A ribbon cutting was held in mid-September to mark the completion of the Balls Ford Composting Facility expansion. Prince William County residents have long been encouraged to bring yard waste, such as grass, leaves and small branches, to the Balls Ford Road Compost Facility in Manassas.
With the newly completed $10 million two year expansion has
nearly tripled its capacity to produce compost. In addition to yard waste, the
facility can now recycle food waste using state-of-the-art composting equipment
and processes. Freestate Farms, who operates the Balls Ford Road Facility paid
for the expansion This is a part of the Prince William County’s efforts
to recycle more, be more sustainable, to take more material that previously
went into the landfill and make usable soil amendments to improve our
environment.”
Before the expansion, yard waste of leaves, grass and brush
is piled high into long rows that have to be manually turned with heavy
equipment. The new system will significantly decrease the time it takes to make
compost. According to Prince William County’s Acting Director of Public Works,
Tom Smith “The new facility will use an advanced aerobic composting technology
where the leaves and grass will be mixed and placed in large bunkers. Those
bunkers will have a series of pipes underneath so air can be drawn … through
the piles. It will be constantly monitored by computers, so it’s a much more
efficient operation. The process now takes six to nine months. Under this new
system, we can have compost within 30 to 45 days.”
The air used in the bunkers will also pass through
bio-filters to control any smell that might otherwise come off of the
composting piles, Smith said.
Turning yard and food waste into compost at the facility
will keep tons of this material out of the landfill. Mr. Smith went on to say
that collecting this type of waste, which would normally enter the landfill,
would increase the useful life of the county’s main landfill past its current
lifespan of 2060. “Based upon studies we have done, approximately 30 % of the
waste going into the landfill is organics, leaves, grass, food waste, etc. If
we can divert that waste into this facility to make usable products, we can
increase the landfill life by 10 to 15 years.”
Freestate Farms will ultimately employ 20 to 25 people at
the facility. The company will profit from the operation by charging commercial
interests a “tip fee” on a per-ton basis. The company will also sell the
compost, fertilizer and mulch it creates from organic waste. Residents will not
be charged to drop off organic material and can purchase the products at
competitive prices, Smith said.
If you are thinking of composting food waste at Balls Ford
Road, you might want to bring your glass bottles and jars with you. If you
bring glass bottles and jars to the compost facility and place them in the
purple bins they will be recycled/reused. All colors of glass- clear, green and
brown of glass food and beverage bottles and jars are acceptable for
recycling/reuse and can be place in the purple bins.
Do not place glass dishes, drinking glasses, vases, shower
doors, windshields, window and door glasses, and mirrors in the purple
bins. Put those items in the trash.
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