No new cans any time soon
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Jennifer Kho
COSTA MESA -- A Costa Mesa Sanitary District board decision about a
proposed program to standardize trash cans throughout the city still
appears to be months away.
Board member Dan Worthington said earlier this week he expected the
board to make a preliminary decision at Thursday’s special meeting about
whether to commit money to the plan.
“We’re just studying this thing to death,” Worthington said after the
meeting. “We’re right there, but we just need to decide that the city’s
needs are important enough to go forward with this and not struggle any
longer. It’s time to call for the question.”
But board President Arlene Schafer said the board could not legally
make any decisions at the meeting because it was designated as a study
session.
The earliest meeting at which such a decision could be made is April
12, because a public hearing and a financial presentation are scheduled
for the board’s next meeting on March 8.
The issue will require at least one more study session after the March
meeting, Schafer said.
The program, if it is eventually passed, will give residents their
choice of standard 35-gallon, 60-gallon or 90-gallon cans free of charge.
Residents also will have the option of getting additional cans.
The sanitary district has been working on the program for more than
two years.
District board members say the change -- which would allow Costa Mesa
Disposable to pick up the cans using a semiautomatic trash truck arm,
keeping its now-skyrocketing insurance rates down and, in turn, holding
the city’s rates flat -- will beautify the city, protect workers and help
to keep rates stable.
Some residents have opposed the plan, saying Costa Mesa Disposal will
get the benefits and they will be inconvenienced because they will have
to store the city’s containers and the hauler will eventually stop
picking up trash that doesn’t fit in the containers.
Worthington said there will be an educational period of at least a
year when the hauler the board decides on will continue to pick up trash
left out of the containers.
Schafer said the board does not know if the hauler will pick up extra
trash after that time, because it is considering three different types of
standardized trash can programs.
Each will require a different hauler program, she said.
Gary Kempinsky, a Mesa Verde resident, is among those concerned about
the program.
Kempinsky said he’s bothered that people have not been better
notified.
“The thing that bothers me most of all is we weren’t informed,” he
said. “People should have been notified because this is a big thing. I
don’t want to stop progress, but I do want more thought to go into it.
The [board] has been having meetings at noon, which means many of us
can’t go, and I think the program could be tough on some of us. I am in a
wheelchair, and my wife has a bad back. She couldn’t handle the 90-gallon
barrels, but if we take 30s, we won’t be able to fit everything in them
and they might not pick them up.”
Mesa North resident Ernie Feeney said she is frustrated with the board
and thinks the program is a “done deal.”
“I still have concerns that haven’t been addressed,” she said. “They
act like everything is up in the air, but I don’t understand why they’re
playing this game when I think they’ve already made up their minds to do
this. I don’t think they would have wasted two years on this if they
hadn’t already made up their minds to do it. When they speak about it,
they don’t say, ‘If we decide to do this.’ They are getting down to what
containers, what pricing, how to do the phasing. . . . If it’s not a done
deal, why would they do that?”
Schafer said the board did make a preliminary decision to try to
develop a citywide standardized trash can program of some sort more than
a year ago, after the district concluded a successful pilot program in
two of the city’s neighborhoods.
“We made the decision to do the pilot program on a trial basis because
we needed to just see if it works,” she said. “Then we voted 5 to 0 to go
forward with the idea of going citywide, but we have made no decision
since then. All we’ve been doing is studying the idea. What we came up
with is three different companies with three different programs, which
are still being worked out, and we can choose one or the other, or
nothing at all.”
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