San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

BOARD RAISES TRASH COLLECTION FEES FOR UNINCORPOR­ATED AREAS

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In a 4-1 vote, the Board of Supervisor­s on May 10 approved hikes to trash collection fees throughout Riverside County’s unincorpor­ated communitie­s, amounting to about 8 percent in additional costs that will be tacked on to residents’ bills, beginning in July.

The board authorized acrossthe-board hikes sought by the four waste haulers under contract with the county — Burrtec Waste, CR&R Inc., Desert Valley Disposal and Waste Management Inc.

According to Department of Environmen­tal Health Director Jeff Johnson, the adjustment­s are necessary to keep pace with inflation, which federal consumer price data showed jumping 8.6 percent between January 2021 and January 2022 in the region. The waste haulers are permitted to seek rate adjustment­s every year based on rising landfill, transporta­tion and other costs.

Only Supervisor Kevin Jeffries opposed the increases, expressing a desire to lessen the impact of the fee adjustment­s by splitting their implementa­tion into two separate six-month periods. When he inquired of the Office of County Counsel whether that might be feasible, he was told the terms of the haulers’ contracts made it complicate­d, and that a one-time adjustment was effectivel­y required.

“That’s a good reason for these contracts to be renegotiat­ed,” Jeffries said. “This takes away our discretion.”

The county has put the waste haulers on notice that their franchise contracts are due to be terminated in six years, which Jeffries said is necessary to have some bargaining power in negotiatin­g better rates.

“We should do our best to minimize (the impacts) of these costs,” the supervisor said.

Last month, Supervisor Karen Spiegel expressed analogous sentiments, noting that galloping inflation had created “trying financial times” that demanded the board do “what’s best on behalf of our residents.” She said based on that, a study session should have been convened ahead of any hearings on hiking waste collection rates.

Despite her previous opposition to holding the hearing on the fee increases, Spiegel voted with the majority to hike rates.

The Burrtec hike will boost customers’ monthly rates from an average $26.60 to $28.07. Residents serviced by CR&R will see their bills go up from between $27.37 and $39.34, to between $29.64 and $42.65.

Desert Valley Disposal customers will go from paying an average $27.49 to $29.52, and Waste Management’s new fee structure will increase from between $23.36 and $26.16, to between $25.37 and $28.41 per month for residentia­l collection­s, according to the Department of Environmen­tal Health.

Waste collection for the county occurs in defined “franchise areas,” which currently number 11 and encompass communitie­s such as Bermuda Dunes, Cabazon, Desert Center, East Hemet, French Valley, Lakeland Village, Nuevo, Thermal, Thousand Palms and Winchester. Most of the existing franchise agreements have been in place since the 1990s.

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