Paper, plastic and cans is trash to some but Baltimore County officials say it could be a source of additional revenue.
Keith Dorsey, the county budget and finance director, told the County Council Tuesday that a proposed $25 million recycling facility could generate $200,000 a month in revenue.
Dorsey and the county are asking the council to approve a bill that would allow it to raise $25 million to pay for the new facility through the sale of certificates of participation.
The new facility would replace an existing one at the Texas Landfill in Cockeysville.
Dorsey said the new facility might allow the county to generate additional revenue by contracting to process other jurisdiction's recyclables.
Previously, the county has worked with the Maryland Environmental Service to process recyclables. The new facility would allow the county to process the materials on its own.
"We'll be handling the operation ourselves," said Fred Homan, the county administrative officer.
Because the notes are not backed by the county in the same way general obligation bonds are, the interest rates would be higher—meaning the county would pay more to investors in interest over the 20-year life of the loan.
Homan told the council the rating on the certificates would be AA+, a slightly lower rating than the county's AAA bond rating.
The county estimates that it would pay slightly more than $12.1 million in interest on the certificates over the life of the loan.
The bill, which is scheduled for a Nov. 7 final vote, allows the county to sidestep some of the normal processes involved in other types of bond sales.
Homan said the process is similar to those undertaken on other projects including the purchase of the Jefferson and the Public Safety Buildings in Towson.
not like they have anything else to do :)
It's slave labor. That is why it is so profitable.