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HomeMy WebLinkAboutPaying For Waste Disposal Slide Show - ~-~ -~_... ~ - .._-,-~.~_._,_._- - -~----- Paying for Waste Disposal Challenges in MSW Managemt!nt What Are the Choices? . More garbage to collect and dispose Tax Base . Higher costs of collection services General Fund . Limited municipal budgets Flat Fee . Public-sector pressure to more cost-efficient User Fee (Pay-As-You-Throw) .' .~ '.'I~~ ~ s.L "3E" Benefits of Pay-As~YQu~Throvv How PAYT Programs Work " . Environmental . Pay for MSW service based on Sustainabllity: garbage thrown out Effectively promotes . Pay for waste like a utility waste reduction . Economic Stability: . Residents only pay for what Stable revenue covers i' >- cost of services they use W - ~ oti3 ~ . 0 . Equity: Economically Q"rrt eco..... fair delivery of services . Types of PAYTPrograms Environmental Research Results I. Conso ."Idools P'Y high" fe" . Duke University National Study for larger containers · Bags: Residents pay .a - 14 to 27% average waste reduction a fe.e for garbage bags - 32 to 59% Increase in recycling /~. Stickers: Residents pay for - 19% found slight Increase In Illegal '\ "-;~' 4. stickers affixed to ,~ftf:..'j/ bags/containers . dumping ~/ EPA ToolslTechnical Asslstilijc:e What is EPA doing to support PAYT? · PAYT helps reduce the greenhouse gas emissions associated with making, . Tool kit, PAYT Video, Fact sheets, distributing, and disposing of products. Testimonials, Guidebook . If 20Qrnoff:! communities adopted PAYT . Technical assistance workshops in cities and re(iuced waste by 20%, greenhouse across the U.S~ f';,-, gas emissions would be cut by 3.8 million ._, .. ". .. ..." _ MTCE. · Web Sjlte: epa..sn)911! ~",,-,..,; '0' i":'o' ..... ~-.-. '. · This equals taKIng , m.()~2.~,~n Ct~ _ ~_ "-.'0.0\ off the road for aim.. _'Ye~r"'- . 'V'" , if ~ ,,~ Pricing Systems Complementary Programs . Proportional ~ ~ 4 '\JF!f!J ~ ~ · Curbside Recycling . Yard Trimmings and Composting . Variable .. . 'I · Bulky Items and White Goods .~~ ;::::,- ~,> ? . Two-tiered/ - , . ~ 1 . Multi-tiered . Growth inPAYT Programs San Jose, California Start Date Prc;lm. Tyoe Container 6000 850,000 July 1993 Four-Sort Cans 5000 4500 ~~~~ . .,. !1 . Before PAYT: Unlimited collection for $12,50/month. 30001 liil'...'...... ~............ ~~mb.r 0 Before PAYT: Three 32-gallon gar.bage cans/week. ;~~~ :-~" Communities . City reduced costs by over $4 millionfyear. 1500 ~ ~j . 87% of residents use the 32-gallon size container. 1000 .' '\ ... 50~ ............'L"L<LQ.~ ~ 0 Recyclables/yard trimmings double pre-PAYT level. 65 70 75 80 85 90 9S 0 . Residents happy with program (80% approval In 1993,90% In 1996), Year Examples of U.S. City Savings PAYT Growing in the U.S. . Wilmington, NC- $400,000 (~:~ . More than 5,000 (Population: 75,000) per year '"L, If communities in U.S. practice . Littleton, NH- $40,000 In extra funds PAYT (Population: 5,800) with PAYT . Cities large and small, rural . Gainesville, FL- $186,200 savings and urban (Population: 96,000) , I I I . More than 60 cities with . San Jose, CA- reduced cost by $4 populations above 100,000 (Population: 850,000) million annually practice PAYT Map of PAYT Communities Large Cities and PAYT R c1in -. MAE] .. . .... San Jose, CA 782,248 43% NlE] ... ..,. San Francisco 723,959 Approx. 33% Portland, OR 437,319 50% (1996) Seattle 516,259 44% (1996) Worcester, MA 169,759 54% (1996) ~u,,"'a1I'f'.~""" \JnI1Id~_An..,....C--- f'1Ll'lIranoIo.o.IorU.-.ul',",. 0 . ~ . 0 . 1.25 1'-100 101'-100 "'.. What People Say about PAYT Lessons Learned from PAYT Approval from elected officials to environmental groups and residents . Economic. Incentives encourage behavioral . PAYT offers "a direct economic payback to changes the people"-San Jose elected official . Treating MSW services as a utility - . High recycling rates in cities correlates you pay for what you use with PAYT . Win-win: high recycling rate and . Surveys indicate residential approval economic stability . Positive changes In consumer behavior ---- ____h~_.,_.h.~._.._ San Francisco, California Seattle, Washington population Start Date PrQm. Tvpe Container Population Start Date Prom. Tvee Container 723,959 1900s Variable Cans 516,259 1981 Variable Cans . PAYT program one of the oldest in the country. . City offers 10, 20, 30, 60, or 90-gallon cans. . 1999: City recycling rate 42%. . City uses totes, semi-automated collection for . "Fantastic 3" program: three 32-gallon carts. containers over 30 gallons. . First program to collect food scraps at curbside. . 25% of resident use 20-gallon cans. . All apartment buildings have access to PAYT. . Water/trash bills issued jointly: City pays for trash, shuts off water. Austin, Texas Vancouver, Washington Start Date Prom. Tyee Container Start Date Prom. Tyee Container 465,622 1991 Variable Cans 69,000 1990 Variable Cans .2000: Recycling rate 28.5%. . Second-can rate 84% greater than first can. . 1991 (program began): Recycling rate 9.8%. . 500 residents switched to the mini-can. . Switch to fully automated, one-person crews. . Weekly recycling costs $3.10/month. . Residents can use 30-, 60-, or 90-gallon carts. . Set out 96 gallons of yard debris: $5.55jmonth. . Excess garbage placed in bag with $2 sticker. . City exceeded 50% recycling goal by 1995. . Bags without stickers charged $4/untagged bag. Portland, Maine Wilmington, North Carolina Start Date Prom. Tvee Container Start Date Prgm. Tvpe Container 1999 Variable Bags 64,513 1992 Two-tiered Cans . Residents purchase bags for $0.68 each. . Combat Illegal dumping: City used newspapers, . Pre-PAYT: No curbside recycling; recycling rate 7%. radio, and 1V. . After PAYT: Recycling rate now 35%. . Citizen focus groups gathered support. . Waste decreased by 80-100 tons/week. . 40-, 90-gallon roll-out carts collect waste weekly. . City set up Q&A hotline before program began. . Biweekly pickup or stickers for overfiow available. . Increase: 10% recyclables, 40% yard debris.