Commissioner (S6) told the Washington County Board of Commissioners that Metro's budget proposal would eliminate local funding for the food-scraps program and said the county is preparing a sign-on letter for the Metro Council meeting on Thursday.
"I'm gonna pass around a letter that we will be signing on to," S6 said, describing the outreach as time‑sensitive and coordinated with other jurisdictions. S6 said the county needs to "put our stake in the ground" to preserve the program.
Other commissioners questioned the rationale. One commissioner (S2) drew attention to disposal-cost trends, saying disposal fees have risen "92% since 2020," and argued cutting outreach programs could reduce the material stream that supports composting and recycling markets.
Board members asked staff for more detail on Metro's underlying budget problems and on the interdependencies between Metro's funding decisions and local programs. S6 said the issue is in process and staff have been working with regional partners, Rusty and Mayer, to finalize the letter.
The report did not include a Metro response or an explicit timeline for implementation beyond S6's note that the Metro Council will consider the matter on Thursday. S6 said the county will provide the final letter to commissioners when it is available.
The board did not vote on any motion during the update. Commissioners asked for follow-up information to better understand the budget context and potential impacts on local services and recycling operations.