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How
one award-winning Recycling and Solid Waste Department
and a band of municipal bureaus work together to maximize
both Phase 1 NPDES BMPs and all-around service quality.
By
Siobhan Bennett
"In
an adversarial relationship, think of all the energy
expended that has nothing to do with positive outcomes,"
muses Joe McMahon III, manager of water resources for
the City of Allentown, PA. "Cooperative relationships
require lots of upfront work but deliver results [that
are] more than worth the investment of energy and time.
In my experience, much higher rates of return are experienced
in cooperative, proactive relationships versus their
adversarial, reactive counterparts. We've got really
outstanding levels of cooperation between bureaus that
has had a powerful, positive effect on our NPDES [National
Pollutant Discharge Elimination System] Phase I Plan."
And this cooperation is not limited to the joint execution
of the municipality's NPDES Phase I Plan but includes
delivery of basic municipal services from solid waste
to recycling to water treatment and filtration. "Trust
me, as a whole we gain with this proactive, synergetic
approach to what our bureaus do."
Superintendent of Streets Denny Wehr, McMahon's counterpart,
couldn't agree more. "This cooperation didn't happen
in a day. We have our differences‹but this working together
has improved everyone's game, increased everyone's overall
professionalism. For example, all the other departments
help us with snow removal now‹Parks, Recycling and Solid
Waste, Building Maintenance, and Water Resources." The
city even put plows on its garbage trucks, which earned
Allentown's Recycling and Solid Waste Department a recent
Waste Age award for truck design in 2003. "As
a result, everyone's knowledge of our city's streets
increases and we've been able to expand the quality
of our snow-removal services even with a head count
that has been drastically reduced over the years."
"I came in here 15 years ago," shares Betsy Levin, the
city's manager of recycling and solid waste. Under her
leadership, there is hardly a national award her department
hasn't won. "And when I arrived I fully expected what
I would call 'turf-protecting behavior.' What I experienced
and what continues to be the reality is completely different.
The inherent cooperation we all operate from is outstanding
and makes all our jobs easier."
This interdepartmental synergy has enhanced outcomes
from NPDES Phase I best management practices (BMPs)
even in the face of tight budgets and head count reductions.
And it is only one example of the highly collaborative
approaches a band of bureau managers has managed to
create within the densely populated city of 106,000
just north of Philadelphia. Let's first take a look
at how they've been collaborating on those Phase I BMPs.
Phase
I Synergetic Interdepartmental BMPs
The city's stormwater management plan was created by
Dan Koplish, McMahon's predecessor. "We were the first
city in Pennsylvania to have our NPDES Phase I plan
accepted," McMahon says. "As a municipality with a population
over 100,000, our requirements are identical to Philadelphia
and Pittsburgh, even though they are exponentially bigger
communities than we are. Additionally, we were the first
city in Pennsylvania to have inter-municipal agreements
with other communities, logically with the contiguous
suburbs that we serve. Typically older cities like ours
[Allentown was incorporated in 1762] are situated in
lower-lying geographies with suburbs growing up around
them over time. Those suburbs need to adopt sewer management
practices similar to the city they surround where any
stormwater flow that contributes to that city's system
has to be managed. In our case, Salisbury, South Whitehall,
Whitehall, and Hanover Townships are in formal intermunicipal
agreements with our city."
McMahon's
department, Water Resources, recycles most of its solid
waste separately from the Recycling and Solids Waste
bureau, about 12,000 tons per year, and in 1988 won
a national EPA award for biosolids recycling. "Dan [Koplish]
very wisely saw that our department is in the drinking-water
and sewage business but not in the solid-waste, engineering,
or street-cleaning business. But all those facets had
to be built onto our plan to comply. So we went to the
other bureausBureau of Streets, Bureau of Recycling
and Solid Waste, and Bureau of Water Resources [separate
bureaus run by one management group] and Engineering,
who do the design and oversight of the pipe installations
for Water Resources."
For those not intimate with the inner workings of municipal
budgets, McMahon explains, "Mine is an Enterprise Fund
bureau, as is Recycling and Solid Waste. Our budget
is built on revenue collected for a service outside
of or in addition to general city taxes levied and collected.
Streets is largely budgeted out of General Fund, from
the overall budget of the city." There is a natural
dynamic tension between departments and bureaus funded
out of a municipality's General Fund‹the managers of
these organizations must be advocates for the services
they provide while municipal leaders must determine
the priority of services as limited by their budget;
someone must determine, for example, if police are more
important than firefighters or street sweeping or economic
development. It's striking that these managers have
even leaped over traditional General Fund tensions in
some of their work together.
"All the involved bureaus," McMahon continues, "already
had BMPs in place, and so we could bring them under
one plan and add others as resources became available.
A BMP committee was created that met on a regular basis
that factored in everyone's input. My department handles
all the regulatory requirements of NPDES Phase I, but
the critical commitments on who-what-where-when-why
details on BMPs to achieve compliance arose very democratically
out of this committee. A big benefit is that everyone's
BMPs are in the NPDES Phase I plan. These BMPs are no
longer optional, but now required of all of us," protecting
them from the vagaries of budgets and administration
changes.
McMahon highlights the Phase I plan contributions of
each bureau. "Our department, Water Resources, does
sample collection on storm events and manages all regulatory
requirements. Engineering manages the design and oversight
of stormwater construction and provides us information
on installations and any other changes to the system.
The Street bureau collects information on an ongoing
basis on pollutants. As they do their street sweeping,
cubic yards are measured and a limited content analysis
for metals and organic content is performed. Organic
chemical analysis we'll send out. Water Distribution
[a sub-bureau of Water Resources] will clean the storm-drain
inlets for any storm event before spring thaw, mainly
to prevent flooding. Recycling and Solid Waste handles
litter baskets and collections, plus offers public information
to the community. Currently, I'm getting the team together
so I can get a report together for June's due date.
We've been at this since 1995 and we get everyone together
annually."
McMahon's cohort in recycling and solid waste, Levin,
graduated with him from Pennsylvania State University's
Class of '79, and they admit to a strong passion for
both city and environmental issues. "One of our main
focuses with Phase I is public information and outreach.
We conducted focus groups this year‹people don't realize
what happens to what goes into storm drains. Just like
trash, they don't realize where it goes. We promote
"Don't dump when you're changing your oil'" and other
bottom-line, simple, key behavior changes, "and our
outreach person reinforces that door-to-door. Our best
results overall in public information come from outreach
to youth, especially early elementary students‹the environment
really resonates with them. Children do the best job
of teaching adults. And once the adults start, they
usually don't stop."
Benefits
of a Synergistic Approach
Cheaper,
Proactive, More Efficient
"Without
these high-caliber outcomes from our joint BMPs, we'd
be forced to process our discharge, spending money on
capital improvement for treatment systems, detention
ponds," McMahon says. "By stressing proactive, collaborative
solutions we avoid more costly and less-efficient treatment
solutions. ... And taxpayers get cleaner streets, less
litter at the same time because all of us are focused
on getting rid of pollutants before they get in the
system."
These municipal leaders acknowledge that as a Class 3
city there are definite challenges in meeting the same
requirements of cities much larger. "I imagine the population
cutoff demarcation of 100,000 was made back when cities
were wealthy, before resources went out to the suburbs,"
remarks McMahon. "Obviously the tables have turned.
The wealth is in the suburbs that surround us. But we
still have to meet those requirements, and it can be
a challenge." The culture of synergy that the department
heads have cultivated obviously assists in meeting "more
demands with less and less resources," points out Karl
Giandomenico, Allentown's assistant superintendent of
streets. "Our department used to literally have hundreds
of employees. Even though we have a fraction of that
manpower now, we still have to get the same work accomplished.
How all departments now collaborate in snow removal
is a great example of how we are doing much more with
much less through these cross-trained collaborative
approaches."
A Boost
in Quality of Life
Increased
street cleaning has been the direct result of Phase
I BMPs, and several departments have joined forces to
get it done. "Instead of street cleaning starting in
April we now start in March. Recycling is working with
us in changing the signage that lets motorists know
that street-cleaning parking rules are starting a month
earlier. The Allentown Parking Authority is focusing
on expanding the 'ticketed routes' "‹on which cars
are ticketed if parked on cleaning days. "We meet regularly
with the parking authority regarding street cleaning
ticketing routes to maximize results. It's not like
the old days when we had enough manpower to maintain
hand crews to pick up litter and debris," observes Giandomenico.
Keeping
It In-House
A
key benefit of the interdepartmental cooperation was
that the city didn't have to hire an outside agency
to draft an NPDES Phase I plan, McMahon says. "It was
all done in-house with everyone's buy-in, because they
were the ones creating the plan. This approach also
resulted in all individual departmental BMPs being protected
under this NPDES Phase I plan, which ends up having
some excellent quality-of-life dimensions that everyone
benefits from. The streets are cleaner; there is less
trash in the streets because these BMPs are being followed
religiously. Also, working together on this plan firmed
up relationships between departments. We all feel a
mutual obligation to keep all this stuff out of the
streams and rivers, which is both our own and our downstream
neighbors' drinking supply. And we've been very successful.
Fish from our nearby streams, the Jordan and Little
Lehigh creeks, were recently tested for mercury by the
USGS [US Geological Survey] and [they] had the lowest
levels in the section of the Delaware River Basin."
Higher-caliber
outcomes
Another
big, but harder to quantify, benefit is in the higher
caliber of outcomes. "Let's face it," McMahon begins,
"EPA doesn't have the manpower to enforce every detail
of NPDES Phase Ieverything is BMP-driven, and
self-policing is the order of the day, people doing
what they should. So it's really up to us to maximize
results and outcomes. For example, permanent 'Don't
Dump' emblems on storm drains weren't originally part
of our plan, but we discovered we could write a Pennsylvania
Growing Greener grant to purchase them." McMahon enlisted
the help of other departments, community groups, and
neighboring cities to install them. "Whenever we can
up the ante we do," he says.
Creating
a Synergistic Municipal Culture
Levin, like her peers, says Neal Kern, the city's director
of public works, deserves a great deal of credit for
this collaborative atmosphere. "Without his encouragement
and full support for this kind of intense cooperation,
we couldn't do it," she notes. "Leadership like his
makes all the difference."
And it seems that cooperative leadership style itself
is a part of the municipal tradition of this corner
of the city. "Back in 1989 we used to have four separate
departments that dealt with some aspect of water and
we merged them under one umbrella," observes McMahon.
"The goal was to maximize economy of scale and manage
by functional areas versus by bureaus. Bill Engle, our
former manager of water resources, saw the need for
coordination in the face of the dramatic increase in
requirements on the horizon. He really transformed how
we did our jobs. Skills and knowledge began being shared
along bureaucratic lines. Case in point, we are the
only municipality I'm aware of where line workers operate
both water-filtration and water-treatment facilities,
and our operators are among the most highly licensed
in the business. The result of this cross-training and
skill spread across departments is if you lost four
operators out of Water Filtration in the old days you'd
be taking a big hit, 50% of your department out the
window versus our current paradigm where a loss of four
out of our combined bureaus is much more sustainable."
Giandomenico concurs. "Overall, the emphasis is on continuous
training for all of staff in all the departments we
collaborate with," he says. "The better trained and
certified and licensed we all are, the more we can assist
each other. For example, I have a Class B water operation
license, Denny has a Class D for Water Distribution
and sewer maintenance, and we're both in the Streets
Department! Another example is that we offer CDL [commercial
driver's license] training for anyone that wants to
pursue it and over 100 different certificates are held
by our team."
Overcoming
Old Culture
"When I became
superintendent of the Bureau of Streets," Wehr remembers,
"the Street department had always been an entity to
itself, not talking much if at all to other departments."
Giandomenico remembers, "The first thing Denny did was
bring us into the twenty-first century‹that opened everything
up; e-mail helped tremendously. We can now work more
efficiently. How did we live without it? Sure, some
of us were reluctant at first, but now we couldn't do
without it. E-mail is a tremendous tool for increasing
collaboration both within and outside departments."
Giandomenico also developed several databases to track
street cleaning, street repair, street paving, street
reconstruction, fleet maintenance, and employee tracking,
and now these data are available to all departments
with instantaneous access. "We meet once month with
departments that are affected by what we do and communicate
what we are planning, what needs to be done. A lot of
what sewer and water do now arises from what Streets
has on the drawing board and visa versa. This planning
and collaborating approach is fully operational now,
but we've been working at this for 10 years."
Everyone's
Invited
"I
think it's important not to underestimate the power
of all of us being invited to the table," acknowledges
Giandomenico. "It was a good shot in the arm for our
department not only to be conferred with but also for
us to realize how well we were doing [relative to NPDES
Phase I BMPs]. For example, we had been collecting our
street sweeping for analysis already. We didn't change
what we did‹but changed how we measured. Working on
the [NPDES Phase I] BMP committee made a big difference
putting us all on the same page and admittedly having
a positive emotional effect on how we felt about the
work we were doing. They [BMP committee members] had
no clue we had all the information because we had been
collecting it for years. All of us committed to a team
goal of analyzing the NPDES influent going in and effluent
to ensure the effluent was equal to or better than the
influent."
Recognition
on a National Level
Levin's Recycling and Solid Waste department has an impressive
list of services that has been enhanced not only by
high levels of coordination with her peers, but also
with the community. "The 'what's included' in your trash
fee is exceptional in our municipality. Our Recycling
and Solid Waste bureau is really a hybrid with levels
of services typical of much larger municipalities,"
says Levin, with awards ranging from SWANA to US Conference
of Mayors to National Recycling Coalition to the state's
Resources Council. "I don't think people realize how
complicated what goes on in government is, the sophistication
and intense coordination of what gets done behind the
scenes. My counterparts in the bureaus we work closely
with have an impressive sense of mission and pride.
You almost don't think about it. It's just how we do
business."
Levin describes the city's extensive collaborative efforts
and the entities involved:
Composting, with Lehigh County and the city's
Recycling and Solid Waste: "This began as a collaboration
of Water Resources, Streets and the Lehigh County Office
of Planning and Economic Development in 1987. Before
that leaf pickup wasn't getting composted. But with
the no-leaf-waste-in-the-garbage-stream requirements
of Act 101, we initiated a composting effort with a
grant for a tub grinder and five municipalities cooperating
and did that for five years. We turned it over to county
two years ago, which now handles operations, and we
all benefit."
Christmas tree collection, with Streets and Recycling
and Solid Waste: "This collection used to be in the
waste contract until we analyzed we could do it at a
better price. Between the Streets department and ours
we divide the city up."
Snow removal, with Streets, Parks, Building Maintenance,
Water Resources, and Recycling and Solid Waste: "Our
public works director, Neal Kern, coordinated all departments
working together to do the snow removal. Everyone pitches
in. Everyone's equipment has a plow."
Recycling Center, with Lehigh County Juvenile Probation and the city Recycling and Solid
Waste bureau: "We share the revenue with Lehigh County
Juvenile Probation, which helps manage all the sorting
at our Recycling Center. That revenue goes to victims
of Juvenile Probation. We handle the 2,700 tons a year
of recycling beyond curbside that comes into our Recycling
Center. This requires a lot of daily cooperation for
scheduling seven days a week, and we are too busy not
to be there seven days a week."
Parks, with Parks Department and Recycling and
Solid Waste Bureau: "When I first came on board we had
real problems with illegal dumpsites, which weren't
in anybody's bureau descriptions. The Parks department
stepped up to the plate, the opposite of 'that's not
my job,' and now there are many bureaus involved and
this is an area we are working on getting under control."
Graffiti, with the police, District Attorney's
Office, and Recycling and Solid Waste Bureau: "We had
a huge graffiti problem that was becoming the norm in
the 1990s. Now we clean it up immediately, but initially
we had a huge backlog. It took four to five employees
to undo thousands of tags citywide; now we are down
to one employee. This was a very big effort between
us and law enforcement. A lot of it is drug and gang
marks. The D.A.'s office even bought us our first pressure
cleaner. What was once a law-enforcement issue we now
treat as a routine public works [task]. The less you
talk about it the better; graffiti artists want fame,
and we ignore them and immediately eliminate their tags."
Don't Trash Allentown, with Streets, Parking Authority,
and Recycling and Solid Waste Bureau: "We've been working
very hard on cleaning up Allentown, collaborating with
Streets and the Parking Authority to improve street-cleaning
outcomes. We added sidewalk cleaning a few years ago
and an alleys and small-streets cleaner just recently,
and we're also working on getting people to move their
vehicles for effective street cleaning, with over 26,000
tickets issued by the Parking Authority using a new
card based on our suggestions that is put on the windshields,
getting the word out through neighborhoods about when
street cleaning is scheduled. Over the years we have
adjusted our solid-waste contract to save money. As
we broke down costs, we found we could do the specialized
components like Christmas tree removal more cheaply
in-house."
It should be noted that Allentown's solid-waste contract
is the largest single municipal contract of any type
in the state. "For example, our litter baskets were
originally emptied by the Streets Department in 1992,
approximately 179 baskets," Levin says. "Our need for
baskets outgrew Streets's ability to keep up with them
with current levels of manpower so we added it to the
solid-waste contract. But then we found that baskets
were always overflowing with our former solid-waste
contractor. So we added two crews of our own and now
we are up to over 850 litter baskets citywide with bigger
baskets and two baskets in commercial or heavy-use locations."
"I'd echo everyone's good remarks about cooperation and
add to the list of collaborators our Parks and Police
Departments and the Parking Authority. And Neal Kern
deserves a lot of credit," Levin says. "Unfortunately,
common public perception is that municipal employees
aren't passionate, departments are at war with each
other for their fair share of tax and other revenue,
and everyone is just 'clocking in' until their retirement
and pension. Nothing could be farther from the truth
here."
McMahon echoes her views. "We have are a group of passionate
bureau chiefs who really believe in what they are doing,
who don't let the inevitable grind of bureaucratic rules
and regulations get them down. These managers believe
in what they're doing and are remarkably conscientious.
They don't let the inevitable setbacks and bureaucracies
wear them down. They stay believers. And that is what
makes the hard work of this kind of collaboration possible.
That, combined with a leader [Kern] who supports collaboration,
produces the outstanding outcomes we've been able to
deliver despite ever-decreasing resources."
Author
Siobhan Bennett writes about environmental and business
issues.
MSW
- September/October 2004
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