Latest News

Weekly police blotter: Six motorists ticketed
Dark skies again: Board hears from Manor, Zella and Grucci
Dougherty and Shepherd square off at Town Hall
Budget passes: Kanarvogel and Graffagnino continue on board
Indie bookseller flourishing on Island
South Ferry crew quickly douses car fire
District gets ‘qualified’ financial report from auditors
Column: When the IRS tried to muscle me
Don’t forget to vote: Polls open until 9 p.m.
Grants could raise $400K for Historical Society

Sports

Eye on the Ball: Honoring our greatest Island athletes

May 20, 2013

Bucks seek housing: looking at alternatives and volunteers

May 16, 2013

Bucks seek housing: Meeting to field residents’ questions

May 13, 2013

Education

Budget passes: Kanarvogel and Graffagnino continue on board

May 21, 2013

Don’t forget to vote: Polls open until 9 p.m.

May 20, 2013

The Incredible Hulk? Spider Man? Mr. Becker, is that you?

May 16, 2013

Business

North Fork farmers say they're not the one with issues

May 19, 2013

Chamber gives Town Board date for holiday fireworks

May 16, 2013

Japanese eatery now open in Greenport

May 12, 2013

Community

Bucks seek housing: looking at alternatives and volunteers

May 16, 2013

Paper gobbler set to roll into town Saturday

May 15, 2013

Board of Ed presents its budget numbers

May 13, 2013

Obituaries

Obituary: Reporter staffer David Lee Draper

May 20, 2013

Obituaries: Elmer August Kestler Jr., Lawrence William Sliker

May 9, 2013

Obituaries: Draper, Rodgers

March 7, 2013

Real Estate

Good grief: ‘Grievance Day’ looms at Assessor’s office

May 14, 2013

High end real estate deals escalate

May 1, 2013

Shed plan rejected: ZBA says ‘detriment’ to neighborhood

April 26, 2013

Opinion

Column: When the IRS tried to muscle me

May 21, 2013

Eye on the Ball: Honoring our greatest Island athletes

May 20, 2013

Inside Out: Lockdown? Not for me on Patriot’s Day

May 17, 2013

Local carter warned by two towns

JULIE LANE PHOTO | This is an appropriate place for construction waste on Shelter Island, but for any carter dumping recyclables in with solid wastes, it’s going to result in contamination fees, according to Public Works Commissioner Jay Card Jr.

A local carter has been told by Shelter Island and Southold that the next time he dumps illegally at their facilities it’s going to cost him. If it continues past that, his company will be banned.

Jon DiVello, owner of Shelter Island Environmental Services (SIES), said he’s done nothing wrong. “We have never been issued a violation concerning anything,” Mr. DiVello said.

Both Shelter Island Public Works Commissioner Jay Card Jr. and Southold’s solid waste coordinator Jim Bunchuck have issued warnings in recent months to Mr. DiVello after they’ve found his truck operators dumping wet garbage mixed with recyclable materials.

One more instance of SIES trucks carrying mixed loads will result in monetary consequences, not warnings, said Mr. Card and Mr. Bunchuck.

On Shelter Island, SIES would be charged contamination fees — the same fees the town would have to pay if it dumped mixed loads and was caught by the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation. In Southold, SIES would be subject to fines resulting from police ticketing. And in both cases, such action could eventually result in SIES being banned from using the facilities.

Mr. Card said on Martin Luther King’s birthday, the Southold facility was closed and workers at the Shelter Island Recycling Center observed bags of wet garbage hitting the plates and heard sounds of glass breaking.

More recently, Mr. Bunchuck said he observed a SIES truck dumping loads of yellow bags with household garbage and he tore open several to reveal that they were mixed with both solid wastes such as construction debris and recyclables.

Mr. Bunchuck said the ratio of solid waste to recyclables for carters is generally around 70:30 and said numbers he has for Mr. DiVello are 99:1.

But Mr. DiVello said there’s no accurate way to gauge how many tons of refuse he’s dumping.

“I have been dumping all my garbage and recyclables under my father’s company account at Mattituck Sanitation for the winter months,” Mr.iVello said in a written response to questions asked by the Reporter. He said he has an agreement during winter months to do so since during those months he’s doing less than 100 tons per month and it would cost him more if he didn’t combine his loads with Mattituck Sanitation.

Southold does charge less for carters with loads of more than 100 tons per month.

“In return, we give them use of our fleet and vise versa,” Mr. DiVello said about his arrangement with Mattituck Sanitation. “It helps us and helps them. I would be happy to show you weight tickets from marketable commodities at any time.

On Shelter Island there are only two commercial carters. Mr. DiVello’s competitor here, Dan Binder of Dan’s Carting & Recycling, said he has never been warned, but has been told that what he dumps will be inspected. Mr. Binder said he welcomes that process.