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Solid Waste 2002 report
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2002 Residential Solid Waste & Recycling Citizens AC
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Solid Waste 2002 report
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Introduction <br />Everyone generates waste. By waste we mean things that we <br />have, that we no ]onger wish to have. Perhaps it's an old piece <br />of furniture, yesterday's newspaper or a candy bar wrapper. <br />Sometimes we give those things away, sometimes we recycle <br />them and sometimes we throw them in the garbage. Those are <br />some of the most recognizable parts, but not all of the parts, of <br />the waste system. <br />We all use the waste system, although most of us take it for <br />granted. Our garbage and recycling are often picked up when <br />we're not home and taken someplace we don't see. But the <br />choices we make, either explicitly or by default, impact lives and <br />livelihoods, the natural environment and the business environ- <br />ment. We will explore those choices and their impacts throughout this report. <br />Roseville and other Minnesota cities are charged by the State with protecting public health, safety <br />and welfare, and protecting the environment. Garbage and recycling collection are necessary <br />public services to assure those charges, much as proper handling of sewage, provision of safe <br />drinking water, providing safe roads and fire and police protection services. <br />In 1980 the Minnesota Legislature established an order of preference for managing waste in order <br />to protect the state's environment and public health. This preferential order is <br />� Reduction and Reuse <br />� Recycling <br />� Yard and Food Waste Composting <br />� Resource Recovery <br />� Landfilling with methane collection <br />� Landfilling with no methane collection <br />Roseville last examined its residential solid waste and recycling practices in 1991 when a citizens <br />advisory committee was appointed by the City Council. That committee released the report <br />"Options for Residential Waste Collection and Recycling for Roseville." The City Council <br />enacted a number of the Committee's recommendations the main one being to divide the City <br />into five zones each with its own day for pickup of garbage and recycling. <br />Since then there have been a number of developments in the garbage and recycling industries that <br />prompted the City Council to re-examine Rosevi]]e's solid waste and recycling policies. Those <br />changes include consolidations in the garbage hauling industry; stagnation of recycling rates in <br />Roseville and Minnesota; an increase in the amount of garbage produced per person despite <br />efforts at waste reduction, reuse and increased recycling; and an increase in out of state <br />landfilling of garbage following a 1994 U.S. Supreme Court decision that struck down Ramsey <br />County's requirement that garbage haulers take their waste collected to the Resource Recovery <br />Facility (RRF), a waste to energy plant, in Newport, Minnesota. <br />Additionally the City Council adopted a set of environmental goals in 1992. The goals were <br />15 <br />
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