A.
The purpose of this chapter is to reduce the amount of organic and recyclable materials deposited in landfills from commercial and residential generators. This chapter seeks to provide a single comprehensive framework to achieve its purposes and comply with various state laws as set forth below.
B.
The city has the power to enact this chapter pursuant to its police powers.
C.
State recycling law, Assembly Bill 939 of 1989, the California Integrated Waste Management Act of 1989 (approved by the Governor of the state of California on September 29, 1989, which among other things, added Division 30 (Section 40000, et seq.) to the Public Resources Code, as amended, supplemented, superseded, and replaced from time to time), requires cities and counties to reduce, reuse, and recycle (including composting) solid waste generated in their jurisdictions to the maximum extent feasible before any incineration or landfill disposal of waste, to conserve water, energy, and other natural resources, and to protect the environment.
D.
State recycling law, Assembly Bill 341 of 2011 (approved by the Governor of the state of California on October 5, 2011, which amended Sections 41730, 41731, 41734, 41735, 41736, 41800, 42926, 44004, and 50001 of, and added Sections 40004, 41734.5, and 41780.01 and Chapter 12.8 (commencing with Section 42649) to Part 3 of Division 30 of, and added and repealed Section 41780.02 of, the Public Resources Code, as amended, supplemented, superseded and replaced from time to time), places requirements on businesses and multifamily property owners that generate a specified threshold amount of solid waste to arrange for recycling service and requires jurisdictions to implement a mandatory commercial recycling program.
E.
State organics recycling law, Assembly Bill 1826 of 2014 (approved by the Governor of the state of California on September 28, 2014, which added Chapter 12.9 (commencing with Section 42649.8) to Part 3 of Division 30 of the Public Resources Code, relating to solid waste, as amended, supplemented, superseded, and replaced from time to time), requires businesses and multifamily property owners that generate a specified threshold amount of solid waste, recycling, and organic waste per week to arrange for recycling service for those materials, and requires counties and cities to implement a recycling program to divert organic waste from businesses subject to the law, and to implement a mandatory commercial organics recycling program.
F.
State organics recycling law, Senate Bill 1383 of 2016, the Short-Lived Climate Pollutant Reduction Act of 2016 (approved by the Governor of the state of California on September 19, 2016, which added Sections 39730.5, 39730.6, and 39730.8 to the Health and Safety Code, and added Chapter 13.1 (commencing with Section 42652) to Part 3 of Division 30 of the Public Resources Code, as amended, supplemented, superseded, and replaced from time to time), took effect on January 1, 2017, and sets statewide organic waste disposal reduction targets of 50 percent by 2020 and 75 percent by 2025, based on the 2014 organics waste disposal baseline, set forth in Section 39730.6 of the Health and Safety Code, and requires CalRecycle to develop regulations to reduce organics in landfills as a source of methane. The SB 1383 regulations place requirements on multiple entities, including counties, cities, residential households, commercial businesses (including multifamily residential dwellings), commercial edible food generators, haulers, self-haulers, food recovery organizations, and food recovery services to support achievement of statewide organic waste disposal reduction targets with compliance required beginning January 1, 2022.
G.
In furtherance of the food recovery objectives of the laws noted above and to reduce legal risks associated with food recovery, the state food donation law, Assembly Bill 1219 of 2017, the California Good Samaritan Food Donation Act of 2017 (approved by the Governor of the state of California on October 9, 2017, which amended Section 1714.25 of the Civil Code, amended Section 58502 of, and repealed Section 58506 of, the Food and Agricultural Code, and amended Sections 114432, 114433, and 114434 of, and added Section 114435 to, the Health and Safety Code, as amended, supplemented, superseded and replaced from time to time), provides additional protections for entities that donate and distribute food for human consumption.
H.
By January 1, 2022, the SB 1383 regulations require jurisdictions to adopt and enforce an ordinance or other enforceable mechanism to implement relevant provisions of the SB 1383 regulations concerning regulation of organic waste collection services, generators of organic waste, waste haulers, and generators and processors of edible food, together with enforcement mechanisms and administrative civil penalties for violations of local regulations.
(Ord. 2022-755 § 1)