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City trash board vows to overhaul curbside green waste removal

By ZACK STOYCOFF World Staff Writer on Aug 14, 2013, at 2:24 AM  Updated on 8/15/13 at 3:13 PM


Randy Sullivan: The chairman said the task now is whether the board wants to keep green waste separate.


Local

Baby Veronica case: Parents return to court for third day

Her biological father from Oklahoma and her adoptive parents from South Carolina spent several hours Monday and Tuesday on the sixth floor of the state's Kerr office building, where the Court of Civil Appeals meets in Tulsa.

Tulsa storage facility fire contained

A cause of the fire is under investigation.

CONTACT THE REPORTER

Zack Stoycoff

918-581-8486
Email

`The city's trash board pledged Tuesday to find a way to overhaul its curbside yard-waste system and restore confidence in collection procedures after the revelation that yard waste has been burned like regular garbage almost since the system's inception.

"I think the public was thinking that we were going to solve this problem today, and ... what we're finding is we really can't," board member Priscilla Harris said. "But we at least recognize that there is a problem, and we're going to resolve it."

The Tulsa World reported last week that yard waste picked up at residents' curbs has been taken to the city's trash incinerator since at least January because equipment at its mulching plant could not remove the plastic bags in which residents are asked to place the material.

The city has still required residents to affix each of those bags with a 50-cent "green waste" sticker and charges trash customers a $1.09 monthly green-waste fee.

Trash board members urged residents during a special yard-waste discussion Tuesday to be patient as they begin what they said could be a long process of fixing the system.

The board, formally known as the Tulsa Authority for the Recovery of Energy, will consider proposals by Mayor Dewey Bartlett and city staff to outsource yard-waste collection and continue incineration or switch to a cart-based mulching system using in-house crews.

The board scheduled the discussion after staff reported last month that yard-waste collections have come far short of projections.

"This is not the hot seat I was expecting," said Gary Betow, a recently-appointed board member whose first meeting was Tuesday. "The whole city's watching this.

"What are we going to do to - I don't know - restore confidence? Maybe that's outside of what we can do, but I think we need to be prepared to step up."

The trash board wanted to separate yard waste from garbage and recyclables when its new curbside program began Oct. 1 because it hoped to turn the material into mulch that could be given away or sold.

Yard waste had previously been taken to the trash incinerator.

The board contracted with hauler NeWSolutions for most collection duties but used its own crews for yard waste because it had little idea how much Tulsans would discard - and thus no way to solicit bids for the service.

The plan was to measure usage over a full year.

The question now is whether the trash board still wants to keep yard waste separate from regular trash, Chairman Randy Sullivan said.

Bartlett proposes outsourcing the service, shutting down the separate city program and allowing the trash board to sell or repurpose its 10 yard-waste trucks.

Under the proposal, NeWSolutions would take yard waste to the trash incinerator without the city's having to pay for its own trucks.

Interim Solid Waste Manager Roy Teeters suggested a similar idea but separately suggested allowing residents to order "green waste" carts and having city crews haul their contents to the green-waste plant.

Sullivan said trash officials will have to hash out the suggestions while exploring whether they could even change the NeWSolutions contract - a likelihood in any scenario, he said.

He said he would ask the board at its Aug. 27 meeting to request a formal opinion from the city attorney.

Recycling advocate Lauren Lunsford, the only speaker during a public comment segment of Tuesday's meeting, said she's "pretty hurt and angry" over the recent yard-waste revelations.

She asked the board to consider a proposal by former Mayor Kathy Taylor, Bartlett's re-election opponent, to form a citizen advisory committee for yard waste.

"I've cried, believe it or not," she said. "I just don't feel like we're really being represented right now."



Green-waste collection resumes

Normal weekly yard-waste collection will resume by Wednesday, Interim Solid Waste Manager Roy Teeters said Tuesday.

The city's 10 green-waste collection crews had been part of a citywide cleanup following last month's windstorm, but they were diverted from storm debris duties last week to pick up some residents' regular bagged green waste.

The crews are now expected to be back on their regular yard-waste pickup schedules, Teeters said.

Other crews, however, continue working through neighborhoods to collect large storm debris that cannot fit in bags.

Trash service spokeswoman Liz Hunt said Wednesday that 50-cent green waste stickers and clear bags are not required for pickup.


Zack Stoycoff 918-581-8486
zack.stoycoff@tulsaworld.com
Original Print Headline: Overhaul of yard waste system vowed
Local

Baby Veronica case: Parents return to court for third day

Her biological father from Oklahoma and her adoptive parents from South Carolina spent several hours Monday and Tuesday on the sixth floor of the state's Kerr office building, where the Court of Civil Appeals meets in Tulsa.

Tulsa storage facility fire contained

A cause of the fire is under investigation.

CONTACT THE REPORTER

Zack Stoycoff

918-581-8486
Email

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