(TNS) — Representatives of the region’s waste disposal authority are making the rounds at city meetings this month to lay the groundwork for long-term contract extensions they say will extend use of the regional landfill through the end of the century.
Southeastern Public Service Authority (SPSA) is asking South Hampton Roads cities and counties to renew their trash contracts for 25 years instead of an upcoming 10-year extension.
The longer-term contracts are needed to ensure that SPSA’s third-party provider will invest $200 million in new facilities to sort recyclables from solid waste across the region, SPSA Board of Directors Chairman Tom Leahy told the Virginia Beach City Council Tuesday.
The new sorting process will eventually eliminate the need for blue curbside recycling cans and for residents to sort recyclables from solid waste.
“All the waste would go into a single can, collected by a single truck at the curbside,” said Leahy. “Recycling and reuse would occur after collection.”
SPSA handles hundreds of thousands of tons of waste for Chesapeake, Norfolk, Portsmouth, Suffolk and Virginia Beach, in addition to surrounding localities including Franklin and Southampton and Isle of Wight counties.
SPSA has been in need of alternative waste disposal services since the 2024 closure of the WIN Waste plant, formerly known as the Wheelabrator facility, which burned 80% of the region’s trash for decades. The former plant also converted waste into steam energy for the Norfolk Naval Shipyard. Then, 30% of the ash left over was diverted to the landfill.
The plant’s closure put pressure on the regional landfill, which will reach capacity in a few decades.
SPSA is in the process of finalizing negotiations with Commonwealth Sortation LLC, a subsidiary of AMP Robotics — a Colorado-based alternative waste disposal provider that uses artificial intelligence and robotics to extract mixed recyclables and organic material from municipal solid waste.
The process will divert 50% of SPSA’s waste from the landfill and extend the landfill’s capacity through 2095, Leahy said.
Commonwealth Sortation plans to invest approximately $200 million in new processing facilities, but wants a guarantee that SPSA’s member communities are in for the long haul. The company is currently operating out of a facility in Portsmouth and plans to expand its operations.
An agreement between SPSA’s board and Commonwealth Sortation is expected by the end of this year, but it’s contingent on most of the localities agreeing to the 25-year extension, Leahy said.
The Virginia Beach City Council is scheduled to vote on the contract extension Oct. 7. Cities’ agreements with SPSA are scheduled to renew for an additional 10 years in 2027. The proposed amendment would extend each localities’ contract to June 30, 2052.
“Recycling’s pretty popular with our citizens, and this will make everybody with a black can be a recycler,” said Vice Mayor Rosemary Wilson. “It’s really good news environmentally for all of us.”
Tipping fee increases associated with the new process are not expected to be higher than what large cities like Virginia Beach that offer curbside recycling are already incurring.
“We won’t necessarily see a cost increase associated with this transaction,” said City Manager Patrick Duhaney.
Several cities recently incurred cost increases when they renewed recycling contracts with TFC Recycling, including Virginia Beach and Norfolk. Chesapeake did away with curbside recycling in 2022 as costs increased.
The average number of homes using curbside recycling in Virginia Beach was 125,000 in 2024. Virginia Beach residents currently pay for curbside recycling as part of their trash collection. The solid waste collection fee is $30.55 per month.
Virginia Beach’s contract with TFC Recycling will overlap with the new SPSA contract and general fund support may be needed to cover the cost, City Manager Patrick Duhaney said.
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