For the purposes of this chapter the following words and phrases shall have the meanings respectively ascribed to them by this section:
"Act"means the California Integrated Waste Management Act of 1989 (sometimes referred to as "AB 939"), Public Resources Code Division 30 (§
40000 and following as it may be amended from time to time), including, but not limited to, AB 341 (Chapter 476, Statutes of 2011), SB 1016 (Chapter 343, Statutes of 2008AB 1826 (Chapter 727, Statutes of 2014), and SB 1383 (Chapter 395, Statutes of 2016), and as implemented by the regulations of the California Department of Resources Recycling and Recovery (CalRecycle).
"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 multi-family residential dwelling that consists of fewer than five units is not a commercial business for purposes of this chapter.
"Construction and demolition debris"means commonly used or discarded materials nonhazardous in nature and generally not considered water soluble, removed from construction, remodeling, repair, demolition, or renovation operations on any pavement, house, commercial building, or other structure, or from landscaping. Such materials include, but are not limited to, dirt, sand, rock, gravel, bricks, plaster, gypsum wallboard, aluminum, glass, asphalt material, plastics, roofing material, cardboard, carpeting, cinder blocks, composite lumber, concrete, copper, electrical wire, fiberglass, formica, granite, iron, lad, linoleum, marble, plaster plant debris, pressboard, porcelain, steel, stucco, tile, vinyl, wood, masonry, rocks, trees, remnants of new materials, including paper, plastic, carpet scraps, wood scraps, scrap metal, building materials, packaging and rubble resulting from construction, remodeling, renovation, repair and demolition operations on pavement, houses, commercial buildings and other structures.
"Contractor"means the person or persons with whom the city council has entered into written agreement for the collection, transportation and disposal of refuse within the city.
"Edible food"means food intended for human consumption, or as otherwise defined in 14 CCR section
18982(a)(18). For the purposes of this chapter 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 (Part
7 of Division 104 of the California Health and Safety Code) as amended from time to time.
"Exempt waste"means biohazardous or biomedical waste, hazardous waste, medical waste, regulated radioactive waste, waste that is volatile, corrosive, or infectious, waste treatment or processing sludge, contaminated soil and dirt, contaminated concrete, contaminated asphalt, automobiles, automobile parts, boats, boat parts, boat trailers, internal combustion engines, lead-acid batteries, any matter or materials which are not acceptable for disposal at a solid waste landfill as defined in the Act and subsequent legislation, and those wastes under the control of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission.
"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 recovery either directly or through other entities or as otherwise defined in 14 CCR section
18982(a)(25), including, but not limited to:
1. A food bank as defined in section
113783 of the California Health and Safety Code;
2. A nonprofit charitable organization as defined in section
113841 of the California Health and Safety Code; and
3. A nonprofit charitable temporary food facility as defined in section
113842 of the California Health and Safety Code.
"Food recovery service"means a person or entity that collects and transports edible food from a commercial edible food generator to a food recovery organization or other entities for food recovery, or as otherwise defined in 14 CCR section
18982(a)(26).
"Food service provider"means an entity primarily engaged in providing food services to institutional, governmental, commercial, or industrial locations of others based on contractual arrangements with these types of organizations, or as otherwise defined in 14 CCR section
18982(a)(27).
"Food waste"mean food scraps and trimmings and other putrescible waste that result from food production, preparation, cooking, storage, consumption or handling. Food waste includes, but is not limited to: meat, fish and dairy waste; fruit and vegetable waste; grain waste; and food contaminated paper products. Food waste does not include exempt waste.
"Garbage"means all putrescible and non-putrescible solid, semisolid and associated liquid waste. Garbage does not include recyclable material, organic waste, large items, or exempt waste.
"High diversion organic waste processing facility"means a facility that is in compliance with the reporting requirements of 14 CCR section
18815.5(d) and meets or exceeds an annual average mixed waste organic content recovery rate of fifty percent between January 1, 2022 and December 31, 2024, and seventy-five percent after January 1, 2025, as calculated pursuant to 14 CCR section
18815.5(e) for organic waste received from the "mixed waste organic collection stream" as defined in 14 CCR section
17402(a)(11.5); or as otherwise defined in 14 CCR section
18982(a)(33).
"Large event"means an event, including, but not limited to, a sporting event or a flea market, that charges an admission price, or is operated by a local agency, and serves an average of more than two thousand individuals per day of operation of the event, at a location that includes, but is not limited to, a public, nonprofit, or privately owned park, parking lot, golf course, street system, or other open space when being used for an event.
"Large venue"means a permanent venue facility that annually seats or serves an average of more than two thousand individuals within the grounds of the facility per day of operation of the venue facility. For purposes of this chapter and implementation of
14 CCR, Division 7, Chapter 12, a venue facility includes, but is not limited to, a public, nonprofit, or privately owned or operated stadium, amphitheater, arena, hall, amusement park, conference or civic center, zoo, aquarium, airport, racetrack, horse track, performing arts center, fairground, museum, theater, or other public attraction facility. For purposes of this chapter and implementation of
14 CCR, Division 7, Chapter 12, a site under common ownership or control that includes more than one large venue that is contiguous with other large venues in the site, is a single large venue.
"Mandatory collection service"means that the collection of solid waste by the contractor shall be mandatory for all single-family homes, mobile homes, duplexes, multi-family residential complexes, commercial establishments (generating solid waste), restaurants, bars, nightclubs, eating houses, boarding houses, or other buildings or facilities where meals are furnished and generating solid waste.
"Multi-family residential dwelling"means of, from, or pertaining to residential premises with five or more dwelling units. Multi-Family premises do not include hotels, motels, or other transient occupancy facilities, which are considered commercial businesses.
"Organic waste"means solid wastes containing material originated from living organisms and their metabolic waste products, including, but not limited to, food waste, green material, landscape and pruning waste, organic textiles and carpets, lumber, wood, paper products, printing and writing paper, manure, biosolids, digestate, and sludges or as otherwise defined in 14 CCR section
18982(a)(46).
"Organic waste processing facility"means any facility selected by the city's contractor that is designed, approved by the city, or specifically designated by the city, operated and legally permitted for the purpose of receiving and processing organic waste.
"Prohibited container contaminants"means: (1) discarded materials placed in the designated recycling container that are not identified as acceptable source separated recyclable materials for the city's designated recycling container; (2) 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; and (3) discarded materials placed in the garbage container that are acceptable source separated recyclable materials and/or source separated organic wastes to be placed in city's designated organic waste container and/or designated recycling container.
"Property"means each address or unit located on a parcel, each of which shall be responsible for providing and maintaining its own solid waste receptacles and contract with the contractor for the collection of solid waste, except as otherwise provided in this chapter.
"Recyclable material"means those materials that may be capable of being recycled using available processes and markets and which would otherwise be processed or disposed of as garbage. Recyclable materials may be sorted, cleaned, treated or reconstituted and returned 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. When mandatory recycling programs are in place, and for the purposes of this chapter, designated recyclable materials shall include the following:
1. "Glass bottles and jars"means food and beverage glass containers including container glass covered by the California deposit law and excluding household and kitchen containers such as drinking glasses, cups, cooking and serving dishes.
2. "Metal"means recoverable aluminum, tin, and bimetal materials such as used beverage containers, siding, and other recyclable manufactured metal items.
4. "Office paper"means waste paper grades of white and colored ledgers. Examples include forms, copy paper, stationery, and other papers that are generally associated with desk activity.
5. "Plastic beverage bottles"means plastic containers with narrow necks, or mouth openings smaller than the diameter of the container bottles used for containing milk, juice, soft drinks or water intended for human consumption; to be distinguished from nonfood bottles such as those containing motor oil, detergent or other household products.
6. "Cardboard"means uncoated paperboard, such as cereal boxes, food and snack boxes, or uncoated old corrugated containers.
"Residential premises"shall mean any property that is used for residential housing purposes and has four or fewer distinct living units.
"Responsible occupant"means and includes the owner, tenant, person in possession of, the inhabitant of, or a person who has the care and control of real property.
"SB 1383"means Senate Bill 1383 of 2016 approved by the Governor on September 19, 2016, which added sections 39730.5, 39730.6, 39730.7, and 39730.8 to the
California Health and Safety Code, and added Chapter 13.1 (commencing with section 42652) to the Act.
"Self-hauler"means a generator that collects solid waste at their premises or place of business for the purpose of hauling those materials in their own vehicles to a permitted solid waste facility in compliance with the requirements of this chapter.
"Solid waste"means all putrescible and nonputrescible solid, semisolid, and liquid wastes, including garbage, trash, refuse, paper, rubbish, ashes, industrial wastes, construction and demolition wastes, abandoned vehicles and parts thereof, tires, 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 all as provided in section 40191 of the Act, as may be amended from time to time.
"Tier one commercial edible food generator"means a commercial edible food generator that is one of the following:
1. Supermarkets with gross annual sales of two million dollars or more;
2. Grocery store with a total facility size equal to or greater than ten thousand square feet;
4. Wholesale food vendor; or
"Tier two commercial edible food generator"means a commercial edible food generator that is one of the following:
1. Restaurant with two hundred fifty or more seats, or a total facility size equal to or greater than five thousand square feet;
2. Hotel with an on-site food facility and two hundred or more rooms;
3. Health facility with an on-site food facility and one hundred or more beds;
6. A state agency with a cafeteria with two hundred fifty or more seats or total cafeteria facility size equal to or greater than five thousand square feet; or
7. A local education agency facility with an on-site food facility.
(Ord. 5114 § 2, 2022)