazardous solid waste
generated within Atlantic County. The Department approved the
amended plan in August. Waste Management has complied with the
amended plan since its approval.
The
driving force behind the Authority's belated opposition to the sale
of Cifaloglio's assets to Waste Management was clearly Waste
Management's subsequent diversion of non-hazardous solid waste from
the Authority's site to an out-of-state site. At the time that
action was taken by Waste Management, delivery of solid waste to a
licensed out-of-state disposal site was explicitly permitted by
Atlantic County's solid waste management plan.2 In other words, the
document governing the issue would have permitted Cifaloglio to
take the same action had the sale of assets not taken place.
Because
the Atlantic County plan has now been amended to prohibit usage of
an out-of-state site, the issue that prompted the Authority's
belated objection to the sale of assets has become moot. Generally,
"courts should not decide cases where a judgment cannot grant
relief." Marjarum v. Twp. of Hamilton, 336 N.J. Super. 85, 92
(App. Div. 2000).
As
previously noted, the Authority did not object to the sale of
Cifaloglio's assets to Waste Management at any time prior to its
approval by the Department. In addition, it never raised issues
with respect to market share and competitive pricing or the manner
in which the Department was conducting the approval process until
after the approval was issued. In essence, the Authority seeks to
raise on appeal issues that it could have, but did not, raise
before the Department during the public comment period.
In
any event, having reviewed the issues raised on appeal, we find
them to be without merit and not warranting discussion in a written
opinion. R. 2:11-3(e)(1)(E).
Affirmed.
1
The Authority filed motions with the Department to intervene and
for reconsideration in November 2011. Those motions were denied in
April 2012 due to procedural deficiencies.
2
It appears that Waste Management sent waste to the out-of-state
disposal site at a time when that site was not listed in its
operations manual. Any regulatory violation resulting from that
conduct is not appropriately the subject of this appeal.
“I’m
talking about half of the waste we handle in the course of a day,”
authority President Rick Dovey said. “This has tremendous
implications.”
The ACUA may
ask the county freeholders to mandate that all garbage generated in
Atlantic County must stay there. A U.S. Supreme Court ruling in 2007
allows public authorities to require private companies to take their
trash to local landfills. Similar measures were adopted by other
counties, including Ocean and Burlington.
How the loss of
revenue will affect future fees at the landfill is yet to be
determined.
Atlantic County
municipalities each have separate contracts through 2013 that cannot
be changed for two years.
Tipping fees
for other companies and contractors may increase without a way to
bring back Waste Management to the landfill, Dovey said.
“At this
point, we have no idea, and that’s what we’re trying to avoid,”
he said.
Waste
Management purchased the Cifaloglio Inc. transfer station off Route
54 in Buena Vista Township for $38 million, including equipment and
other assets, according to documents filed by the state Department of
Environmental Protection, which approved the sale Oct. 12.
Up until
mid-October, the authority thought the deal would boost business. It
anticipated more revenues coming in from the Cifaloglio station,
which previously took its garbage to another landfill.
The Egg Harbor
Township landfill has one of the lowest disposal rates in the state,
and Waste Management already gets a $2 per ton discount from the
regular rate of $64.73 because it is such a large hauler, Dovey said.
But the sudden
loss of revenue from Waste Management and anticipated revenue took
the authority by surprise.
Much of Waste
Management’s waste comes from non-municipal commercial sites —
such as casinos, factories and hospitals — and represents a large
chunk of garbage collection in the county, he said.
Dovey said the
authority will push for a change to a waste control ordinance. It
also filed an appeal of the DEP’s approval of the sale in October,
arguing it is contrary to the public interest.
“The
economics of it don’t make any sense. And there’s no bad history
with Waste Management,” said Dovey, who accused the company of
“predatory pricing.”
Waste
Management spokesman George McGrath said ACUA’s claims of predatory
pricing are baseless.
“The
authority has no insights or information about how Waste Management
operates its business, the contractual agreements we have with our
customers, or what we charge for disposal,” McGrath wrote in an
email. “Our customers in Atlantic County have seen no changes in
what they pay for our services since we acquired the Cifaloglio
operations this year.”
McGrath said
Waste Management’s decision to send waste out of state is permitted
by the county’s own solid waste management plan.
A county
ordinance passed in 2010 required that municipal waste in Atlantic
County be taken to the local landfill, but gave commercial haulers
the option to go out of state.
DEP spokesman
Larry Ragonese said the agency could not comment due to the pending
litigation.
Atlantic County
Executive Dennis Levinson said the issue will likely come before
county freeholders early next year.
“We’re
going to do whatever the parameters of the law allow us to do,”
Levinson said. “Experience has shown that solid waste disposal
needs to be carefully regulated and monitored.”
Last week,
freeholders in Burlington County approved a law requiring trash
collectors to use their county’s landfill, joining 11 other New
Jersey counties, the Burlington County Times reported. The DEP has
several months to approve it.
The Atlantic
County Utilities Authority’s lost revenue comes at a time when the
authority is facing other revenue drops.
These include
declining state subsidies and less overall waste due to the sour
economy, according to Fitch Ratings.
The Atlantic
County Utilities Authority budget for solid waste is $38 million in
2011, and its proposed budget for 2012 is $37.2 million, Dovey said.
This does not include the authority’s separate wastewater division.
Contact
Brian Ianieri:
609-272-7253
END
TWANSMISSION,SIR
ELMER FWUDD!
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