Zecca announces retirement after 30 years’ service

By Sharon A. Driscoll

James A. Zecca, director of the Madison County Department of Solid Waste and Recycling is retiring after 30 years.

Zecca has taken a small site and transformed it into an energy-efficient facility. Madison County’s landfill is a paradigm for solid waste experts and those seeking to emulate the green initiatives in practice there. He lives and breathes recycling. Since starting the first recycling program at SUNY Cobleskill in the 1970s against some tough opposition, he has never backed down from a challenge.

“Throughout my tenure at the Madison County Department of Solid Waste, I was fortunate to have a great group of people working shoulder to shoulder with me to turn a small rather insignificant landfill into a showplace for renewable energy,” Zecca said, reflecting on his years of service to Madison County and the numerous programs and services he and his team have provided for the residents of this rural community.

“Working together we – Russ Hammond and his crew, Recycling Coordinator Sharon A. Driscoll, the office staff of Lynne Shephard, Cindi Shoener, Sarah Gaudin, and all those who came before in our office, the current and former staff at Barton and Loguidice engineering, Attorney Bill Buchan and his wife Sharon, ARC Manager Mike Bowe and former manager Ken Stone and all the others that are too numerous to mention – accomplished great things here in Madison County.”

Zecca became head of the department in 1988. His efforts to pursue solar energy and gas-to-energy have put this tiny landfill on the international map. Scientists, members of the media and those involved in the solid waste industry from Australia, Ecuador, Russia and Sweden, along with visitors from across the United States, have toured the Buyea Road landfill site seeking information on renewable energy from Zecca.

On the forefront of innovative “green” technology and propelling the Madison County landfill into the 21st century, Zecca’s leadership and vision have put the Madison County at the top of the leaderboard in New York state, across the country and throughout the world.

He was the Recycling Center supervisor in Wilton and then the town of Milford Recycling and Bio-solids Composting Coordinator in New Hampshire in the late 1980s.

In the late ’80s, as mayor of Oriskany Falls, he initiated the first mandatory curbside recycling program in Oneida County, utilizing an abandoned dairy building as the recycling center.

In 2011, Madison County, was the first municipality in the nation to close its landfill with energy-generating solar technology. The landfill features Carlisle’s Spectro Power Cap Solar Cover system that provides superior environmental protection as a landfill closure system while also generating clean, renewable energy for the ARC Recycling Center.

Zecca was presented with the 2014 New York State Association for Reduction, Reuse and Recycling Leadership Award for Lifetime Achievement during the 25th anniversary conference of NYSAR3 in Cooperstown; his latest efforts have been centered on establishing a plastics and tires-to- energy facility at the newly created Agriculture and Renewable Energy [business/industrial] Park on Buyea Road next to the landfill site.

His wish was to establish a collection site for tires along with agricultural and rigid plastics that would be turned into synthetic gas or diesel fuel. One such facility would provide much needed jobs for the area and save the county thousands of dollars in energy costs.

Zecca has also been a long-time board member of the state Solid Waste Management Association and a founding member of the New York State Association of Recycling.

Editor’s note: Sharon A. Driscoll is media consultant for the Department of Solid Waste

By martha

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