HONORING
NATIONS: 1999 HONOREE
Cherokee Tribal Sanitation
Program
Tribal Utilities Department, Eastern Band of Cherokee
Contact:
Larry Blythe, Executive Director, Tribal Sanitation Program
Eastern Band of Cherokee
P.O. Box 547, Cherokee, NC 28719
Tel (828) 497-7004 Fax (828) 497-1830
E-mail: larrblyt@nc-cherokee.com
Web: http://www.cherokee-nc.com/index.htm
In 1990, the Eastern Band of Cherokee came to
a crossroads. For the previous 25 years, the Tribe
had provided a trash pickup and disposal service
for tribal members, which relied on a tribally
owned landfill. New federal guidelines were in
the pipeline, however, that would make the landfill
unviable. The Tribe already lacked appropriate
permits for current operations, and the site certainly
would be unable to meet the impending, more stringent
requirements. In other words, the Tribe was faced
with a serious question of where its trash would
go.
Seeking solutions, the Tribe’s governing
body asked the Executive Director of Tribal Utilities
to report on options. First, he observed that local
off-reservation disposal was unworkable, since
the five surrounding counties were also unprepared
to meet the new federal requirements. He further
advised that, if the Tribe planned on staying in
the landfill business, it should devote 50 acres
to develop a “sub-title D” landfill—an
undertaking that would cost $300,000-$400,000 per
acre, but would unquestionably meet the federal
government’s environmental protection standards.
Alternatively, he suggested that the Tribe could
cover and close its current landfill and construct
a waste transfer station, a facility that would
receive and sort solid waste on the reservation
and transport it off the reservation for appropriate
disposal or sale.*
Based on this report, the Tribe opted for the waste transfer station. The decision
has been an environmental and economic success.
Today, the reservation is remarkably trash-free, presenting a strong complement
to the two national parks on its borders (the Great Smokey Mountains National
Park and the Blue Ridge Parkway). In 1997, there were five small, open dumps
on the reservation. Only one, which is privately owned, remains. The Tribe
has supported this progress with a reservation-wide clean-up effort. It has
posted signs prohibiting littering and emphasizing good environmental stewardship,
launched roadside clean-up programs—in which tribal departments frequently
participate—and invested in educating the public about recycling. The
latter program has been particularly successful among the community’s
youth—the recycling supervisor who visits the schools is immensely popular
and in high demand.
On the economic side, while continuing to provide pick-up and disposal services
free-of-charge to tribal members, the Program has nonetheless increased revenue
in every year since its inception. Income is generated through the sale of
recyclables and compost and, significantly, by providing services to other
jurisdictions. In 1999, the Sanitation Program was under contract to receive,
sort, and transport solid waste from two nearby counties. The Program also
controls costs through sound management. For example, based on itsstrong track
record in a foregoing two-year deal, the Executive Director of Tribal Utilities
was able to negotiate a ten-year agreement with Waste Management, the firm
that provides off-reservation trash disposal for the Tribe.
Continued economic success is likely. The relative scarcity of disposal and
transfer alternatives in the region suggests that the surrounding counties
will increasingly rely on tribally provided waste management services. Importantly,
the Cherokee Sanitation Program is poised to effectively capitalize on its
market niche. The transfer station handles 100 tons of waste daily, but it
is equipped to handle 300 tons a day; engaging the additional staff and trucks
necessary to shift the operation to full capacity would take only 30 days.
The Tribe’s casino, which opened in 1997 and relies on the transfer station
to handle its food and solid waste, proves the ability of this business to
both adapt and expand. Similarly, the Program’s animal incineration business
demonstrates its capacity to develop new, appropriate disposal services as
needs arise.
A key ingredient in the Program’s success is the tribal government’s
policy—which it upholds—of separating business from politics. This
separation is achieved both structurally and through the commitment of government
officials. Specifically, directors and managers of the Eastern Band of Cherokee’s
governmental programs are required to report to the executive directors of
their departments, not to elected officials. Similarly, complaints against
programs are initially directed to non-Council bodies. For example, complaints
against the Sanitation Program are first reviewed by the Utilities Commission,
which then forwards recommendations to the Tribal Council. Rarely has the Council
rejected these recommendations. The effective separation from politics encourages
program directors and managers to take real responsibility for their programs
and to operate them in businesslike manner, results which ensure program sustainability
and improve interactions between tribal programs and non-tribal entities.
In rural and tribal communities, pressing economic development concerns often
take precedence over other community problems. But by viewing new federal regulations
as an opportunity, not a problem, the Eastern Band of Cherokee re-thought their
solid-waste disposal procedures and found a way to address both their environmental
and economic concerns. Through its business relationships with outside jurisdictions,
the Tribe’s waste transfer station also improved the standing of the
Tribal government and Indian community. The Cherokee Sanitation Program is
an exemplary story of creative problem solving and successful self-determination.
Transfer stations sort solid waste according to its appropriateness for recycling,
compost, or landfill. Materials for recycling and compost are sold to the public,
and remaining waste is transported to a certified “sub-title D” landfill.