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Tulsa trash board reimbursing QuikTrip for green-waste stickers

By ZACK STOYCOFF World Staff Writer on Sep 18, 2013, at 2:25 AM  Updated on 9/18/13 at 3:29 AM


Mike Thornbrugh: QuikTrip will give refunds on the stickers.


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CONTACT THE REPORTER

Zack Stoycoff

918-581-8486
Email

The city is refunding to Quik-Trip the money the company spent for thousands of green-waste stickers that it intended to sell to Tulsa's curbside trash customers, Solid Waste Manager Roy Teeters said Tuesday.

The convenience store chain was the sole distributor of the 50-cent stickers that residents were required to place on bags of extra yard waste. It bought at least 125,000 from the city - $62,500 worth - to sell to the public at the wholesale price.

When the city's trash board suspended the sticker requirement after the revelation last month that yard waste was being incinerated along with regular trash, Tulsa-based QuikTrip Corp. asked the city to take back its unsold stickers, Teeters said.

"It's just like if the bread man delivered too much bread to the grocery store," he said. "We're in the process of getting them back from them."

Teeters said late Tuesday that he could not immediately look up the amount of the refund, and QuikTrip spokesman Mike Thornbrugh said he didn't know how many stickers were left over.

The company bought them as a service to the city "with the understanding that if there's an excessive amount (left over), ... they would be refunded," Thornbrugh said.

Although the trash board has decided for now not to offer refunds to customers, Thornbrugh said QuikTrip will refund unused stickers brought to its stores under its policy to refund any returned item - no receipt necessary.

That practice drew ire from the trash board Tuesday.

The board, formally known as the Tulsa Authority for the Recovery of Energy, has asked residents to keep their green-waste stickers because they might eventually be allowed to stand in for the orange "extra refuse" stickers that are required for bags of garbage that cannot fit in trash carts.

"It's my understanding that there's no reason at this point in time for QuikTrip to engage unilaterally on a refund program for green-waste stickers," trash board Chairman Randy Sullivan said, although he added that "QuikTrip can do whatever they want to."

The question of refunds "is premature at this time," he said.

Thornbrugh said "very few" customers have asked to be refunded for stickers but that the company has obliged them, as it would "for any commodity that we sell."

The Tulsa World reported last month that yard waste picked up at residents' curbs has been taken to the city's trash incinerator almost since the beginning of the new trash program Oct. 1 because equipment at its mulching plant could not remove the plastic bags in which residents are asked to place the material.

The city, meanwhile, had continued requiring residents to use the green-waste stickers and still includes a 70-cent monthly fee in every trash customer's bill.

The trash board has since begun debating ways to reform or eliminate the program, which the city's Legal Department has said could nullify the trash board's contract with independent hauler NewSolutions.

The board is seeking a second opinion and last month voted to allow Sullivan and Vice Chairman Paul White to search for and employ a private legal firm.

Sullivan said Tuesday that the board will hire Stephen Schuller of the Gable Gotwals law firm, a previous trash board member who has represented the board before, for $7,500 - within the amount allowed without competitive bidding.


Zack Stoycoff 918-581-8486
zack.stoycoff@tulsaworld.com
Original Print Headline: Sticker refund OK'd for QuikTrip
Local

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An investigation into a Tulsa dentist has revealed that one person contracted hepatitis C as a direct result of a visit to that practice, according to the Oklahoma State Department of Health and Tulsa Health Department.

Continuing coverage: Read more on the investigation here.

State chamber seeks to push school choice through new nonprofit

According to a copy of a grant request to the Walton Family Foundation obtained by the Tulsa World, the state chamber is requesting a three-year $300,000 grant from the foundation to advocate for "an aggressive change agenda" in Oklahoma education.

CONTACT THE REPORTER

Zack Stoycoff

918-581-8486
Email

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