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Leaf Pickup Program <br />History/Trends: Minnesota banned burning <br />yard waste effective January 1, 1971 and banned <br />putting yard waste in with your garbage effective <br />January 1, 1990. Prior to the bans residents were <br />allowed to dispose of yard waste as they disposed <br />of any other garbage. <br />In response to the 1971 ban on yard waste burning <br />Roseville began curbside collection of leaves. <br />Roseville is one of few cities in the metro area to <br />offer a Leaf Pickup Program although other cities <br />include leaves in their yard waste collection <br />programs. The Leaf Picicup Program allows <br />residents to rake leaves from their property to the curb where City crews use a specially equipped <br />truck to vacuum up the leaves according to a published schedule (typically the end of October <br />and beginning of November). Leaves are hauled to the Roseville leaf compost site off Dale just <br />south of County Road C where they are composted. (At other times of the year the Vac-all is <br />used to clean parts of the sewer system and on other related projects.) <br />The leaves are stored in windrows to speed their decomposition. Roseville contracts with a <br />private company to turn the windrows four times a year. That charge of $8-10,000 a year is taken <br />out of a budget account that deals specifically with the compost facility. It typically takes a little <br />over a year for the leaves to decompose into usable compost. The compost is available for <br />residents to pick up free of charge. There is a small charge for home delivery. The charge ($30 a <br />6 cubic yard truck load) is just enough to cover the cost of delivery; it does not subsidize the <br />facility. Residents use approximately 80% of the compost. The rest is used in City projects. All <br />the available campost is used during the year it is available. <br />Roseville addressed concerns about runoff from the compost site noted in the 1991 report by <br />constructing a filter berm in 1992 to filter the leachate. That berm will need to be repaired and <br />regraded in a few years. <br />The leaf pickup program was run at no additional cost to participants until 1997. Homeowners <br />Leaf Pickup Pro rg am Sign Ups <br />1998 2,500 <br />1999 2,575 <br />2000 2,652 <br />2001 2,750 <br />were then asked to pay a$15 fee that was added to the�r <br />water bill. Par�icipation rates fell and the City lowered the <br />fee to $10 a year. Participation has fallen by 50% since <br />Roseville began charging a fee, however the City still <br />collects 2/3 of the volume. However after the initial decline <br />the number of homeowners signing up for the program has <br />been growing. In 1998 it was 2,500, in 1999 it was 2575, in <br />2000 it was 2652 and in 2001 it was 2750. <br />Residents may drop leaves off at the site for free. The site is open in the fall during October and <br />the beginning of November and again m the spring in April and May. According to the 2002 <br />survey of homeowners 38% said they dispose of their leaves by taking them to the City's <br />� <br />