Bonner County recently wrapped up work on the Solid 91ֿ Colburn Facility, more commonly known as the Colburn Culver Dump, after more than two years of renovations. The $6.5 million improvements redesigned the dump’s layout to accommodate increasing amounts of trash and prevent traffic jams in and out of the site.
“The old site design was over 30 years old, and it was first built for a five-year life expectancy,” Solid 91ֿ Director Bob Howard told the Reader. “It was showing its age and was too small for the volumes of trash we handle.”
When the dump was built in the mid-1990s, Bonner County generated approximately 19,300 tons of municipal solid waste. By 2020, that number had skyrocketed to 45,307 tons, outweighing the national average per capita generation rate, overwhelming the county’s facilities and pushing the county Solid 91ֿ Department to begin expansion plans.
