Western Lake Superior Sanitary District (WLSSD) Food Waste Drop

Transcription

Western Lake Superior Sanitary District (WLSSD) Food Waste Drop
Western Lake Superior Sanitary District (WLSSD)
Food Waste Drop Site Program
2004 - 2010
Susan Darley-Hill
Environmental Program Coordinator
Western Lake Superior Sanitary District
Duluth, Minnesota
www.wlsssd.com
8 December 2010
Community characteristics
Population:
95,000 in greater Duluth (43,895 households)
133,000 area population (55,410 households MN + WI)
Open market hauling system
WLSSD Organics Program: basic facts
MN State capital grant for site
construction
Opened September 2001
Compost source-separated organics
and yard waste
MPCA Permit: 3950 tons yard waste
+ 3950 tons food waste/year
Garden Green® Compost (USCC/STA)
production: 2500 yds/year
Nine years of growth and change (2001-2010)
Voluntary organics recovery program for businesses &
institutions (2001 – 2006)
• 30-50 regular participants
• 1 hauler
• Organics acquisition contractor (part-time)
Residential curbside pilot (2003)
Stakeholder meetings: haulers & generators (2004)
Established food waste drop sites for residents and small
business use (2004-2009) Seven sites in operation today
WLSSD Solid Waste Ordinance mandates business
diversion of pre-consumer organic waste. (Oct 2006)
Phased roll-out of mandate covering ~150 businesses &
institutions (2007-2010)
WLSSD established a trial drop site program in 2004
Why:
• No curbside collection by private haulers (density!)
• Residents wanted an organics recycling option
• Compromise: establish sites for centralized collection
How:
• Grant from State of MN
• bio-compostable bags & Norseman curbside bins
• hauling costs
• Phased implementation
• 3 residential/small business sites in 2004 (2 staffed by WLSSD)
• 7 sites in 2010 (6 residential, 1 business-only drop site)
Objectives
Provide greatest access at minimal distance to users
Maximize capture of residential and small business
food residuals + intermittent special events
Explore and address challenges:
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Odors/pests?
Contamination/dump and run?
Adequate size/type of container?
Frequency of collection?
How best to educate/recruit users?
Viable alternative to curbside collection?
Started small with 3 sites and 1 hauler
Five businesses host drop sites now
Businesses provide oversight at non-WLSSD drop sites
Customer traffic (positive impact)
Community partnership/common vision
Shared or covered costs of disposal
Bins are sized to need & most are locked after hours
Today, 6 years later…
WLSSD still supplies bags at most sites (reduces slop factor for users)
WLSSD covers hauling costs at all but one large restaurant site (shared)
Reduced pick-up schedule November – May (cold) reduces hauling costs
Users make the best site monitors and program cheerleaders
Contamination remains extremely low; 2 sites no longer lock their bins
Tonnage has increased steadily since start-up (hard data for years 1-4)
Annual Totals
60000
50000
40000
30000
Annual Totals
20000
10000
0
1
2
3
4
Each site has its own character(s!)
Waste-Free Event kit: Loaned at no cost
Getting the word out
WLSSD’s Drop Site Program
In a perfect world…
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Cheaper hauling costs
More drop site locations
Better bins & trucks
Frequent cleaning
No maggots in July
But it works…
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Human scale that folks appreciate
Fulfills need – manageable size
Room to grow – we determine the rate
Many requests to add sites
Loop is closed locally