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“Sustainable Waste Management Strategies for Arlington County”

This comprehensive report from the Virginia Recycling Association outlines the implementation of zero waste policies in Arlington County’s municipal organics collection program. The program, managed by the Department of Environmental Services Solid Waste Bureau, aims to divert waste from landfills and incineration by 2038. The report details the county’s solid waste management plan, recycling goals, and innovative strategies such as composting yard and food waste. It discusses the impact of residential services, seasonal leaf collections, and brush collection efforts on waste diversion rates. Through community surveys and outreach initiatives, the county has successfully increased recycling participation and reduced overall waste generation, showcasing the benefits of sustainable waste management practices.

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“Sustainable Waste Management Strategies for Arlington County”

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  1. Implementing Zero Waste Policies in Municipal Organics Collection Program Arlington County Department of Environmental Services: Solid Waste BureauVirginia Recycling AssociationMay 16, 2017

  2. About Arlington County… • Land area = 26.2 miles • Population = ~225,000 • Households = ~96,000 • ~64% of households are apartments or condos served by private haulers • ~36% of households are single family style homes served by the County’s residential collection program • 211,000 at-place employees each day

  3. Solid Waste Management Plan • 20-Year Solid Waste Management Plan (SWMP) • Adopted by County Board in June of 2004 • Guide for the future growth of the County’s solid waste management system • Provides roadmap for program enhancements over time • Established recycling rate goals: • 37% by 2014 • 42% by 2019 • 47% by 2024

  4. Guided by 4 C’s Approach to SWM

  5. Arlington Zero Waste Resolution • Adopted on November 19, 2015 • Aims to divert 90 percent of waste away from landfills and incineration by 2038

  6. Solid Waste Management Strategy Metal White goods Metal items Composting Yard Waste Food Waste

  7. Cost Effective Services *FY13 Rate **FY14 Rate

  8. Residential Solid Waste Services • Weekly curbside recycling, yard trimmings and trash collections to 33,100 homes (contracted) • Household solid waste rate = $307.28 per year • On-call collection fee-based services for E-waste, scrap metals and bulk appliances (contracted) • On-call brush collection • Mulch pickup & on-call mulch delivery (SWB) • Household Hazardous Material drop-off every Saturday • Monthly paper shredding events • Self-haul options for small amounts of inert materials including rock, asphalt, concrete to Earth Products Recycling Yard

  9. Seasonal Leaf Collections • Leaf Season: • -Bag collection (weekly) • November-January • -Vacuum Collection (2 passes) • November-December • 2015 Tonnages: • 659 bagged materials • 552 vacuum

  10. Brush Collection • On-call service (paid as part of HSWR) • Performed by SWB crews • 5,372 tons in 2015 from 18,000 service requests • Processed at SWB Earth Products Recycling Yard

  11. Earth Products Recycling Yard Recycle all organic materials in a closed loop system Tub Grinder Leaf Mulch Brush Collection Brush Mulch Leaf Collection Recycle and reuse as much inorganic material as possible Crusher- concrete/asphalt/brick into aggregate Trommel- topsoil Dirt shaker-separates clean dirt from aggregate

  12. Where We Were in 2015 • 16% of residential MSW could be recycled in blue cart • Needed to target other fractions of waste stream to increase diversion April 2015 – March 2016

  13. Opportunities & Approach • Residential collection services contracts rebid in 2014 - yard waste collection pricing sought through RFP • Pricing from successful proposer (American Disposal Services): • Collections at $2.83/HH/month • Carts financed through ADS contract ($11.40 per cart per year (for first five years of contract); $1.43 per HH per year cart maintenance fee • FY 2016 impact of $33.96 on HSWR • County Board approval in November, 2015 • Processing contract with Loudoun Composting for $32 per ton

  14. Asking the Customer • County surveyed HSWR customers via Survey Monkey: • 31,033 customers • 4,283 total respondents (evenly spread across County) • 70% of respondents indicated increasing recycling rate was important • 60 percent supported adding yard waste collections • Made it easier for County Board to approve program

  15. 2015 Year-Round Yard Waste Survey Results

  16. Getting the Word Out • Local press • Direct mail to ratepayers • County website • Direct mail to landscapers and lawn service providers • February – April: • Carts distribution • Social media

  17. Program Participation 37,400+ Total cart pickups in April 2017 33,063 Households in residential program (FY 2017) 30,515 Green organics carts in the program *Some households have more than 1

  18. Yard Waste Collected by Month April 2015 – March 2016: 1,460 tons total April 2016 – March 2017: 7,172 tons total Seasonal Collection Year Round Collection

  19. Change in Residential Waste Stream 51% diversion 57% diversion 21% 7,209 ton decrease of MSW due to yard waste program and other waste reduction efforts

  20. Residential v. County Recycling Rates 58.0% 46.8% As reported to VA DEQ. Includes 5% DEQ credits.

  21. Residential Waste Profiles April 2016 – March 2017 April 2015 – March 2016

  22. Overall MSW in Arlington Arlington County MSW Management in 2016* Arlington County MSW *Includes Va. source reduction & reuse credits MSW generation has declined by ~34% since 2004

  23. Other Benefits • 1,300 tons of topsoil created • 600 tons of avoided dirt disposal • Equates to $7,500 in avoided disposal costs for dirt • Additional cost avoidance of approx. $10,000 in top soil purchase costs • Creating topsoil (660 cubic yards) for Laporte Facility project

  24. Mulch Quality • Mulch meets the Seal of Testing Assurance (STA) standards established by the U.S. Composting Council. • Test results, indicate a high level of integrity and “vigor” suitable for plant growth and soil sustainability. • Mulch is monitored for persistent herbicides

  25. In-Vessel Composter Unit School Pilot Project Special Events Collection

  26. Next Steps? • Success of yard trimmings collection program validates future food scraps collection program • Processing infrastructure & capacity key • Consideration of other program costs (in-home pails, bags, etc.) • Targeting FY19 for food scraps collection

  27. Costs of Managing MSW

  28. Thank You! Questions? skruljac@arlingtonva.us

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