SAN MARTIN
– Members of San Martin’s land-use board want San Martin’s waste
transfer station to move to the industrially zoned southern end of
Gilroy, rather than expand the facility that has been on Llagas
Avenue for the past 20 years.
SAN MARTIN – Members of San Martin’s land-use board want San Martin’s waste transfer station to move to the industrially zoned southern end of Gilroy, rather than expand the facility that has been on Llagas Avenue for the past 20 years.

South Valley Disposal and Recycling center wanted to quadruple the size of its San Martin facility to meet increases in waste disposal. Those plans are still on the books, but the company has confirmed it is trying to work out an option that would bring the facility to Gilroy in the next few years.

The waste transfer station needs to process waste and recyclables in San Martin as the Gilroy site gets developed.

The company’s plan, if the lease deal in Gilroy goes through, would be to temporarily increase the 100-ton limit imposed on the San Martin site. After the Gilroy site was operational, trucking loads of waste and recyclables to San Martin would cease.

Vaughn hopes San Martin residents and county officials will see the plan as a compromise. However, San Martin Planning Advisory Committee member Bob Cerruti says he doesn’t want any increase in the amount of traffic that would cross over two Llagas spanning bridges and in front of San Martin-Gwinn Elementary School.

“These roads were designed many years ago,” Cerruti said. “The road is 15.4 feet wide (7.7 feet wide divided in half for two lanes) and the trucks are 8.6 feet wide.”

Vaughn says his company will be addressing the road and traffic issues but declined to elaborate on any specifics.

The transfer station is a 20-year-old facility that serves as the collection, processing, and transfer point for solid waste and recyclable materials from Gilroy, Morgan Hill, San Martin and other parts in South County and San Benito County.

The proposed expansion of the San Martin site includes:

• Adding 7,600 square feet to the eastern side of the existing transfer station building, increasing the total area to 23,600 square feet.

• Demolishing the recycling building and constructing a new building with a total area of 13,300 square feet.

• Constructing an approximately 11,800-square-foot organics transfer building.

• Developing an approximately 58,000-square-foot area along the southern side of the transfer station for handling materials such as concrete, scrap metal and rock.

An environmental review of the Llagas Avenue project has been prepared by Santa Clara County, triggering a 45-day public review period which ends March 1.

A copy of the environmental impact report is viewable online at www.sccplanning.org/planning. Use the link called San Martin Transfer Station Draft EIR.

Comments can be sent to the Santa Clara County Planning Office at:

County Government Center, East Wing, 7th Floor, 70 West Hedding Street

San Jose, CA 95110. Or e-mail planner Zachary Goldberg at za**************@********ov.org

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A staff member wrote, edited or posted this article, which may include information provided by one or more third parties.

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