Long Beach, CA
File #: 20-0789    Version: 1 Name: ER - Waste Management to deliver ash from SERRF to El Sobrante landfill D1
Type: Contract Status: CCIS
File created: 8/4/2020 In control: City Council
On agenda: 8/18/2020 Final action: 8/18/2020
Title: Recommendation to authorize City Manager, or designee, to enter into an agreement with Waste Management, Inc., to allow the City of Long Beach to deliver ash from SERRF to Waste Management’s El Sobrante Landfill, at an estimated annual cost of $7,000,000 to $8,000,000, for a period of four years, with the option to extend the agreement for five additional one-year periods, at the discretion of the City Manager. (District 1)
Sponsors: Energy Resources
Attachments: 1. 081820-R-25sr.pdf
Related files: 35669_000
TITLE
Recommendation to authorize City Manager, or designee, to enter into an agreement with Waste Management, Inc., to allow the City of Long Beach to deliver ash from SERRF to Waste Management’s El Sobrante Landfill, at an estimated annual cost of $7,000,000 to $8,000,000, for a period of four years, with the option to extend the agreement for five additional one-year periods, at the discretion of the City Manager. (District 1)

DISCUSSION
The City of Long Beach’s (City) residential refuse, as well as refuse from numerous private haulers serving other area cities, is taken to the Southeast Resource Recovery Facility (SERRF) where it is burned and generates electricity. SERRF handles approximately 500,000 tons of municipal solid waste each year and, in the combustion process to create the electricity, produces about 175,000 tons of ash annually. This ash is treated and currently transported to El Sobrante Landfill (El Sobrante) operated by Waste Management, Inc. (WM). The ash is put to beneficial use at the landfill and this reuse contributes approximately 13 percent to the City’s overall estimated waste diversion of about 75 percent.

El Sobrante, located in Riverside County, is owned by WM. El Sobrante is the only Class 3 landfill in California that is permitted by the Regional Water Quality Control Board (RWQCB) to receive and reuse ash. By utilizing El Sobrante, the City can maintain its current waste diversion rate and avoid implementation of new waste diversion programs. El Sobrante will charge SERRF a negotiated rate of $40 per ton for disposal of ash, below its standard rate for non-county waste. Depending upon the amount of ash generated at SERRF, the estimated annual cost for transportation and disposal will be approximately $7,000,000 to $8,000,000.

The City’s only other option would be to dispose of SERRF’s ash at Kettlemen Landfill (Kettlemen), located just south of Fresno, also owned by WM. The estimated annual cost for this option is $...

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