A city law mandates that 3,000 tons of commercial garbage must be recycled each day by 1994.
He also said that more than half the city's commercial garbage was already being processed in Brooklyn at private waste transfer stations.
Some lawmakers said the study would be the first step toward bringing commercial garbage under city jurisdiction.
Last year, the incinerator took in about 200,000 tons of the city's commercial garbage.
But the biggest problem is uncovered commercial and residential garbage.
Apart from the legal fight, a movement is gathering steam to add the residential and commercial garbage together in an entirely different way.
In addition, the town would have to institute a mandatory recycling program for all of the town's residential and commercial garbage.
He also said the city's commercial garbage should be handled by the same marine transfer stations.
Well, Will was sure it was going to be another piece of commercial garbage.
To do this, the city is taking bids from private companies that operate transfer stations for commercial garbage.