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Waste Hauling & Recycling Proposals City Council Workshop July 22, 2019 1 ---PAGE BREAK--- Background Dec. 10, 2018: Arvada Sustainability Advisory Committee presentation to Council Jan. 18, 2019: During annual retreat Council requested additional information including potential implementation timeline of waste hauling options Feb. 11, 2019: Workshop with City Council March - May 2019: Outreach and Survey May 13, 2019: Workshop with City Council May 24, 2019: RFP goes live June 27, 2019: Proposals received 2 ---PAGE BREAK--- Why Consider Change? An organized waste hauling system can: Improve Arvada’s low recycling rates Decrease road damage Decrease noise nuisance and air pollution Provide additional services (recycle, bulk item pick up) Increase safety for pedestrians, kids, pets, vehicles Lower costs to residents or provide additional services 3 ---PAGE BREAK--- Most important reasons to take action 4 ---PAGE BREAK--- 5 Timeline Dates City Council workshop Feb. 11 Hire consulting firm(s) to help evaluate process, RFP components, RFP responses and craft community education and engagement March 31 Community engagement through Speak Up Arvada and other means through full implementation in July 2020- a specific engagement plan for each phase of the process will be created Feb. 2019 to July 2020 Hauler outreach, individual meetings with 9 residential haulers Late April Workshop with City Council- sharing community and consultant input on RFP components May 13 Refine RFP scope based on community engagement and council consideration May 2019 RFP goes live late May Proposals due late June Proposal evaluation July Council workshop to present proposals July/August Community engagement related to proposals/Advisory question Aug. /Sept. / Oct. Possible advisory question set for ballot late August Preparation of Ordinance December 2019 First reading of ordinance, public hearing and approval Early 2020 Hauler contract approved 1st quarter 2020 Implementation timeline established 1st quarter 2020 Community education regarding implementation/timeline Ongoing in 2020 Order carts and establish billing process 1st quarter 2020 Households select program components, container size/cart deployment Mid 2020 Begin implementation / Four month roll out Late 2020 ---PAGE BREAK--- RFP Responses Overview 6 ---PAGE BREAK--- Services requested Trash: Weekly, volume-based pricing Recycling: Biweekly, included in price Composting: Optional weekly food/yard debris Bulky: Quarterly bulky item collection or as defined by haulers Opt-out option w/ basic fee and bulky services still offered 7 ---PAGE BREAK--- RFP options Customer service handled by hauler Option to sub-contract services Contract: 3 year contract with two 2-year renewal options Households: ~32,000 Districts or citywide Options for carts, billing ---PAGE BREAK--- RFP results overview ● Four haulers responded ● Haulers able to provide all requested services ● Range of prices for all services → NOTE: PRICING AND SERVICE TERMS ARE PROPRIETARY UNTIL CONTRACT IS AWARDED. ALL RESULTS WILL BE DISCUSSED IN GENERAL. 9 ---PAGE BREAK--- What residents like best about their hauler Price was most important quality 10 ---PAGE BREAK--- Important qualities for choosing hauler Even split for four top criteria 11 Evaluation of proposals focused on these topics ---PAGE BREAK--- Proposed household rates (w/o billing) 12 opts out, bulky item only (base rate) $2 - $8 32 gal trash cart, 96 gal recycling, bulky item $11 - $18 64 gal trash cart, 96 gal recycling, bulky item (assume 50% of Households choose this size) $15 - $24 96 gal trash cart, 96 gal recycling, bulky item $20 - $33 32 gal trash cart, 96 gal recycling, 96 gal composting, bulky item $22 - $43 ---PAGE BREAK--- Customer service overview Several haulers offered local call center Protocols for weather-related delays and customer notification Additional services: ● App ● Sample educational materials ● Implementation plans 13 ---PAGE BREAK--- Districts vs. citywide services Several haulers proposed same prices in districts vs. citywide Slight savings from two haulers Additional staff time to manage costs Different customer service 14 Recommended next step: Contract with one hauler for citywide services ---PAGE BREAK--- Volume-based pricing or one trash rate PROS: Volume-based pricing ● Proven strategy to increase recycling, reduce trash ● Allows residents to choose their own costs ● Cheaper 15 PROS: One trash rate ● Simplified billing Recommended next step: Prefer volume-based rates to increase recycling, provide lower cost options ---PAGE BREAK--- Carts: City or hauler purchases Variation in hauler pricing: costs ● $0.77 - $2.70: 32 gallons ● $1.54 - $3.58: 96 gallons Benefits of city purchasing: ● Capitalize over 10-year period ● Grants available for recycling carts ● Potentially lower financing 16 Recommended next step: Staff explore financing options, ask cart vendors for pricing ---PAGE BREAK--- Billing option: City billing or hauler Hauler-provided: ● to $5.95/quarterly ● $1.10 - City-provided: ● • Includes 2 FTE • hardware, software, payment processing fees ● 12-24 month implementation 17 Recommended next step: City provides billing ---PAGE BREAK--- Opportunities for further public involvement 18 The City’s next steps for community engagement around this topic are dependent on the outcomes of this workshop. For example: ● The current plan includes engaging the community about the options outlined in the proposals to provide more feedback that would inform selection and negotiation with a hauler. ● However, if Council decides to have an advisory ballot measure, staff will continue to provide general information about the project through the election ---PAGE BREAK--- Draft ballot advisory question NON-BINDING 19 ---PAGE BREAK--- Discussion Topics to Inform Next Steps 20 1. Advisory question 2. Districts 3. Volume based pricing 4. Customer Service 5. Additional services 6. Billing 7. Carts ---PAGE BREAK--- Questions, Comments, Feedback? 21