The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Gwinnett may charge more to recycle, limit items to four categories

- By Arielle Kass akass@ajc.com

A group of Gwinnett County trash haulers has asked the county to renegotiat­e their contracts in order to both reduce the number of recyclable materials they pick up and charge to collect them.

The county approved agreements in December 2017 that don’t expire until 2026 and were meant, in part, to encourage more recycling. But in a meeting with county commission­ers, the haulers said the cost of recycling — which is currently free for residents — has risen. They said they need to add a surcharge in order to sustain it.

And the haulers have asked that any cost increases be retroactiv­e to Jan. 1.

“If you want to continue to do the right thing with recycling, it’s going to cost more money,” said Brad Martin, Republic Service’s municipal services manager for northeast Georgia.

There are nearly 197,000 solid waste customers in the unincorpor­ated parts of the county who would be affected by any changes. Some haulers said they have made similar requests in the cities as well.

Commission­ers haven’t yet decided whether to take up the haulers’ request, which comes as China, which takes a number of recyclable materials, has drasticall­y reduced its intake.

“The result is unsustaina­ble losses for processors,” said Steve Edwards, Advanced Disposal’s gov

ernmental affairs manager for Georgia.

Other local communitie­s have also struggled with recycling over the years. DeKalb County and other jurisdicti­ons eliminated glass recycling as part of what they picked up and processed, and Clarkston this year eliminated curbside recycling entirely. Gwinnett Clean & Beautiful closed its own recycling bank in 2016.

Martin, Edwards and others said they wouldn’t encourage Gwinnett to stop collecting recycling entirely, but they did think changes had to be made.

For starters, they want to reduce the number of recyclable items. Now, residents can put CD cases, aspirin bottles, straws and shampoo bottles into their 65-gallon recycling bins, along with aerosol cans, paperback books and shoe boxes. But the cost to process many of those materials is high, and Martin said the haulers would rather limit recyclable­s to four key categories: corrugated cardboard, mixed paper, aluminum cans and plastics with the numbers 1 and 2 on the bottom. Those are primarily soda and water bottles and milk, juice, butter and yogurt containers.

With so many recycling options, he said, residents often put items in their bins that aren’t recyclable.

That contaminat­es the recycling stream. The cost to remove contaminan­ts is high. And while there used to be a market for a wide range of materials, which the haulers would sell, that market has shrunk dramatical­ly. Now, Martin said, haulers have to pay for some of the materials to be taken away.

“The material we’re picking up at the curb has no value,” Martin said. “We can’t operate trucks for recycling for a loss.”

He and others are asking for rate increases that they said would amount to $7 to $9 a year per household for residents to continue recycling. The contract that went into effect in July 2018 meant a $15 annual savings on trash and recycling pickup for residents.

The haulers are asking for a variable price, so they can charge more if their own costs rise and reduce the price for residents if recycling once again becomes profitable. There’s a similar provision in the agreement for fuel costs.

If the county was unwilling to negotiate, the haulers said, they might use a clause in their contract regarding outside forces to compel commission­ers to help them.

“You’re looking at litigation,” Gwinnett Commission Chairman Charlotte Nash observed.

Commission­er Tommy Hunter said he thought the haulers were justified in asking for the increase.

“I think it’s a reaction to the facts,” he said. “These companies can’t just do something for free.”

Neill Herring, a lobbyist for the Georgia chapter of the Sierra Club, said he thought the haulers would have to prove they were actually recycling materials — and not throwing them away — if they were going to charge for the service.

“I’m not sure you’re getting anything for the money except a promise,” he said. “It’s very opportunis­tic on their part.”

Laura Hernandez, a county resident who founded Gwinnett Recycles, said she thinks the county and the companies could better educate people about what they can and cannot recycle. Once that’s done, she said, maybe a rate increase can be considered. But first, more effort needs to be made to reduce the costs by eliminatin­g contaminan­ts.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? For now, Gwinnett residents can put CD cases, aspirin bottles, straws and shampoo bottles in their 65-gallon recycling bins, along with aerosol cans, paperbacks and shoe boxes.
CONTRIBUTE­D For now, Gwinnett residents can put CD cases, aspirin bottles, straws and shampoo bottles in their 65-gallon recycling bins, along with aerosol cans, paperbacks and shoe boxes.

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