Smell of Money Fades as Pennsylvania Town Sees End of Trash Cash

A landfill operated by Waste Management Inc. stands in the background while a FedEx Corp. truck makes a delivery in Tullytown, Pennsylvania, U.S., on Wednesday, Feb. 4, 2015. Dumping fees from two of the busiest landfills in the eastern U.S. may end soon, leaving Tullytown to decide how a town where the average homeowner pays $380 in annual property taxes will sustain itself minus the revenue from 650 garbage trucks arriving daily from Pennsylvania, New Jersey, New York City and beyond. Photographer: William Thomas Cain/Bloomberg via Getty Images
A landfill operated by Waste Management Inc. stands in the background while a FedEx Corp. truck makes a delivery in Tullytown, Pennsylvania, U.S., on Wednesday, Feb. 4, 2015. Dumping fees from two of the busiest landfills in the eastern U.S. may end soon, leaving Tullytown to decide how a town where the average homeowner pays $380 in annual property taxes will sustain itself minus the revenue from 650 garbage trucks arriving daily from Pennsylvania, New Jersey, New York City and beyond. Photographer: William Thomas Cain/Bloomberg via Getty Images
Smell of Money Fades as Pennsylvania Town Sees End of Trash Cash
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Date created:
04 February, 2015
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PA TRASH BONUS
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