State Finds Hueneme Cut Landfill Use - Los Angeles Times
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State Finds Hueneme Cut Landfill Use

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Port Hueneme has exceeded state requirements to reduce its landfill-bound garbage by 25%, officials said Thursday.

The state’s Integrated Waste Management Board found that Port Hueneme kept 28% of its waste out of landfills in 1995 and increased that to 39% in 1996.

“The progress Port Hueneme has made in cutting the amount of garbage going to landfills is phenomenal,” said board Chairman Daniel Pennington.

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Implemented in 1990, the Integrated Waste Management Act requires that California cities enact programs to keep 25% of their garbage from going to landfills. Moorpark, Oxnard, Simi Valley and Thousand Oaks also have met the state requirements.

Not meeting standards could lead cities to pay as much $10,000 a day in fines.

Cities like Port Hueneme have stepped up recycling and reclamation programs to keep landfills clear of reusable garbage.

Statewide, the program is being hailed a success as Californians continue to recycle one ton of garbage every three seconds and keep more than 100 million tons of garbage from clogging the state’s diminishing landfills.

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