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The
City of San Jose enters the mix with new split-body
collection trucks.
By
Ellen D. Ryan
A quarter
century ago, many cities began addressing the growing
problem of too much garbage and too little space in
which to dump it indefinitely. As a result, the mantra
that "less is more" has emerged in municipal
environmental programs throughout the country and made
its way to the City of San Jose, the third largest city
in California and on the West Coast.
Since 1985,
San Jose has used competitive bidding to drive down
the costs of garbage and recycling collection, as well
as the cost of landfill disposal, while expanding the
categories of materials its residents could recycle.
This has enabled it to become the first California city
with a population of more than 500,000 people to exceed
the state-mandated landfill diversion requirement of
50% by 2000.
Starting
this summer, the City of San Jose will switch from source
separation to commingled recycling for its 195,000 single-family
and 85,000 multifamily dwellings. "Clean 'n Green
San Jose: Services with Curb Appeal" is an enhancement
of the city's successful "Recycle Plus" program
that almost tripled recycling volumes when it was introduced
in 1993. Under the new program, residents will place
all recyclable materials into a single cart rather than
separating them into four different containers.
A key component
of the new program is the introduction of new split-body
collection trucks to be used by the city's two haulers
for garbage and recyclingNorcal Waste Systems
and GreenTeam - for single-family-home routes. Powered
by cleaner-burning fuel, the split-body trucks will
pick up wheeled recycling carts (96, 64, or 32 gal.,
depending on customer preference) during the same trip
in which they pick up the garbage carts.
Commingled
recycling, a nationally emerging trend, has some clear
advantages over traditional collection methods for the
front-end user. It eliminates the need for sorting of
recyclables and guesswork in the home and encourages
greater participation, especially at multifamily dwellings.
From a customer-service point of view, it's both
a practical and an aesthetic improvement.
San Jose's
curbside services will begin July 1, 2002, coinciding
with the implementation of new multiyear collection
and processing service contracts. The city's request
for proposals, issued two years ago, contained detailed
information about program objectives, service districts,
and cost strategies, but provided significant latitude
in determining modes of collection. Both Norcal and
GreenTeam, selected from a pool of seven bidders and
with well-deserved reputations for customer-service
satisfaction, proposed the use of split-body trucks.
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Norcal chose
the 33-yd.3 Rapid Rail automated sideloader,
custom produced by Heil Environmental Industries, for
its needs. Wayne Grundmeier, district sales manager
for Heil, explains that the vehicle's two compartments
use a hydraulic sweeping panel capable of compacting
commodities to about 25% of their original volume, significantly
reducing the number of trips to material recovery facilities
(MRFs) and landfills, while ensuring that the recyclables
aren't compromised. The cycle time is fast enough for
drivers to service the same number of homes even though
the vehicle is handling two distinct commodities. The
trucks can operate on conventional or alternative fuel
(liquefied natural gas, compressed natural gas, or any
of the new diesel mixes), with mileage largely depending
on engine displacement and gross vehicle weight.
Norcal's
trucks will use PuriNOx, a diesel blend that reduces
nitrogen-oxide emissions by 14% and particulate matter
by nearly 63%, according to John Nicoletti, the company's
general manager. The fuel also is readily available
and powered by cleaner alternative fuels, which were
factors in its selection.
GreenTeam
researched several vehicles and decided to go with the
Automiser Cool Hand, manufactured by Labrie Equipment
Ltd. of Canada, which "fit perfectly" with
the waste hauler's co-collection strategy, according
to Weslie Brandon, community outreach supervisor. GreenTeam
currently services 87,000 single-family homes with 28
recycling trucks and 23 garbage trucks. The Labrie fleet
can do the same job with 38 of the dual-purpose trucks.
The new vehicles
run on B100-grade biodiesel, a cleaner-burning, fully
renewable fuel made from soy and other grains, cooking
oil, and sewer grease. Biodiesel is more expensive than
conventional fuels, Brandon acknowledges, but GreenTeam's
contract with the city includes financial incentives
to use alternative fuels. The new trucks run much quieter
because the engine doesn't rev when the collection
arm is picking up the carts. According to Gil DeLaCerda,
a driver for GreenTeam, a resident he spoke with remarked,
"It's so quiet, how will I know when to wake
up now?"
Both Norcal
and GreenTeam say that driver training is not a significant
concern since the split-body trucks operate largely
in the same fashion as conventional automated collection
trucks. The key difference is the packer paddle, or
flipper gate, which sits inside the hopper and rotates
180º to seal off the compartment not in use, ensuring
that recyclables and garbage are not mixed. "We
installed a color-coded lighting system in the cab of
the vehicle, which informs the driver which compartment
is currently 'open' to be dumped into, and
there is a monitoring camera in the hopper, which shows
the operator the position of the paddle," Nicoletti
explains.
Still, even
if the vehicles and drivers operate precisely as they
should, some residents might mistakenly believe that
recyclables and garbage are going into the same compartment
because the packer blade is out of view. That's
where customer relations plays a key role, Nicoletti
stresses. Because drivers will handle both collection
functions and remain on the same routes, they will be
expected to address concerns whenever they are raised.
The public
has had a chance to see GreenTeam's new trucks
in action on test routes in select San Jose neighborhoods,
and Brandon reports that the reaction has been favorable.
Those who wonder how the driver manages to keep the
garbage and recyclables separate are shown the diverter
joystick in the cab and taken to the rear of the vehicle,
where the split compartments are readily evident.
At community
meetings, attended by both city officials and representatives
of the waste haulers, a few concerns have been raised
about whether commingled recycling will require more
sorting - and therefore more labor and higher costs.
A brief explanation of MRF technology and the fact that
increased recycling volume will generate more revenue
have eased concerns.
Starting
in November 2001, the city embarked on an extensive
trilingual campaign to ensure that residents know all
about the "Clean 'n Green San Jose" program
and its goals. Numerous community meetings were scheduled
to help single-family residents make informed decisions
about selecting the right-size recycling cart for their
households and to reassure residents that the program's
enhancements (which include more frequent street sweeping
and the option of using a green yard-trimmings cart
in lieu of loose-in-the-street pickup) are environmentally
sound. In addition, the city included information about
the program along with the bimonthly garbage bills,
developed a Web site (www.sjrecycles.org)
that provides updated information, produced an infomercial
for cable television, and advertised in local media.
The initial response has been markedly positive.
The City
of San Jose's outreach, combined with the waste
haulers' efforts, should minimize angst about the
new collection process. But nothing succeeds like success,
and the city is confident that "Clean 'n Green
San Jose: Services with Curb Appeal" will be a
winner for everyone.
Ellen
D. Ryan is deputy director with the City of San Jose
Environmental Services Department.
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