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Nashville is locked in a contract dispute with Red River Waste Solutions, the private company the city hired for trash and recycling pickup. Things got so bad that the city stopped picking up recyclables altogether late last year.
Recycling collection has started up again, but Red River is still in bankruptcy and the city’s garbage is piling up. All this refuse raises questions. Where does our junk go? Are we running out of space to dump it?
Garbage collection on the one hand, and landfill space on the other, are just two elements of a larger issue: environmental justice. State senator Brenda Gillmore has said, “There’s a clear pattern of racial and socioeconomic disparities in the distribution of landfills. Minorities and low income communities are seen as the path of least resistance.”
Also in this episode, WPLN reporter Juliana Kim reflects on the one-year anniversary of the Atlanta spa shootings, and the ripple effect on Nashville’s Asian American community.
Guests:
Juliana Kim, WPLN reporter
Rainey Heflin, Glenview resident
Mac Nolen, director of Williamson County’s Solid Waste Management
Jaffee Judah, president of Recycle Reinvest
Melvin Black, former Metro council member from Bordeaux
By WPLN News - Nashville Public Radio4.7
5858 ratings
Nashville is locked in a contract dispute with Red River Waste Solutions, the private company the city hired for trash and recycling pickup. Things got so bad that the city stopped picking up recyclables altogether late last year.
Recycling collection has started up again, but Red River is still in bankruptcy and the city’s garbage is piling up. All this refuse raises questions. Where does our junk go? Are we running out of space to dump it?
Garbage collection on the one hand, and landfill space on the other, are just two elements of a larger issue: environmental justice. State senator Brenda Gillmore has said, “There’s a clear pattern of racial and socioeconomic disparities in the distribution of landfills. Minorities and low income communities are seen as the path of least resistance.”
Also in this episode, WPLN reporter Juliana Kim reflects on the one-year anniversary of the Atlanta spa shootings, and the ripple effect on Nashville’s Asian American community.
Guests:
Juliana Kim, WPLN reporter
Rainey Heflin, Glenview resident
Mac Nolen, director of Williamson County’s Solid Waste Management
Jaffee Judah, president of Recycle Reinvest
Melvin Black, former Metro council member from Bordeaux

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