Regarding the article, “Cedar Grove cited for four odor violations in June”: Cedar Grove’s state-of-the-art processing plant is so clean that there is no environmental impact. If this is the case, then why doesn’t the city of Seattle offer to co-locate the waste treatment in one of their watersheds? Chester Morse Lake watershed is very large and has more than one access point, no residential population nearby, easterly winds flow down out of the cascades miles before impacting any residential areas. It would be a win-win location, close to collection, close to 1-90, close to Highway 410 to ship the finished product to market.
It is appalling to me that Puget Sound Clean Air Agency ignores the problem, it will not be fixed.
Pacific Clean wants to start a processing plant in Kittitas County, I hope we are smarter than their smoke and mirror show.
Fred Marion
Cle Elum
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