Laserfiche WebLink
Appendix A <br />Policy I licatios <br />Several key recycling and solid waste management policy questions are raised within <br />the City of Roseville's pilot collection study and this analysis. <br />Role of the Cities in Minimizing Disposal of Materials Collected for Recycling - <br />Each local municipality has some role in assuring the materials collected for recycling <br />by its contractor are indeed recycled to the maximum extent feasible. The negative <br />public relations caused by materials unnecessarily disposed as waste are a major threat <br />to the residents' trust that is essential in continuously encouraging, maintaining, and <br />improving participation in municipal recycling programs. This is true regardless of <br />collection method (i.e., dual-stream vs. single-stream). <br />There are a variety of optional procedures that a city can implement to maximize <br />recycling and minimize unnecessary disposal of materials collected. These options <br />may not be mutually exclusive and include: <br />® Tacitly encourage the contractor to maximize recycling. <br />Work to provide clear, consistent city-published public education tools as to <br />materials to be included for recycling and excluded (non targeted materials). <br />During recycling service procurement (e.g., during development of request for <br />proposals and contract negotiations, etc.): <br />® Adopt clear definitions of terms, including "targeted materials", "non- <br />targeted materials", and "processing residuals"; <br />® Specify public education tools to be provided by the contractor and <br />require that the city approve the education materials before they are <br />distributed; <br />e Consciously decide if the contractor shall provide atruck-side quality <br />inspection function (i.e., will materials be rejected by the collection <br />crew and education tags left in the curbside bin); <br />® Specify a maximum processing residuals rate and an agreed upon <br />measurement scheme for objectively monitoring this rate; and/or <br />® Specify a liquidated damage charge to be imposed on the contractor if <br />the maximum processing residual rate is exceeded. <br />Role of the Government in Minimizing Disposal of Materials Collected for <br />Recycling -Provision of standardized definitions, more research, and clear policy <br />direction as to acceptable levels of process residuals would assist cities and haulers <br />with the best available information about the processing residuals issue. For example, <br />there is still little hard data available that characterizes the color-mixed, broken glass <br />generated from MRFs in Minnesota. We still do not know how much single-stream <br />collection and processing systems impact the relative amounts of mixed glass <br />produced compared dual-stream systems. <br />A-6 si6os <br />