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While
it isnt necessarily rocket science, selecting
containers for solid waste or recyclables requires close
attention to detail, an accurate assessment of who will
be using them, and a clear idea of what you want to
accomplish.
By
Penelope Grenoble OMalley
Introducing
New Containers
Replacing
Existing Containers
Cost-Effective
Service and Attention to Goals Are Key
Recycling
Containers for Manual Pickup
When it comes
to selecting containers for refuse and recycling, Joan
Hicken, recycling coordinator for the City of Glendale,
AZ, thinks basic parameters must be recognized"universal
truths" as she calls thembut effective decision-making
requires an accurate assessment of the individual system
in which the containers will be used.
Whether youre
replacing old containers or introducing something new,
the best advice is to make an in-depth assessment of
what is unique about the circumstances in which the
containers will be used. This requires being clear on
what you want to accomplish (customer participation,
percent of wastestream diversion), what the advantages
and liabilities of your current collection equipment
are (and should you stick with what you have, modify,
or invest in something new?), your customer base (old,
young, affluent, poor, educated?) and what changes you
anticipate in the future. Other variables to factor
in include weather and climate conditions (temperature,
precipitation, sunlight, pollutants, wind); geography
(street layout, utility placement, landscaping); staff
experience and expectations regarding handling, service,
and repair; and finally price and the resources you
have available for planning, purchasing, and implementation,
which includes customer education and outreach. While
the experiences of the municipalities sampled vary,
Hickens advice remains sound: Know the basics
and then adapt.
Introducing
New Containers
"A lot
of people get into this kind of a system based on financial
considerations," says Ed Marr, director of refuse
and recycling for the City of Buffalo, NY, which recently
implemented semiautomated collection to replace a manual
system where residents used their own containers. "We
looked at it from a more holistic approach. In Buffalo
the decision to go semiautomated was about litter control,
rodent control, and the ability to charge variable rates."
The city collects both refuse and recyclables for the
85,000 residential and commercial accounts it serves
and does its own transfer and hauling. Marketing of
recyclables is handled through a contract with BFI.
Situated
at the eastern end of Lake Erie, Buffalo is windy. Allowing
residents to use their own containers resulted in blowing
trash can lids, litter, and rodents. To get control
of the situation, the city first introduced a new billing
system. "In the past, our services were paid for
in the tax package, based on the assessed value of a
property," Marr explains. "This determined
how much of an individuals tax dollar was allocated
to refuse collection and disposal. To generate income
outside the tax base, we implemented a user fee based
on an average weight of refuse collected per type of
household. We did a sampling of single, double, and
triple residential units and then used an engineering
firm to provide us with industry standards for the different
types of commercial properties we service."
Although
the city considered going directly to automation, it
chose semiautomated collection, using tippers on rear-collection
vehicles, as a compromise with the citys layout-narrow
streets, onstreet parking, power lines, overhanging
trees and curbside piles of snow in winter. "Fully
automated would be difficult in parts of the city,"
says Marr, although he maintains that automated collection
hasnt been ruled out completely. "Our plan
is to implement semiautomated in the first phase and
look later at doing fully automated in some parts of
the city." Once collection was agreed on, Marr
presented options for wheeled carts to an advisory committee
of representatives from among elected city officials,
residents, and the MSW industry. Eventually the decision
came to go with 35-, 65-, and 95-gal. containers from
Schaefer Systems.
Marr suggests
that this kind of community input is critical when contemplating
a substantial change in service because it can help
pinpoint demographics and identify user-friendly considerations
that will influence how well a system is implemented,
as well as providing an extra measure of support for
staff recommendations if decision-making gets bogged
down in politics. Buffalos decision on container
size was based in part on committee input. "A large
part of our population is either elderly or poor,"
says Marr. "We wanted to give the elderly the opportunity
for a smaller container that they could move easily,
and we wanted to give people on a budget the opportunity
to reduce how much they throw away by recycling or composting."
With the decision came a pilot study. Six hundred containers
were distributed to residents in different parts of
the city. "We werent interested in how the
containers worked in Virginia or Michigan," notes
Marr. "We wanted to determine the pros and cons
of how they performed on the streets of Buffalo."
Once they knew the containers would work as expected,
the city purchased 95,000 of the 95-gal. carts and bought
the 65- and 35-gal. containers in clusters of 5,000,
which resulted in a better price break than if a gradual
expansion of the pilot program had been chosen.
Buffalo is
in its fifth year of semiautomated collection, and Marr
says things are working well, except that procedures
for administering customer service werent as well
laid out as they could have been. He is currently implementing
changes in how his staff tracks service requests and
sees that theyre addressed. Otherwise the key
to success is to do your homework. "You know best
what your needs are. You know the environment in which
the containers will be used. You know your work force
and your equipment." And one further point, "The
cheapest answer is not necessarily best."
Replacing
Existing Containers
Marrs
advise would not be wasted on Ed Sones, assistant director
of the Bureau of Sanitation for the City of Los Angeles,
CA. L.A. switched directly from manual to automated
collection for refuse in 1991, using 60-gal. carts,
and has had automated collection of commingled recyclables
in 90-gal. carts for five years. Yardwaste is collected
in 60-gal. carts. Peterbilt trucks make three passes
through neighborhoods so collection of all materials
occurs on the same day. (New trucks will use liquefied
natural gas because new air-quality restrictions prohibit
the purchase of diesel-powered trucks after July 1,
2001.) Solid waste goes to privately owned landfills,
recyclables to three different outside contractors at
six different locations, and the city operates two of
its own yard-trimming disposal sites.
The current
challenge is to replace 2.1 million containers purchased
from five different manufacturers over the years with
one uniform cart. "Twenty-five thousand of the
carts now in service are going out of warranty every
month," says Sones. He explains that using five
different suppliers (a result of the citys low-bid
policy) led to difficulties with service and the expense
of maintaining duplicate parts inventories. "We
have to keep five different sets of parts on hand; our
repair personnel have to know how to repair five different
types of containers. We have five different manufacturers
to negotiate with on warranty claims. Plus its
also tough to get an arm that will pick up all five
containers."
The plan
calls for replacing one-tenth of the carts currently
in service every year for 10 years. Sones explains that
the city is using a request for proposal (RFP) rather
than a bid process because of the range of factors it
wants to consider. "We want to see what each manufacturers
historic failure rate is. Although we have experience
with the five manufacturers whose carts we are now using,
we want to know where else their containers have been
put in service, how long theyve been in use and
what the manufacturers warranty claims are. [The
review process allows for extra points for a longer
warranty as long as the manufacturer can substantiate
that its containers will last as they say they will.]
The containers will have to be compatible with the arm
our trucks now use, and if not, we are requiring the
manufacturer to replace the arms on all our equipment.
We require a minimum of 20% but no more than 30% recycled
content. The specs are broad enough that both rotational
and injected-molding manufacturers can respond, but
the contractor must own its own manufacturing facility.
No contract molders." The manufacturer must also
guarantee that its container will hold up to L.A.s
heat, sunlight, and smog.
To verify
manufacturers claims, the city will do its own
testing at an independent laboratory, which Sones hopes
will provide the staff with a more solid background
for its recommendations, especially if decision-making
gets bogged down in politics (L.A. receives a new mayor
and city council during the period when cart replacement
takes place). A draft of the RFP went to the industry
for comment, and a number of changes and modifications
were made to open it to as many manufacturers as possible.
It was the
hard realities of municipal finances that led decision-makers
in Washington, DC, to replace 80,000 outdated containers
with carts from a single manufacturer. Tom Henderson,
administrator of the districts Solid Waste Management
Administration, explains: "We were able to get
funds to replace the carts, but we have difficulty getting
year-in, year-out operating money." Some of the
96-gal. carts had been in service for 19 years (collection
is semiautomated using rearloaders, mostly in alleys),
but Henderson lost his repair staff. The solution called
for the supplier (Toter won the bid) to be responsible
for in-field, on-call service. Repairs not covered by
warranty will be billed to the city, which currently
plans to absorb the cost rather than pass it on to its
customers. "To make the system work," says
Henderson, "we had to have uniform carts."
The vendor will deliver the new carts and has already
found a market for the old ones, which will be used
to manufacture new sewer pipe.
Once this
system is up and operating effectively, Henderson says
the city might look at taking back some of its collection
of recyclables which at present is under contract to
Waste Management. "Right now it looks like wed
also do the recycling collection with a cart, the advantage
being that we would be able to use the same collection
equipment we use for refuse."
Cost-Effective
Service and Attention to Goals Are Key
The City
of San Jose, CA200,000 single-family and 85,000
multifamily households situated in what was once an
agricultural communitycontracts out its automated
pay-as-you-throw garbage pickup and is about to do the
same with commingled recyclables. Previously, single
families used a four-sort system and multifamily residences
used a two-sort system that separated mixed containers
from paper. San Jose awards it contracts using a competitive
bid system, which the city maintains has helped build
a cost-efficient variable-rate system that has tripled
curbside recycling, and all decisions about collection
equipment, including containers, are made by its two,
soon to be three, contract haulers. "What we care
about," remarks Ellen Ryan, manager of the citys
environmental services department, "is that the
carts are maintained and serviced and that every household
has the cart they want. What we specify is basically
size and volumetrics."
Ryan says
the two years San Jose spent developing the RFP covering
the contracts it will award in 2002 exemplifies the
type of assessment all municipalities should undertake.
"You have to think about what you want your contractors
to do as if the city itself were doing the job: What
kind of service do you want to offer? How would hold
yourself accountable? What would your performance measures
be?"
San Jose
has never maintained a civic refuse collection and disposal
service but relied instead on a succession of small
haulers until BFI bought out the existing contract in
the 1970s. Ten years later, the city decided it wasnt
satisfied with an exclusive contract and introduced
the competitive bid situation. "We were growing,"
recalls Ryan. "We were running out of landfill
capacity, and expenses were rising." Collection
and disposal were separated, and the city was divided
into three service districts, with responsibility for
containers handed over to the haulers who own the carts
for the duration of their contract. If a contract isnt
renewed, the carts are returned to the city. "We
didnt want to face the circumstances where at
the end of the contract, the hauler pulled all the carts,"
says Ryan. The detailed RFP is specific on reporting
requirements and performance standards for contractors,
including cart exchanges and replacements, administrative
charges that kick in if the citys specifications
arent met or the called-for response time isnt
honored. (For details, check out rfp.recycleplus.org.)
The city handles billing and takes customer service
calls, which it forwards to the haulers.
The new contracts
will give residents the choice of 32-, 64-, or 96-gal.
recycling carts, 96 gal. being the default size because
most residents currently use 32 gal. for garbage service
(in the new contracts, haulers will be required to provide
a 20-gal. container at a reduced rate). Residents will
also have the option of containerized yardwaste pickup,
which is now loose in the street. While the contracts
specify that refuse and recyclables must be collected
on the same day, the choice of collection vehicle is
the haulers, and split collection vehicles are
on the docket for the new contract period.
One specification
the city insists on is that containers must contain
20% postconsumer material. "I think at one time
there was some concern with the integrity of a container
made with recycled materials," notes Ryan. "But
weve found that that is not an issue. And you
have to practice what you preach in as many ways as
you can."
Recycling
Containers for Manual Pickup
While such
cities as Glendale and L.A. might consider containerized
recycling a logical extension of automated or semiautomatic
refuse collection, many communities, either by default
or design, meet state or local diversion requirements
or their own recycling goals with manual pickup of small-volume
recycling containers. Bloomsburg, PA, is a small college
community of a little more than 12,000 that practices
what it preaches to the point that, until recently,
residents used standard grocery bags as their recycling
containers. "That way everything we pick up we
recycle," says Carol Has, the citys environmental
services administrator. And contrary to current trends
toward minimizing the number of source separations residents
are required to undertake, Bloomsburg requires seven
sorts for its twice-monthly pickup: separation of clear,
brown, and green glass, as well as steel and aluminum
cans; separate bundling of newspaper; and separation
of numbers one and two plastics from the glass and cans.
The city recently purchased an International Harvester
side dump for pickup with a hopper separated in three
sections to accommodate the three kinds of glass. (Mas
admits it might be difficult to find someone to bid
on this kind of equipment when it comes time to replace
the truck in five years.) A full-time staff of four
handles the pickup and sorting.
"You
have to work with what you have," states Mas. And
what Bloomsburg has is a small population committed
to recycling. Downtown public waste receptacles are
situated in clusters of threeone each for waste,
bottles, and aluminum cansreplacing the 55-gal.
drums into which all waste used to be tossed. The city
bought 52 of these three-container sets from Kettle
Creeks Windsor Barrel Works 10 years ago. The
company made the sole bid on the contract, which specified
a high percent of recycled material. The first attempt
was to use reusable bags for recyclables, but the city
has since opted for rigid containers as more practical
and aesthetic.
This year
the city took another leap forward and used grant money
to pilot test three different plastic containers for
residential recycling in place of the brown grocery
bags. Thirty-gal. trash cans (no top) went to student
areas of the city where Mass crews collect a large
amount of glass. Rectangular curbside crates and stackable
bins, both from Spectrum, were distributed in other
areas, and households were asked to rate their choices.
Extra crates and bins were made available on a first-come,
first-served basis, and Mas says she ran out but wont
be able to apply for more until after this summer. Residents
were equally divided between their preference for topless
crates and bins, but Mas notes that the staff preferred
the crates because they were easier to dump.
Residents
in Dayton, OH, were not given a choice when the city
decided to purchase 48,000 20-gal. plastic crates from
A-1 Plastics in 1998 and another 11,000 a year later
to standardize the pickup of commingled recyclablespaper,
bottles, and canswith newspaper bundled separately.
According to Gary Lucas, senior buyer in the citys
division of purchasing, the decision to go with crates
included weight and fiscal considerations. Left to their
own devices, residents took to using 30-gal. trash cans
for recycling and holding them for pickup until they
were full, which often made it difficult for city workers
to lift them into rearloading collection vehicles. (In
older sections of town laid out with narrow, one-way
allies, refuse collection occurs with rearloaders, but
in areas where there is enough curb space and no obstacles,
sideloaders are put to use, and Lucas says carts for
recyclables are a possibility in these areas). Other
criteria included that the crates be user-friendly (an
important consideration for a city just introducing
recycling and trying to increase participation), that
they stand up to Daytons weather extremes (100°F
in the summer to below-freezing in winter), and that
they have drainage to prevent the accumulation of liquids
and rainwater. "The main thing we considered is
quality and user friendliness for people using this
system for the first time," Lucas points out, "keeping
in mind that what we chose would be handled by young,
healthy people as well as the elderly." He notes
that when the city went to automated trash collection,
it received complaints from older residents about the
size of the carts and was forced to make a smaller 60-gal.
container available. (In suburban Glendale, AZ, where
Rehrig Pacific containers are used in the recently implemented
automated recycling system, the fact that kids often
put out the garbage influenced the city to go with a
smaller container.)
So far, Philadelphias
attempt to bring its 525,000 households into the recycling
program it began almost 20 years ago has been a battle
that started with 6.5-gal. buckets collected weekly.
The buckets, which featured holes for drainage and to
discourage other uses, worked well enough in a pilot
program that included weekly pickup but turned out to
be too small for the biweekly collection that was the
norm in most of the city. They have since been replaced
with a 19-gal. rectangular crate (no top). The current
challenge, says Steve Tilne, the citys recycling
program administrator, is to make collection more efficient.
"I want 100% participation in our recycling program,
but that doesnt mean everybody has to put their
containers out in the street for every pickup. In fact,
its not a good use of our personnel or equipment
for crews to stop to dump a container that only has
a couple of cans in it." Tilne hopes that a new
education program will help inform residents how to
use the containers more efficiently but worries that
any education effort will be hampered by the fact that
18-25% of his target population moves in any given year.
"Look at your population, evaluate the material
being generated against your collection schedule,"
Tilne emphasizes. "Go for what you want100%
participationbut dont necessarily think
that it must be every week."
In neighboring
New Jersey, 16 communities in Middlesex County resolved
a number of problems associated with purchasing recycling
containers for 95,000 customers by piggybacking onto
the states contract with one container supplier.
The communities use two containers: a 20-gal. lidless
round container for plastic, glass, and cans available
on the state contract from T.M. Fitzgerald Associates
and a rectangular 14-gal. bin with lid for mixed paper.
Residents can order additional of either type but have
to pay extra, or they can choose their own container
as long as it doesnt exceed 32 gal. Ed Windas,
recycling manager for the Middlesex County Improvement
Authority, says the program is five years old and there
was no recycling previously in place. The county bought
the containers and required Fitzgerald to distribute
them to residents (16 of the 25 eligible cities signed
on). What would Windas tell someone whos looking
to introduce containers for the first time? "Look
at the material, the mill thickness of the plastic;
make sure the container has handles and holes in the
bottom and that its rigid, especially if its
going to be used for mixed paper collection like ours,
which includes hardcover books and telephone books.
Be clear about the warranty and be sure that whatever
you chose can be used by people with a range of physical
abilities." What would he do differently? "Id
look into a much smaller container for the elderly who
live in places like assisted-care facilities, who might
put out one can and a bottle a week."
The idea
of county or regional purchasing is one that recycling
coordinator Hicken endorses. It takes the onus out of
decision-making for small communities that might not
have the resources to thoroughly research their options,
and buying in quantity is a good way to get a better
price. Another piece of advice Hicken espouses is to
look down the road as far as you can, to anticipate
when escalating personnel costs or other factors might
force you to automate (the folks at Otto contend, for
example, that use of recycling carts is likely to become
more widespread because theyre more user-friendly
and participation rates go up). She advises to look
for new trends that will likely emerge in the industry,
as well as new equipment. She says to watch for the
days when laws may mandate action that today is discretionary
and to design a system that can accommodate itself to
change and transition.
Penelope
Grenoble OMalley is a frequent contributor to
environmental publications.
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