Long Beach, CA
File #: 08-0259    Version: 1 Name: CD2,1,3 - Multi-Family Unit Residential Recycling
Type: Agenda Item Status: Approved
File created: 3/13/2008 In control: City Council
On agenda: 3/18/2008 Final action: 3/18/2008
Title: Recommendation to request City Manager to develop new requirements for permitted private refuse haulers to ensure that all multi-family residential units have the same access to recycling as do residential units serviced by the City; and request the recommended requirements be brought back to the City Council in 60 days for review.
Sponsors: COUNCILMEMBER SUJA LOWENTHAL, SECOND DISTRICT, VICE MAYOR BONNIE LOWENTHAL, COUNCILMEMBER, FIRST , COUNCILMEMBER GARY DELONG, THIRD DISTRICT
Attachments: 1. 031808-R-18sr.pdf
Related files: 09-0817
TITLE
Recommendation to request City Manager to develop new requirements for permitted private refuse haulers to ensure that all multi-family residential units have the same access to recycling as do residential units serviced by the City; and request the recommended requirements be brought back to the City Council in 60 days for review.

DISCUSSION
Currently all single family and multi-family residents (up to 10 units) are serviced by the City and provided the opportunity to participate in the Residential Recycling Program. That amounts to approximately 109,000 residential customers and 5,600 businesses with curbside pick-up of refuse and recycling. The City contracts with Waste Management, Inc. for the collection of recyclable materials. Waste Management takes the recyclables to Potential Industries, a Materials Recovery Facility (MRF) in Wilmington, where they are sorted and prepared for the market place. However, residents living in multi-family units not serviced by the City often find that the private hauler servicing their building is unwilling or unable to make recycling services available.

Public Resources Code section 41780, enacted by AB 939 (Sher)--the Integrated Waste Management Act (Chapter 1095, Statutes of 1989)--requires every city and county in the state to divert from landfill at least 50 percent of the waste generated within their jurisdiction. The Legislature amended this statute in 2000, requiring jurisdictions to sustain their waste diversion efforts into the future. The City of Long Beach has achieved an overall diversion rate of 66% (2005), and the City was recognized by Sustainlane, an independent sustainability organization that conducts surveys and research throughout the country, as tied for #1 in solid waste diversion practices among the 50 largest cities in the US. However, larger multi-family residential units without recycling services represent a great opportunity to increase our diversion rate while reducing our impact...

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