After hundreds of neighbor complaints about smelly composting operations at Cold Canyon Landfill in San Luis Obispo, the landfill operators are planning to shut down an 11-year-old recycling program.

Though the California Department of Resources Recycling and Recovery (CalRecycle) hasn’t mandated the closure of composting at Cold Canyon, landfill officials said the department will instead shut down the existing operations and ship the material to Santa Maria.

CalRecycle is forcing Cold Canyon to comply with state odor requirements by Oct. 3 in response to hundreds of neighbor complaints and several formal violations issued by the state this year.

According to landfill manager Tom Martin, compliance means absolutely no odors can escape from the composting operations, which he said is impossible.

ā€œJust to give you an idea of how crazy this is, one of the complaints that we got was for freshly ground green waste,ā€ he said.

It costs about $18 per ton to compost material at Cold Canyon but will cost about $45 per ton to truck the material out of county, Martin said. However, the ratepayer increase will likely be minimal, maybe 1.4 percent. A CalRecycle inspection report referred to the smell as ā€œfreshly ground feed stock and finished compost.ā€ But neighbors have referred to odors in the area as ā€œdog poop,ā€ ā€œreally gross,ā€ and ā€œthe grossest smell I’ve ever smelled,ā€ said Bruce Falkenhagen.

Neighbors have been complaining since Cold Canyon officials expanded the composting operations in 2004, Falkenhagen said. He has kept an ā€œodor log,ā€ and neighbors have made at least one complaint per day, until the last two months when they averaged two complaints per day.

ā€œTo the people that say we’re nimbys, we have lived with this … and we are saying that they need to abide by their current permit conditions,ā€ Falkenhagen said.

CalRecycle officials have been conducting monthly inspections and issued the first violation to Cold Canyon in April.

ā€œWhen there are complaints about odors, the Local Enforcement Agency—or in this case, CalRecycle—will visit the site to verify the odor, and if verified, note that on a violation report,ā€ said CalRecycle spokesman Mark Oldfield.

The landfill is also in the environmental-review phase in a request to expand the landfill by 46 acres and, under the original application, to increase the composting from 300 to 450 tons per day. Martin said the composting expansion was later withdrawn in response to complaints.

ā€œIt’s a difficult balance, because you have a landfill that has been there for quite a while—I think longer than the residents,ā€ said San Luis Obispo County Supervisor Adam Hill, whose district includes the landfill. ā€œBut they live there, and they have legitimate concerns.ā€

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