Brookfield residents take great pride in their homes, including landscaping. That means they produce piles of leaves, sticks, flowers and all sorts of other yard waste needing disposal. A special task force met in 2003 and proposed several new restrictions on leaf burning. They are summarized in this article from the Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel of August 17, 2003. At the council meeting of December 2, 2003 the council accepted a slightly modified version of that task force recommendation, which placed new restrictions on leaf burning. Note that I supported a total ban on burning.
Residents petitioned for a binding referendum to overturn that change, leaving the old, less restrictive burning ordinance in place. On April 6, 2004, by a vote of 5,293 to 4,199 (55.7% to 44.3%) the old, less restrictive rules were put back into place. See this pre-election summary MJS article from
March 29, 2004.
I believe it is time to reopen this issue. There is much more public awareness of environmental problems, especially air pollution. Alternatives to burning such as mulching mowers and composting have been refined.
2007 saw a limited pilot program (I made that referral and championed the experiment) for Veolia Environmental to provide curbside lawn waste pickup. See: Board of Public Works (BPW) minutes of
June 12, 2007 and
July 10, 2007 And, of course, there's always the city recycling center on Brookfield Road, south of the Village. Click here for a
newly revised list of what materials can be left at the center. It's a lot more than grass clippings!
I believe there is more public support than ever for stopping leaf burning but only if the city provides some effective, easy to use alternative at a reasonable price. In the end, it will all come down to spending money for a new service.
At the April 15, 2008 council meeting, I made a referral to study (again!) yard waste disposal, including leaf burning. That means the city staff and the appropriate committee (BPW) will study the idea and decide what to do about it. The referral was:
To: Mayor Jeff Speaker
Date: April 10, 2008
Re: Yard Waste
This is a service request / legislative referral I will make at the April 15, 2008 Council meeting.
I request the City study revising the yard waste disposal policy.
- Implement yard waste (leaves, grass, flowers, sticks, etc.) pickup at all residences on a seasonal basis.
- Once the collection system is in place, a phased reduction of leaf burning eventually leading to a total ban.
- Implementing this may have a substantial financial and operational impact, so the review may fall outside the normal committee workload.
Here is a link to a PDF of the submitted referral: Referrals_20080415_YardWaste.pdf
The last point about "may fall outside the normal committee workload" hints at the possibility of handling this outside of the Board of Public Works committee meetings and instead holding public hearings or even using a special task force. In any event, the BPW will be the starting point.
So, what do you think?