Collections & Transfer: Page 19
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American Trucking Associations says 4 factors will fuel worsening driver shortfall
Retirements are leading the trade group’s projection of a 160,000 driver shortfall by 2030. Drug and alcohol violations are seen as one factor sidelining potential drivers.
By David Taube • July 11, 2022 -
What’s still on California’s legislative agenda for waste and recycling
Single-use plastics in e-commerce, state purchasing requirements, diversion credits from waste-to-energy facilities and a bottle bill expansion for wine are still in play before lawmakers end their session.
By Megan Quinn • July 11, 2022 -
Red River Waste bankruptcy sale moves closer to finalization
Upcoming hearings — with input from numerous creditors — aim to hammer out final details of the proposed $12.6 million sale to private equity firm Platform Capital.
By Megan Quinn • July 11, 2022 -
Waste Eliminator becomes sizable metro Atlanta presence with new acquisitions
Two newly announced transactions in the region add recycling, transfer and disposal capacity for multiple streams. This is part of plans by Allied Industrial Partners to invest $150 million into the business.
By Cole Rosengren • July 7, 2022 -
Deep Dive // California's organics experiment
How 3 Southern California programs are ramping up organics recycling
Preparing for SB 1383’s recycling requirements is a bigger lift for areas that didn’t already collect food scraps. Program officials in Los Angeles, San Diego and San Bernardino County share their stories in Part 4 of our series.
By Cole Rosengren • July 7, 2022 -
National bottle bill supporters eyeing 2023 for updated draft legislation
Proponents of a nationwide container deposit bill are revising a draft first announced last year, which would call for a 5-cent redemption value on most container types, with the hope that it can get bipartisan support.
By Megan Quinn • July 7, 2022 -
Summer heat affects collection routes as OSHA continues process toward workplace heat standard
Waste and recycling workers are among those at risk for heat stress and illness as many parts of the U.S. experience record-breaking temperatures.
By Maria Rachal • July 6, 2022 -
Red River bankruptcy proceedings continue as GFL Environmental takes over Fort Wayne contract
The Texas-based company is in talks to be acquired by a private equity firm. Meanwhile, the Indiana city is cutting ties with Red River after months of service issues that have also been seen in Nashville and elsewhere.
By Cole Rosengren • July 1, 2022 -
California Gov. Newsom signs nation's most comprehensive paper and plastic packaging EPR bill
The landmark legislation sets ambitious recycling and reduction rate targets for plastic and other types of packaging. Its passage averts a plastics fee ballot initiative and comes after years of stalled legislative efforts.
By Megan Quinn , Cole Rosengren • Updated July 1, 2022 -
California EPR bill passes state Assembly, final vote must happen immediately
After four years of attempts, this major legislation could finally pass. The bill must now make it through the state Senate and reach the governor’s desk by the end of June to avert a competing plastics ballot measure.
By Megan Quinn • June 30, 2022 -
Congress makes moves on recycling funding, single-use plastic reduction
A rural recycling infrastructure bill gets a House version, efforts to reduce plastic packaging at the U.S. Capitol move forward, and USAID tackles ocean plastic with new Save Our Seas funding.
By Megan Quinn • June 29, 2022 -
Pay growth continued for top waste and recycling leaders in 2021 as CEO-median employee pay ratio widened
See the latest compensation data for executives at WM, Republic Services, Waste Connections, GFL Environmental, Clean Harbors, Stericycle, Harsco and Casella Waste Systems in our annual report.
By Cole Rosengren • June 29, 2022 -
NYC commercial waste reform
As inflation surges, pricing becomes focal point for upcoming New York commercial waste zone system
The city recently approved its first waste rate cap increase since 2018 and added greater weight to pricing proposals for a bid process that will reshape the market. Local stakeholders remain wary about how things will unfold.
By Cole Rosengren • June 27, 2022 -
Clock ticking for contentious California EPR bill to avert plastics ballot measure
SB 54 is supported by major recyclers, including Republic Services, but it is drawing opposition from key environmental groups. It must pass by the end of this month to stop an upcoming plastics fee ballot initiative.
By Megan Quinn • Updated June 27, 2022 -
Deep Dive // California's organics experiment
California's local governments grapple with financial and logistical demands of organics recycling law
Regulations weren’t finalized for years, and the pandemic delayed many plans. New state grants worth $180 million will help, but more will be needed to meet this unfunded mandate. Read Part 3 of our series.
By Cole Rosengren • June 23, 2022 -
Opinion
Surveying the corporate-controlled EPR landscape in 2022
Amid new producer responsibility action in states such as Colorado, New York and Hawaii, Neil Seldman of the Institute for Local Self-Reliance weighs in on the best way to approach this policy going forward.
By Neil Seldman • June 22, 2022 -
Q&A
WM explains plans to accelerate automation amid a 'war for talent'
With the company potentially phasing out up to 7,000 positions in the next few years, Chief Customer Officer Michael Watson elaborated on efforts to “upskill” employees and seize growth opportunities even in a tight labor market.
By Maria Rachal • June 15, 2022 -
Q&A
How Cleveland is restarting curbside recycling after more than 2 years
Curbside service returned Monday. Ren Brumfield, the city’s first recycling coordinator, discussed the new contract with Rumpke, how to measure success, the challenges and opportunities with a total reset, and more.
By Maria Rachal • June 13, 2022 -
EPA aims to disburse $375M in waste and recycling funds from infrastructure bill by spring 2023
Stakeholders have called for the EPA to move quickly on implementing funding from grants and initiatives that the agency says represent its “largest investment in recycling in 30 years.”
By Megan Quinn • Updated June 15, 2022 -
California’s high-stakes experiment to cut organic waste disposal 75% by 2025
Waste companies and local governments in the state are making massive investments and operational changes to meet the demands of SB 1383. Explore the implications with our ongoing series.
Updated Nov. 14, 2022 -
Deep Dive // California's organics experiment
Expecting food waste 'tsunami,' California recyclers focus on infrastructure and end markets
As the state rolls out universal organics collection, major companies such as Agromin, Anaergia, GreenWaste Recovery, Recology, Republic Services and WM are expanding to meet demand. Learn more in Part 2 of our series.
By Cole Rosengren • June 9, 2022 -
Palo Alto, California, amending GreenWaste recycling contract in move to prioritize domestic markets
The update will direct some rigid plastics and mixed paper to domestic processors at a cost of up to $1.2 million after the company had been been unable to prove the materials were responsibly managed once exported.
By Megan Quinn • June 8, 2022 -
Recology SF corruption investigation
San Francisco voters approve reform measure in wake of Recology corruption scandal
The first major change to the local refuse ordinance in 90 years will update a rate-setting process that resulted in significant overcharges. It could also affect the company’s lock on hauling permits, pending further legislative action.
By Cole Rosengren • June 8, 2022 -
New York business improvement districts adapt to expansion of waste containerization pilot
The Times Square Alliance is moving forward with installations, but questions remain about barriers to participation around container choice and servicing for some potential adopters.
By Maria Rachal • June 6, 2022 -
Deep Dive // California's organics experiment
Ambitious policy makes California a crucible for investments in organics collection and recycling
SB 1383, a sweeping law that calls for a 75% reduction in organic waste disposal by 2025 to reduce methane emissions, has spurred a flurry of activity. Is the state's current infrastructure ready to meet the moment?
By Cole Rosengren • June 3, 2022