Roanoke Times Copyright (c) 1995, Landmark Communications, Inc. DATE: THURSDAY, March 14, 1991 TAG: 9103140200 SECTION: VIRGINIA PAGE: B-4 EDITION: METRO SOURCE: JOEL TURNER MUNICIPAL WRITER DATELINE: LENGTH: Medium
As a result, the county and Vinton will have a majority of the seats on the seven-member board, even though Roanoke has a larger population and dumps more trash at the landfill.
The board was told Wednesday that the 1990 census figures indicate the county is entitled to another member. The county recently requested a review of the representation issue.
The board now has three members from the city, two from the county and one from Vinton.
John Parrott, board chairman, said he will notify County Administrator Elmer Hodge that the county can appoint a third member. The county Board of Supervisors can make that appointment immediately, said John Hubbard, assistant county administrator and a board member.
The regional agreement, which was approved when the landfill was developed in the mid-1970s, provides for each participating locality to have one member for each 35,000 people or fraction thereof.
Salem, which has a garbage incinerator and its own landfill, does not participate in the regional facility.
The county raised the representation issue on several occasions in recent years as its population has increased. But no change was made because of differing views on whether Vinton should be excluded from the county's population in apportioning representation.
Roanoke officials had argued that the town's population should not be counted twice. The city paid nearly two-thirds of the cost for developing the landfill and dumps more trash there than the county and Vinton combined. City officials contended it wouldn't be fair for the city to have less than half the board members.
But the latest census showed the county's population is about 73,000, excluding Vinton, said Hubbard.
"We have verified the population figures developed under the 1990 census and conclude that the population of the county does support the request for an additional member," said Hubbard, chairman of a special committee that reviewed the census figures.
The board also was told that the county hopes to complete negotiations soon with Norfolk Southern Railway on the rates and conditions for hauling trash to a new landfill at Smith Gap by train. "We hope to wrap it up soon," Hubbard said.
County officials said a trash train will cause less disruption than large trucks for residents near the landfill.
The plan calls for construction of a rail siding from the railroad's main line in the vicinity of Ironto to the Smith Gap site.
City officials are focusing on three potential sites for a transfer station. The sites have not been made public.
by CNB