Waste hauler asks household recyclers to consider worker safety

Published: June 17, 2022, 6:13 p.m.

b'June 15, 2022 \\u2014 With the passage of SB 1383, Californians will be required to reduce organic waste in the landfill by 75% in the next three years. In a few weeks, a new large-scale compost facility will be available to most of Mendocino County, and buy-back recycling will re-open in Fort Bragg and Ukiah.\\nMost of the county\\u2019s non-recyclable, non- compostable trash goes to a landfill in Fairfield. The county and cities have composting contracts with Cold Creek Compost in Potter Valley, which is permitted to process 50,000 tons of material a year.\\nOn July 1, C&S Waste Solutions will take over the solid waste contract for Fort Bragg and Franchise Area 2, from Waste Management. C&S partner Bruce McCracken sketched out the area where residents can expect to see new containers, and new trucks, making the rounds.\\n\\u201cFranchise Area 2 is kind of split in two, an inland portion and a coastal portion,\\u201d he explained. \\u201cThe coastal portion being everything slightly north of Fort Bragg, and then south down to the Navarro river, so down towards Albion, et cetera. The inland portion is the Ukiah Valley: Redwood Valley, Potter Valley, Hopland. So basically the entire Ukiah Valley\\u2026I would like to add, though, on the trucks: one thing that the residential customers will see is that we run split-body trucks. So we co-collect. We collect garbage and recycling at the same time. And I know when people first see it, we\\u2019re going to get a bunch of phone calls saying, you\\u2019re mixing everything! But we\\u2019re not. There actually is a wall in between, in the body of the vehicle. It\\u2019s one less trip on the streets, so it helps the roads. It makes us more efficient\\u2026it makes no sense for us to mix the material, because it costs us money to go to the landfill.\\u201d\\nIn 2019, the company won a $3 million grant from the state to build a compost facility at the Ukiah transfer station. Like Cold Creek, it\\u2019s permitted to process 50,000 tons a year, though it\\u2019s currently able to process half that. The transfer station has been composting yard waste, but the new covered facility will take organic waste like food scraps, as well.\\nAnd, after suspending buy-back recycling in 2019, C&S is promising to open beverage container recycling centers in Ukiah and Fort Bragg. McCracken estimates that in about three months, customers will be able to get their California Redemption Value refunds on bottles and cans. \\nSB 1383 puts the burden of enforcement and education on the contractor, but McCracken says the hammer will come down incrementally. \\u201cIf we note that there\\u2019s prohibited material in the blue can or the green can, we will tag it. Our customer service staff will call the customer. We will send out literature explaining that this is what really goes into the blue or green can. A second time, you\\u2019ll get a small fee, which in most cases we will waive. It\\u2019s more of a wake-up, to say, hey. We can\\u2019t accept this material in these carts. The third time, it\\u2019s a little more serious, where there will be a charge levied against you for contamination, and if it continues, we have the ability to take the cart away. But we don\\u2019t want to do that. I understand that everybody wants to recycle everything. But it\\u2019s just not doable.\\u201d\\nThat\\u2019s apparent at the old Alex Thomas pear shed in Ukiah, now transformed to a sorting facility where seventeen workers separate trash from recyclables. Plastic bags and plastic wrappers, says McCracken, are the enemy. \\u201cWe don\\u2019t want bags in the recycling, because that\\u2019s where we find needles, too,\\u201d he said, over the roar of the machinery. \\u201cNeedles are the biggest threat on the line.\\u201d\\nThere are other hazards, too. In the quiet section of the MRF, or Materials Recovery Facility, there is a huge pile of crushed glass. McCracken\\u2019s not worried about glass. \\u201cAnother thing that\\u2019s really bad in the blue can are batteries,\\u201d he said. \\u201cBecause it starts fires in MRF\\u2019s, and it starts fires in garbage trucks.\\u201d He added that batteries need to be taken to Mendo Recycle during hazardous household waste events, or to the facility in Ukiah, which has limited hours of operation. \\u201cThe amount of fires across the county in garbage trucks and at MRF\\u2019s is escalating at an alarming rate, and it\\u2019s batteries,\\u201d he warned.\\nOn the tipping floor, where workers extract sheets of plastic film from the recyclables, there are room-sized bales of material that are headed for the landfill. Clothes, pillows, foam mattresses and small appliances have all been pulled from the recycling stream. Some items, like hoses, call for extraordinary measures. \\u201cThese are known as tanglers in the business, because they tangle up in the machinery,\\u201d he said, tugging on a length of hose strapped into one of the landfill bales. \\u201cSo we literally, at the end of the shift, have to send people up there in harnesses, with knives, to cut it out of the machinery. It\\u2019s a hard job as it is, and that\\u2019s why people doing their part on the front end makes the job a lot easier.\\u201d\\nOnce the material makes its way out of Ukiah, there are a few options. McCracken says there are brokers on the West Coast who will take recyclables, but that \\u201cnothing goes to China anymore.\\u201d It does go to Pacific Rim countries, including South Korea. \\u201cThere is a push to get more and more in-country facilities that will process this material,\\u201d he reported. \\nOn the far side of the crushed glass and the assembly line where McCracken says a couple hundred tons of material is sorted every day, there is an orphan pile of miscellaneous items that he hopes to educate out of the blue bins altogether. \\u201cI mean, there\\u2019s a lot of stuff here, why would you ever think of putting it in the blue can?\\u201d he asked, nudging a brick with his foot. A beat-up old saddle was nestled in beside a chipped red enamel pot. \\u201cWe see it all,\\u201d he confirmed, eyeing the mountain of trash.'