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In 1972, the Cape May County Municipal Utilities
Authority (“CMCMUA” or “Authority”) was created by the Cape May County Board of
Chosen Freeholders. The Authority,
and its appointed board of commissioners, was entrusted with the task of
designing, constructing and operating, efficient and cost-effective wastewater
treatment facilities to respond to the passage of the Federal Water Pollution
Control Act Amendment of 1972. This
Amendment mandated the abatement of pollution of the nation’s water resources.
These new regional treatment facilities would replace numerous outdated
municipal treatment plants.
The prompt response of both the Cape
May County Board of Chosen Freeholders and the Authority to this federal mandate
resulted in the CMCMUA being able to secure more than $183 million in State and
federal grants to pay for approximately 55 percent of the capital costs for the
regional wastewater treatment projects constructed by the Authority.
The construction phase for the four (4) regional systems, which include
Ocean City, Cape May, Seven Mile Beach-Middle and Wildwood Lower, began in 1979
with the first facility completed in 1982 and the fourth plant finished in 1988.
The CMCMUA’s regional wastewater system also includes a sewage sludge
composting facility that began operating in 1985.
The Cape May County Board of Chosen
Freeholders formally expanded the Authority’s pollution abatement mission in
1980 when the Authority was designated as the implementing agency for the Cape
May County Solid Waste Management Plan.
This Plan was developed in response to the 1976 enactment by the New
Jersey Legislature of an Amendment to the New Jersey Solid Waste Management Act.
The Authority developed and implemented
a comprehensive solid waste management system which includes the siting,
construction and operation of a Secure, Sanitary Landfill located on the
Woodbine / Upper Township border; a Transfer Station located in the Burleigh
section of Middle Township; and an aggressive source separation, recycling,
reuse and waste reduction program that provides for the recycling of forty-one (41)
mandated materials, reclaims energy through its landfill gas recovery system and
prevents toxic materials from entering the waste stream by collecting them
through a household hazardous waste program.
The Authority’s seven commissioners,
who are appointed by the Freeholder Board, and the CMCMUA’s professional staff
continue to be committed to protecting the environment for all of Cape May
County’s inhabitants.
Cape May County Government
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Cape May County Municipal
Utilities Authority
Post Office Box 610 |
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