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Byline: Troy Anderson and Kerry Cavanaugh Staff Writers

Los Angeles County supervisors voted 5-0 Tuesday to call for a report to determine whether the city of Los Angeles is sending its trash to the Lancaster Landfill.

The report was requested by Supervisor Michael D. Antonovich, who has proposed barring Los Angeles from dumping its trash at the Lancaster Landfill - a move that could block Mayor James Hahn's plan to haul garbage outside the city limits.

Antonovich's motion is designed to head off an attempt by Los Angeles to ship any of the 4,700 tons of trash it generates daily to the Lancaster Landfill. The city's trash currently goes to Sunshine Canyon Landfill, which has long generated controversy in the San Fernando Valley by residents concerned about health risks and quality-of-life issues.

Antonovich asked for the report because it appeared the city's discussions about diverting its trash to the Antelope Valley had ``escalated to the point'' where it appeared a decision was close to being made, said Bob Haueter, senior deputy to Antonovich.

``Residents in the Antelope Valley are concerned, with good reason, about local landfills accepting trash from outside of the Antelope Valley,'' Antonovich said. ``In addition to the fundamental question of fairness, trucks driving from Los Angeles to the Antelope Valley increase traffic congestion and worsen air quality.

City officials could not immediately be reached for comment.

But officials for Waste Management Inc., which owns the Lancaster Landfill and the Antelope Valley Landfill in Palmdale, said they would compile information on how much city of Los Angeles trash ends up in their two dumps.

``We have serious concerns about the legality of the county restricting the flow of waste into our privately held landfills,'' said Kit Cole, director of community relations at Waste Management. ``We feel it's a business decision on our part.''

The two dumps currently take trash from private haulers who pick up from apartments and businesses in the city of Los Angeles. The city's Bureau of Sanitation hauls refuse from single-family homes and some small apartment complexes to Sunshine Canyon Landfill in Granada Hills.

The motion calls on the county's public works director to compile data on the origin of trash going to the Lancaster Landfill in the last 12 months and to look into the legal issues and steps necessary to institute a landfill waste-shed, the area around the landfill from which trash can An icon of a garbage can used for deleting data. The icon of a file or folder is dragged to the trash can and released. In the Mac, the trash can is also used to eject removable media by dragging the disk icons onto it. Windows 95 introduced the recycle bin (more politically correct for the 1990s), which is used to delete files and folders, not to eject media. be dumped. The creation of a waste-shed would prevent the city of Los Angeles from sending its trash to the landfill.

As a solution to the problems, Antonovich has asked Los Angeles officials to enter into serious talks about hauling the region's trash by train to a remote desert property in Imperial County that the county has purchased for development.

Troy Anderson, (213) 974-8985

troy.anderson(at)dailynews.com
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Copyright 2005, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Publication:Daily News (Los Angeles, CA)
Date:Apr 6, 2005
Words:469
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