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Women's Voices for the Earth

Livingston MT, Incinerator

Success! Park County, Montana, was home to the last remaining municipal waste incinerator in the state. With pressure from WVE and Park County Environmental Council, this incinerator was replaced with a safer, healthier landfilling alternative in 2005.

On January 20, 2004, County Commmissioners in Park County, MT, announced their decision to shut down the county's municipal waste incinerator and build a transfer station to send their waste to a landfill.  This was a landmark decision for the state of Montana as it culminated months of hard work by WVE and the Park County Environmental Council.  In the Spring of 2005, the incinerator was finally shut down and dismantled eliminating a major source of toxic air pollution in that community.

For two years, WVE worked closely with Park County Environmental Council to educate the Livingston community and local decision-makers about the hazards of toxic chemicals associated with the incinerator. 

Until its closure, the Park County incinerator was the single largest source of airborne lead and the second largest source of airborne mercury and dioxin in the state of montana.  It was built in 1981 to solve the problem of trash blowing away from the local landfill at a time when regulations for incinerators were minimal.  No scrubbers or other pollution control devices were installed on the incinerator stack and very little monitoring was required.

In the last few years however, the Environmental Protection Agency passed new federal regulations for municipal waste incinerators.  Park County was given until 2005 to upgrade their incinerator to meet the new regulations.  In addition to expensive new control equiptment, the new regulations also require extensive  monitoring and stack testing.

Although prone to its own unique problems, landfilling waste has many advantages over incineration.  Landfills isolate waste and associated pollutants in one place, rather than emitting the pollution into the air where it is  rapidly distributed by wind.  Additionally, landfilling creates a financial incentive for counties to increase recycling.  While incinerators need a constant input of garbage to operate most effectively, a landfilling contract operates on a cost per ton basis.  Every ton of recyclable material diverted from the landfill can save money.


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