“Act”
means the California Integrated Waste Management Act of 1989
(sometimes referred to as “AB 939”), including, but not
limited to, the Jobs and Recycling Act of 2011 (AB 341), SB 1016 (Chapter
343, Statutes of 2008), the Mandatory Commercial Organics Recycling
Act of 2014 (AB 1826), and the Short-Lived Climate Pollutants Bill
of 2016 (SB 1383),
Public Resources Code Section 40000 and following
as it may be amended, and as implemented by the regulations of CalRecycle.
“Collection”
means the operation of gathering together within the city
and transporting to the point of disposal or processing of any garbage,
recyclables, and organic waste.
“Commercial business” or “commercial”
means a firm, partnership, proprietorship, joint-stock company,
corporation, or association, whether for-profit or nonprofit, strip
mall, industrial facility, or a multifamily residential dwelling,
or as otherwise defined in 14
CCR Section 18982(a)(6). A multifamily
residential dwelling that consists of fewer than five units is not
a commercial business for purposes of implementing this chapter.
“Container”
means any bin, box, or cart used for the purpose of holding
garbage, recyclables or organic waste for collection.
“Edible food”
means food intended for human consumption, or as otherwise
defined in 14
CCR Section 18982(a)(18). “Edible food”
is not solid waste if it is recovered and not discarded. Nothing in
this chapter or in 14
CCR, Division 7, Chapter 12 requires or authorizes
the recovery of edible food that does not meet the food safety requirements
of the California Retail Food Code.
“Food recovery”
means actions to collect and distribute edible food that
otherwise would be disposed.
“Food recovery organization”
means an entity that engages in the collection or receipt
of edible food from commercial edible food generators and distributes
that edible food to the public for food recovery either directly or
through other entities or as otherwise defined in 14
CCR Section 18982(a)(25),
including, but not limited to:
3.
A nonprofit charitable temporary
food facility as defined in Section 113842 of the Health and Safety
Code.
“Garbage”
means all putrescible and nonputrescible solid, semisolid,
and liquid wastes generated or accumulated through the normal activities
of a premises. Garbage does not include recyclables or organic waste
that is source separated and set out for the purposes of collection
and recycling.
“Multifamily residential dwelling” or “multifamily”
means of, from, or pertaining to residential premises with
five or more dwelling units. Multifamily premises do not include hotels,
motels, or other transient occupancy facilities, which are considered
commercial businesses.
“Organic waste”
means solid waste containing material originated from living
organisms and their metabolic waste products, including, but not limited
to, food waste, green waste, organic textiles and carpets, lumber,
wood, paper products, printing and writing paper, manure, biosolids,
digestate, and sludges or as otherwise defined in the Act. Biosolids
and digestate are as defined by the Act.
“Organic waste generator”
means a person or entity that is responsible for the initial
creation of organic waste, or as otherwise defined in 14
CCR Section
18982(a)(48).
“Person”
means any institution, public or private corporation, governmental
unit or jurisdiction, individual, company, firm, association, partnership
or other entity.
“Prohibited container contaminants”
means: (1) discarded materials placed in the designated organic
waste container that are not identified as acceptable source separated
organic waste for the city’s designated organic waste container;
(2) discarded materials placed in the garbage container that are identified
as acceptable source separated organic waste, which are to be separately
collected in city’s designated organic waste container; and
(3) excluded waste, as described herein, placed in any container.
“Recyclables”
shall mean those materials that are separated from solid
waste prior to disposal to be recycled consistent with the requirements
of the Act. The city may adopt a schedule of materials suitable for
recycling, as determined by resolution of the city council, or as
set forth in a collection agreement, which may be revised periodically.
“Representative”
means an entity that the city contracts with or otherwise
arranges to carry out any responsibilities of this chapter, as authorized
by 14
CCR Section 18981.2. A representative may be a government agency,
a private entity, or a combination of those entities.
“Residential householder”
shall mean any person or persons holding or occupying a residential
premises in the city, whether or not the owner of the residential
premises.
“Self-hauler”
means a person, who hauls solid waste, organic waste or recyclables pursuant to the conditions set forth in Section
9.12.020 of this chapter. Self-hauler also includes a person who back-hauls waste, or as otherwise defined in 14
CCR Section 18982(a)(66). Back-haul means generating and transporting organic waste to a destination owned and operated by the generator using the generator’s own employees and equipment, or as otherwise defined in 14
CCR Section 18982(a)(66)(A).
“Single-family”
means of, from, or pertaining to any residential premises
with fewer than five units.
“Solid waste”
has the same meaning as defined in State Public Resources
Code Section 40191, which defines solid waste as all putrescible and
nonputrescible solid, semisolid, and liquid wastes, including garbage,
trash, refuse, paper, rubbish, ashes, industrial wastes, demolition
and construction wastes, abandoned vehicles and parts thereof, discarded
home and industrial appliances, dewatered, treated, or chemically
fixed sewage sludge which is not hazardous waste, manure, vegetable
or animal solid and semisolid wastes, and other discarded solid and
semisolid wastes, with the exception that solid waste does not include
hazardous waste, as defined in the State
Public Resources Code Section
40141, radioactive waste regulated pursuant to the State Radiation
Control Law, or medical waste regulated pursuant to the State Medical
Waste Management Act.
“Source separated”
means materials, including commingled recyclables, that have
been separated or kept separate from the solid waste stream, at the
point of generation, for the purpose of additional sorting or processing
those materials for recycling or reuse in order to return them to
the economic mainstream in the form of raw material for new, reused,
or reconstituted products, which meet the quality standards necessary
to be used in the marketplace, or as otherwise defined in 14
CCR Section
17402.5(b)(4). For the purposes of this chapter, source separated
shall include separation of materials by the generator, property owner,
property owner’s employee, property manager, or property manager’s
employee into different containers for the purpose of collection such
that source separated materials are separated from waste/mixed waste
or other solid waste for the purposes of collection and processing.
“Tier one commercial edible food generator”
means a commercial edible food generator as defined by 14
CCR Section 18982(a)(73) as amended, and includes the following:
2.
Grocery store with a total facility
size equal to or greater than 10,000 sq. ft.
“Tier two commercial edible food generator”
means a commercial edible food generator as defined by 14
CCR Section 18982(a)(74) as amended, and includes the following:
1.
Restaurant with 250 or more seats,
or a total facility size equal to or greater than 5,000 sq. ft.
2.
Hotel with an on-site food facility
and 200 or more rooms.
3.
Health facility with an on-site food
facility and 100 or more beds.
4.
Large venue as defined in 14
CCR
Section 18982(a)(39).
5.
Large event as defined in 14
CCR
Section 18982(a)(38).
6.
A state agency with a cafeteria with
250 or more seats or total cafeteria facility size equal to or greater
than 5,000 sq. ft.
(Ord. 6501 §
1, 2022)
A. Single-family organic waste generators
shall comply with the following requirements:
1. Subscribe to and maintain organic waste
collection services for all organic waste. The city shall have the
right to review the number and size of a generator’s containers
to evaluate adequacy of capacity provided for each type of collection
service for proper separation of materials and containment of materials.
Single-family organic waste generators shall adjust service level
for their collection services as requested by the city. Generators
may additionally manage their organic waste by preventing or reducing
their organic waste, managing organic waste on site, and/or using
a community composting site pursuant to 14
CCR Section 18984.9(c).
2. Participate in the city’s organic
waste collection service(s) by placing source separated organic waste
in the container identified and designated for source separated organic
waste and placing all other materials in the container identified
and designated for such materials.
3. Place containers as follows:
a.
Residences Having Street Frontage
Only. Containers must be placed for collection at curbside in front
of residence. The wheels of the container will be placed in the gutter
with the handle facing the residence. Containers will be at least
six feet from any obstruction such as automobiles, trailers, motor
homes, fences, lampposts, portable basketball hoops, mailboxes, or
other automated containers. Containers are not to block pedestrian
access.
b.
Residences with Alley Access. Containers
must be placed for collection on private property adjacent to the
alley property line, with direct access from the alley. The base of
the container will be placed on a stable, level surface with the handle
facing the residence. Containers will be at least six feet from any
obstructions such as automobiles, trailers, motor homes, fences, portable
basketball hoops, lampposts, mailboxes, or other automated containers.
c.
All containers must be at curbside
by 6:00 a.m. on scheduled collection days, holidays included. Collection
trucks will come back for containers that are put out after truck
has passed a residence upon payment of an extra pick-up service charge.
B. Generators that are commercial businesses,
including multifamily residential dwellings shall comply with the
following requirements:
1. Subscribe to and maintain organic waste
collection services for all organic waste. The city shall have the
right to review the number and size of a generator’s containers
to evaluate adequacy of capacity provided for each type of collection
service for proper separation of materials and containment of materials.
Commercial business organic waste generators shall adjust service
level for their collection services as requested by the city. Generators
may additionally manage their organic waste by preventing or reducing
their organic waste, managing organic waste on site, and/or using
a community composting site pursuant to 14
CCR Section 18984.9(c).
2. Participate in the city’s organic
waste collection service(s) by placing source separated organic waste
in the container identified and designated for source separated organic
waste and placing all other materials in the container identified
and designated for such materials.
3. Supply and allow access to adequate number,
size and location of collection containers with labels or colors sufficient
for employees, contractors, tenants, and customers, in compliance
with the city’s collection service requirements.
4. Excluding multifamily residential dwellings,
commercial businesses shall provide containers for the collection
of source separated organic waste and garbage in all indoor and outdoor
areas where disposal containers are provided for customers, for materials
generated by that business. Furthermore, the commercial businesses
shall place containers in such place as shall be convenient to the
city for removal of organic waste and garbage. Storage of other equipment
or material will not be allowed.
5. Excluding multifamily residential dwellings,
containers provided by commercial businesses shall have either:
a.
A body or lid that conforms with
the container colors provided through the collection service provided
by the city, with either lids conforming to the color requirements
or bodies conforming to the color requirements or both lids and bodies
conforming to color requirements. A commercial business is not required
to replace functional containers, including containers purchased prior
to January 1, 2022, that do not comply with the requirements of this
subsection prior to the end of the useful life of those containers,
or prior to January 1, 2036, whichever comes first.
b.
Container labels that include language
or graphic images, or both, indicating the primary material accepted
and the primary materials prohibited in that container, or containers
with imprinted text or graphic images that indicate the primary materials
accepted and primary materials prohibited in the container.
C. Generators that are commercial businesses,
excluding multifamily residential dwellings shall:
1. To the extent practical through education,
training, inspection, and/or other measures, prohibit employees from
placing materials in a container not designated for those materials
per the city’s collection service.
2. Periodically inspect all containers for
contamination and inform employees if containers are contaminated
and of the requirements to keep prohibited container contaminants
out of those containers pursuant to the Act.
3. Annually provide information to employees,
contractors, tenants, and customers about organic waste proper sorting
and recovery requirements.
4. Nothing in this section prohibits a generator
subject to these provisions from preventing or reducing waste generation
or managing organic waste on site.
5. Commercial businesses that are tier one or tier two commercial edible food generators shall comply with food recovery requirements, pursuant to Section
9.12.110 of this chapter.
(Ord. 6501 §
1, 2022; Ord. 6659 § 1, 2023)
Nothing contained in this chapter
shall be construed as prohibiting the owner or tenant of any premises
in the city from destroying or carrying away any garbage in order
to reduce the amount to be taken away by the city, or its duly authorized
agents or employees, but not by means of any person who shall in any
way receive the benefits of the use of any such garbage for feed for
poultry, hogs or other livestock, unless such person shall receive
permission from the city council to carry away such garbage. Nothing
contained in this section shall be construed as relieving any person
from paying the regular garbage fees established for the city.
(Ord. 6501 §
1, 2022)
All garbage accumulated at or on
any premises within the city shall be removed by the city at regular
intervals of once a week within the city limits, or more often at
the request of any tenant, occupant or lessee, and delivered to the
“authorized solid waste management facility.”
(Ord. 6501 §
1, 2022)
A. Residential. Place containers as follows:
1. Residences Having Street Frontage Only.
Containers must be placed for collection at curbside in front of residence.
The wheels of the container will be placed in the gutter with the
handle facing the residence. Containers will be at least six feet
from any obstruction such as automobiles, trailers, motor homes, fences,
lampposts, portable basketball hoops, mailboxes, or other automated
containers. Containers are not to block pedestrian access.
2. Residences with Alley Access. Containers
must be placed for collection on private property adjacent to the
alley property line, with direct access from the alley. The base of
the container will be placed on a stable, level surface with the handle
facing the residence. Containers will be at least six feet from any
obstructions such as automobiles, trailers, motor homes, fences, portable
basketball hoops, lampposts, mailboxes, or other automated containers.
3. All containers must be at curbside by 6:00
a.m. on scheduled collection days, holidays included. Collection trucks
will come back for containers that are put out after truck has passed
a residence upon payment of an extra pick up service charge.
B. Commercial Placement. Garbage receptacles
at places of business shall be located in such place as shall be convenient
to the city for removal of garbage. City-approved trash enclosures
are to be used for refuse removal equipment only. Storage of other
equipment or material will not be allowed.
C. Container Type. The environmental utilities
director or designee shall determine the size and specifications of
all containers used for the purposes of collection under this chapter.
(Ord. 6501 §
1, 2022; Ord. 6659 § 2, 2023)
The city shall not provide collection
for the purposes of this chapter from above the first floor of any
premises, nor from the basement of any premises.
(Ord. 6501 §
1, 2022)
A. Residential.
1. Each and every householder or tenant occupying
any dwelling, house, or residence, shall pay to the city, or its authorized
agent, a fixed minimum charge as set forth in this section as a refuse
rate. Such fixed minimum is based upon service of one call per week,
irrespective of whether there is any refuse to remove from any premises.
2. Automated Container Service. Each premises
shall be assigned city-owned containers. Containers will be serviced
by automated collection. All garbage and source separated organic
waste for collection must be contained within the container(s) designated
for such materials with the lid closed and must fall freely from container
when dumped. Each such premises shall be provided collection regularly,
as determined by the environmental utilities director or designee.
3. For collection of additional containers
beyond those covered by the fixed minimum rates established in this
chapter, the collection charge shall be that identified in this section.
4. Return Trip Services.
a.
Extra Pick Up. An additional or “extra”
pick up may be requested beyond the minimum service required by this
chapter. Each such additional or extra pick up shall be subject to
a fixed fee.
b.
Out Late. Return service for containers
placed out late may be requested. Each “out late” pick
up shall be subject to a fixed fee.
c.
Missed Pick Up. A “missed”
container must be reported within 48 hours of collection day or an
“out late” charge shall be applied to the account.
5. Rates for Residential Collection. Effective
July 1, 2021, and July 1, 2022, the residential rates on billings
shall be as follows:
Residential Refuse Service
|
Effective
7/1/2021
|
Effective
7/1/2022
|
---|
Fixed refuse monthly charge (one trash container and one source separated organics waste (green waste) container as identified in Section 9.12.090(A)(2))
|
$31.06
|
$36.05
|
Each additional mixed waste container
|
$21.24
|
$24.65
|
Each additional source separated
organic waste (green waste) container
|
$11.28
|
$13.10
|
Additional pick up of a mixed waste
container (also “out late” fee) (also source separated
organic waste (green waste) container emptied as trash due to contamination)
|
$20.30
|
$23.56
|
Additional pick up of a source separated
organic waste (green waste) container (also “out late”
fee)
|
$14.92
|
$17.32
|
Move in box pick up
|
$109.77
|
$127.39
|
Temporary dumpster delivery and removal
(6 yards only)
|
$152.19
|
$176.65
|
Source separated organic waste contamination
fee
|
$30.36
|
$35.24
|
Residential return trip fee (applied
when service is requested but container is inaccessible)
|
$30.36
|
$35.24
|
Container exchange (customer requested
in excess of 1x per 12 months)
|
$30.36
|
$35.24
|
Container exchange (due to misuse—melted
or damaged beyond reuse)
|
$90.70
|
$105.26
|
B. Commercial.
1. A landlord, property owner, property manager
or management company of a commercial business that has a commercial
dumpster shall pay to the city, or its authorized agent, a fixed charge
as set forth by the city council as a refuse rate. Monthly charges
will be applied to a single account per service. Such rates and fees
are based upon a minimum service of one call per week, irrespective
of whether there is any refuse to remove from any premises.
A landlord, property owner, property
manager or management company with multiple tenants who must share
a commercial dumpster shall be responsible for the refuse utility
bill of the tenants.
The environmental utilities director
may at his or her discretion consolidate billing accounts where service
costs are being split by two or more landlords, property owners, property
managers or management companies.
2. Commercial frontloader, rearloader, roll-off,
and automated container services are provided by the city.
An additional or extra pick up may
be requested beyond the minimum service required by this chapter.
Each such additional or extra pick up shall be subject to a fixed
fee.
Temporary commercial collection must be charged to a City of Roseville customer utility account. A “garbage only” account may be requested for temporary services. See Chapter
14.04 “Utility Customer Billing, Accounting and Collections” for information about establishing a new account.
Timeframe for Temporary Customer Service. Temporary dumpsters for commercial business use must be serviced weekly and removed within a 90-day period. It is the customer’s responsibility to schedule services. If a temporary dumpster is not emptied within seven consecutive days of its delivery or last collection, the account shall be assessed a weekly rental fee per subsection
(B)(5), Rates for Commercial Collection.
3. Multifamily residential dwellings will
not be required to recycle food waste, but will need to provide proof
to the city that other source separated organic waste such as green
waste are being recycled or diverted from the landfill in an appropriate
manner. The city can also provide green waste services, if necessary.
The city will collect all source
separated organic waste, unless a commercial business had collection
services in place before September 28, 2014, the date AB 1826 was
approved. Any commercial business with a collection contract in effect
before this date can continue with providers until the contract expires.
Once the contract expires the commercial business will default to
city collection service as provided for in this chapter.
4. An additional or special pick up may be
requested beyond the minimum service required by this chapter. Each
such additional or special pick up shall be subject to a fixed fee.
5. Rates for Commercial Collection. Effective
July 1, 2021, and July 1, 2022, the commercial rates on billings shall
be as follows:
Frontloader and Rearloader Commercial
Services*
|
Effective
7/1/2021
|
Effective
7/1/2022
|
---|
Waste service minimum monthly charge
|
$34.83
|
$40.42
|
Automated container commercial service
(per container, where available; organic waste service—see Organics
Rate Section 9.12.090.E)
|
$31.06
|
$36.05
|
Streetscape and LLD containers*
|
$10.25
|
$11.90
|
Hand pick up service* (up to three
30-gallon cans or six bags per week, where available)
|
$34.83
|
$40.42
|
Frontloader and rearloader* trash
dumpster per yard charge
|
$12.74
|
$14.79
|
Frontloader and rearloader* trash
compactor per yard charge
|
$22.96
|
$26.65
|
Frontloader cardboard dumpster and
compactor per yard charge
|
$3.91
|
$4.54
|
Commercial bin assistance (per occurrence)
|
$54.86
|
$63.67
|
Recyclable material contamination
fee (applied after third notification)
|
$30.36
|
$35.24
|
Lock delivery or replacement (per
occurrence)
|
$18.22
|
$21.15
|
Lock service (per container, per
month)
|
$12.15
|
$14.10
|
Push/pull charges (per container,
per month)
|
$18.22
|
$21.15
|
Extra pick up charge (percentage
of monthly base rate plus return trip charge)
|
25%
|
25%
|
Exchange bin (for dirty bin in excess
of 1x per 12 months)
|
$91.08
|
$105.70
|
Commercial return trip fee (applied
when service is requested but container is inaccessible; also used
to calculate commercial extra pick ups)
|
$30.36
|
$35.24
|
Emergency after-hours service fee
(per service)
|
$196.06
|
$227.53
|
Commercial standby fee (per 15 minutes
when asked by on-site customer to wait)
|
$72.86
|
$84.56
|
*
|
A premium of 25% will be added to
all rearloader services.
|
Roll-Off Commercial Open Top and
Compactor Services
|
Effective
7/1/2021
|
Effective
7/1/2022
|
---|
Minimum charge per haul (base rate)
without tonnage* (all sizes and material)
|
$379.39
|
$440.28
|
Pleasant Grove Wastewater Treatment
Plant sludge-hauling fee (per bin)
|
$267.12
|
$309.99
|
Roll-off tonnage fees (tipping fees)
|
Pass-through rates apply*
|
|
Compactor cleaning service (hauling
charges also apply)
|
$512.68
|
$594.96
|
Return trip fee (scheduled bin not
ready for haul, customer requests return later on same day—per
occurrence)
|
$36.43
|
$42.28
|
Roll-off relocation fee (no haul—per
occurrence)
|
$60.72
|
$70.47
|
*
|
Tonnage charges (tipping fees) vary
by material type, and are determined by the Western Placer Waste Management
Authority. With city department head approval, some entities may pay
tonnage charges directly to Western Placer Waste Management Authority.
|
Temporary Frontloader and Roll-Off
Fees
|
Effective
7/1/2021
|
Effective
7/1/2022
|
---|
Frontloader and rearloader temporary
dumpster delivery and removal fee
|
$75.75
|
$87.91
|
Frontloader and rearloader temporary
dumpster per yard fee (plus trip fee for extra pick ups)
|
$12.74
|
$14.79
|
Frontloader and rearloader temporary
dumpster rental fee per week
|
$72.11
|
$83.69
|
Roll-off temporary dumpster hauling
fee*
|
$379.39
|
$440.28
|
Roll-off temporary dumpster rental
fee per week
|
$130.94
|
$151.96
|
*
|
Tonnage charges (tipping fees) vary
by material type, and are determined by the Western Placer Waste Management
Authority. With city department head approval, some entities may pay
tonnage charges directly to Western Placer Waste Management Authority.
|
C. Shared Compactor Rates. Shared compactor
rates are applicable to the City of Roseville downtown specific plan
area. Exact rates are determined on a site-specific basis based on
the following criteria:
|
Cost per 1,000 square feet of building
area or per dwelling unit
|
Cost per 1,000 square feet of building
area or per dwelling unit
|
|
---|
|
Effective 7/1/2021
|
Effective 7/1/2022
|
|
---|
Below are the square footage rates
for shared compactors. If a customer’s site-specific charge
does not exceed the fixed minimum charge, they will be subject to
the monthly fixed minimum charge.
|
Monthly Minimum (Fixed)
|
$34.83
|
$40.42
|
|
Tier 1: Cost per 1,000 square feet
of building area or per dwelling unit
|
$7.28
|
$8.45
|
Tier 1 includes business types that
are determined low use by the environmental utilities director.
Typical examples of low use are retail
and office establishments and small apartment units.
|
Tier 2: Cost per 1,000 square feet
of building area
|
$29.34
|
$34.05
|
Tier 2 includes business types that
are determined medium use by the environmental utilities director.
Typical examples of medium use are
relatively smaller establishments such as bars and grills, coffee
shops and delis; selling or serving food but not considered a full-service
restaurant.
|
Tier 3: Cost per 1,000 square feet
of building area
|
$61.98
|
$71.93
|
Tier 3 includes business types that
are determined high use by the environmental utilities director. A
typical example of high use is full-service restaurants, restaurant/bakeries,
and similar establishments. Full-service restaurants are defined as
primarily dine-in establishments with established menus, and a minimum
of two meals per day (e.g., lunch and dinner).
|
D. Shared Compactor Organic Tiers. Organics
tiers are applicable to some shared compactor units depending on compactor
tier and usage type. Exact rates are determined on a site-specific
basis based on the following criteria:
Commercial Shared Compactor Organic
Tiers
|
Effective 7/1/2021
|
Effective 7/1/2022
|
---|
Tier 1
|
$0.00
|
$0.00
|
Tier 2
|
$99.50
|
$115.47
|
Tier 3
|
$198.92
|
$230.85
|
E. Rates for Commercial Organic Waste Collection.
Effective July 1, 2021 and July 1, 2022, the commercial organic waste
collection rates on billings shall be as follows:
Organic Waste Collection Rates
|
Minimum Monthly Charge (Effective
7/1/2021)
|
Minimum Monthly Charge (Effective
7/1/2022)
|
---|
0-2 yards
|
$99.50
|
$115.47
|
0-4 yards
|
$198.92
|
$230.85
|
5 yards
|
$248.66
|
$288.57
|
6 yards
|
$298.34
|
$346.22
|
7 yards
|
$348.22
|
$404.10
|
8 yards
|
$397.83
|
$461.68
|
9 yards
|
$447.52
|
$519.34
|
10 yards
|
$497.24
|
$577.04
|
11 yards
|
$547.12
|
$634.92
|
12 yards
|
$596.68
|
$692.44
|
Additional empty of organics container
|
$74.62
|
$86.60
|
Empty of contaminated organics container
|
$99.50
|
$115.47
|
Effective October 1, 2023,
the commercial organic waste collection rates on billings shall be
as follows:
Monthly Organics Cost Effective October
1, 2023
|
---|
On-Site Containers
|
Service 1x Weekly
|
Service 2x Weekly
|
Service 3x Weekly
|
Service 4x Weekly
|
Service 5x Weekly
|
---|
1st 65-gallon can
|
$48.30
|
$96.60
|
$144.90
|
$193.20
|
$241.50
|
Each additional 65-gallon can
|
$24.38
|
$48.76
|
$73.14
|
$97.52
|
$121.90
|
1st 2-cubic yard bin
|
$114.73
|
$229.46
|
$344.19
|
$458.92
|
$573.65
|
Each additional 2-cubic yard bin
|
$90.82
|
$181.64
|
$272.46
|
$363.28
|
$454.10
|
(Ord. 6501 §
1, 2022; Ord. 6659 § 3, 2023)
It is unlawful for any person to
permit solid waste, organic waste, or garbage to accumulate upon the
premises owned or occupied by such person.
(Ord. 6501 §
1, 2022)
No city employees shall remove or
dispose of, for such employee’s individual use or benefit, any
of the contents of any vessel, tank or receptacle used for the collection,
removal or disposal of solid waste, organic waste, or garbage.
(Ord. 6501 §
1, 2022)
No person shall place any wearing
apparel, bedding or other refuse from homes or other places where
highly infectious or contagious diseases have prevailed or any explosive
substance, poison, hazardous chemical, offal, or fecal matter in any
receptacle or bundle offered for collection by the city collector.
Hazardous medical waste, including, but not limited to, sharps, shall
be handled by a licensed medical waste hauler and shall not be disposed
of in materials offered for collection by the city. All items and
substances identified in this section shall be collectively referred
to and incorporated herein as “excluded waste.”
(Ord. 6501 §
1, 2022)