KITSAP COUNTY SOLID WASTE ADVISORY COMMITTEE City of Bremerton Utilities Building 100 Oyster Bay Ave N Bremerton, WA 98312 January 10, 2018 4:00 PM AGENDA APPROVAL OF AGENDA APPROVAL OF MINUTES CORRESPONDENCE KCPW Election of Officers Review of By-laws 2018 Work Plan OVTS/RAGF Rate Study ROUND TABLE DISCUSSION PUBLIC COMMENTS
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KITSAP COUNTY SOLID WASTE ADVISORY …...KITSAP COUNTY SOLID WASTE ADVISORY COMMITTEE City of Bremerton Utilities Building 100 Oyster Bay Ave N Bremerton, WA 98312 January 10, 2018
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KITSAP COUNTY SOLID WASTE ADVISORY COMMITTEE
City of Bremerton Utilities Building
100 Oyster Bay Ave N Bremerton, WA 98312
January 10, 2018 4:00 PM
AGENDA
APPROVAL OF AGENDA
APPROVAL OF MINUTES
CORRESPONDENCE
KCPW
Election of Officers
Review of By-laws
2018 Work Plan
OVTS/RAGF Rate Study ROUND TABLE DISCUSSION PUBLIC COMMENTS
SOLID WASTE ADVISORY COMMITTEE (SWAC)
MEETING MINUTES
January 10, 2018
Those present: Regional/Cities: City of Bainbridge Island – Diane Landry, City of
Bremerton – Wayne Hamilton, City of Poulsbo – Shannon Wood, North Kitsap –
Douglas Chamberlain, Central Kitsap – John Poppe, South Kitsap – Eric Lenius;
Organics Management: Jeff West; Commercial: Bill Rich, Laura Kneib; Industry: Waste
Management – Laura Moser; Suquamish Tribe – Jaime Lawrence
KCPW SWD: Pat Campbell, John Steinmetz, Barbara Bricker
KPHD: Jan Brower
Those Absent: Regional/Cities: City of Port Orchard – Stephanie Bailey; Agriculture:
APPROVAL OF THE MINUTES – December meeting minutes approved.
CORRESPONDENCE – No correspondence to report.
KCPW
Introduction of New SWAC Members –
Pat introduced the new commercial representative Bill Rich from Kitsap Transit and
alternate Laura Kneib, owner of F.R.O.G. Soap.
Election of Officers – Motion made and seconded to retain Stephanie Bailey as Chairperson and John Poppe as Vice-Chair. All members in favor. Motion carried. Bylaws Reviewed – Pat pointed out minor errors in the current adopted bylaws;
specifically, in Article 2, the number of members was not changed to fifteen when the
agricultural representative was added, though the list of members is correct and does
add up to fifteen; on Page 5, the most recent approval date is not listed. These seem
not to warrant Board approval at this time, but will be noted for inclusion in next revision.
Motion made by Jeff West and second by Eric Lenius to adopt SWAC Bylaws as
presented for 2018. All members in favor. Motion carried.
2018 Work Plan Draft Discussion – An annual work plan is requested by the Board for all advisory boards. Pat identified the following priorities for SWAC discussion:
Carryover from last year:
OVTS/RAGF Rate Structure Recommendations
Formal adoption and implementation of Solid and Hazardous Waste Management Plan
Finalize Disaster Debris Management Plan New this year:
Investigate Plastic Bag Ban
Tours/Meeting Suggestions for 2018:
Tours to Columbia Ridge and JMK
Jeff West mentioned open house and tour of new compost site at Olympic Organics tentatively in April.
Doug suggested a tour of the newly remodeled King County Transfer Station in downtown Seattle.
Diane suggested attending WSRA - WRED events.
Doug suggested a representative from a jurisdiction where the plastic bag ban has been implemented to speak at a meeting about challenges and successes.
Jeff suggested learning about the use of compostable bags and the challenges from Seattle.
Questions/Comments
Jan Bower added the Secure Medicine Return Ordinance Implementation to begin March 1. SWAC may be asked to comment on outreach materials. KPHD is coordinating a celebration for the finished Bremerton Auto Wrecking Landfill Remediation project, to be held in April. SWAC members will receive invitations. Jan asked what the schedule is for the HHW facility to be located in the north end area of Kitsap County. Pat responded that the Road Division is the lead on acquiring a site and they are looking at sites but nothing is expected to be ready until 2019. Diane Landry asked about adding Pre-consumer Food Waste Diversion. Pat responded that she would discuss with Chris but may not be able to be included, with so many other priorities identified for this year Pat announced the Poulsbo Recycle Center officially sold as of December 15, 2017. The funds will go to the Solid Waste Capital Improvement account.
Meeting Schedule: SWAC members agreed to continue to schedule monthly meetings, recognizing that meeting frequency may be reduced later in the year to every other month. Pat Campbell – OVTS/RAGF Rate Study (Handout and PowerPoint Presentation included) Questions/Comments Was there a change in the number of one-can customers at the RAGFs after the previous rate increase? Pat – There was a small difference at first but there are still a lot of one-can customers. What is the expected implementation date for the new rates? Pat – We are aiming for July 1, 2018. Where does the 3.6% SW collection tax go? Pat – It is a state tax and goes to the Washington State Public Works trust fund. SWAC recommends moving forward with the proposed OVTS fees, OVTS special fees, the OVTS minimum fee staying the same at $22.00 and the RAGF loose and can rates as presented. Motion made by Doug Chamberlain and second by Eric Lenius. All members in favor. Motion carried.
ROUND TABLE DISCUSSION
Jeff West – 2017 was a busy year for Olympic Organics recycling and composting. In
2018 we are moving forward with an expansion of the Olympic Organics facility and are
acquiring a sort line and buildings for taking construction and demolition materials.
There will be an open house for the retail outlet opening in East Bremerton sometime in
April, and a soft opening for sales starting this month. Jeff is working nationally on the
development of compostable products.
Diane Landry – Reminder of the Styrofoam and CD collection at Bay Hay and Feed on
Bainbridge Island Jan. 20 & 21.
Jan Brower – KPHD’s Grant Holdcroft has left Solid and Hazardous Waste to accept the position of PIC (Pollution Identification and Control) Program Manager for the shoreline, lake and stream monitoring program.
Pat Campbell –
The Styrofoam collection event held in December was a great success, and we are
planning more collections in the future. Thank you to Diane Landry and Laura Kneib
for volunteering at the event. There were approximately 340 customers and 160
cubic yards of Styrofoam was collected.
The Solid and Hazardous Waste Management Plan adoptions are complete in
Poulsbo, Bainbridge and Port Orchard with the others to be finished soon. When all
the presentations are done it will go to the Board of County Commissioners for
adoption. This should be in February. The March SWAC meeting will include the
State-required meeting of local stakeholders responsible for the Waste
Reduction/Recycling element of the Plan,
ADJOURNMENT
There being no further business the meeting adjourned 5:30 pm.
NEXT MEETING
The next meeting is tentatively scheduled for Feb. 7, 2018 at 4 pm.
KITSAP COUNTY PUBLIC WORKS SOLID WASTE DIVISION
SOLID WASTE ADVISORY COMMITTEE (SWAC)
OLYMPIC VIEW TRANSFER STATION / RECYCLING AND GARBAGE FACITILY
RATE PROPOSALS, 2018 – 2021
JANUARY 10, 2018
During the December 2017 discussion of rate-setting options at Olympic View Transfer Station
(OVTS), SWAC members raised several questions concerning the three options presented. Based
on that discussion, staff has reviewed the information previously presented, corrected errors that
were noted, and, as requested, prepared a summary of pros and cons of cash- vs. bond-funded
capital projects.
In using the projected revenue requirements over the next four years to develop rates for OVTS,
a calculation error was discovered. Specifically, the annual funding requirements for Kitsap
Nuisance Abatement Team (KNAT), Kitsap Public Health District (KPHD), and the new Rate
Stability Fund were inadvertently added as increases over the previous years’ requirements,
rather than as what was needed in the individual subsequent years. A corrected table
summarizing the projected revenue requirement for each of the options is presented below:
PROJECTED REVENUE REQUIREMENT (per ton) – NOTE: revised from 12/6/17
CURRENT TIPPING FEE = $71.00/ton 2018 2019 2020 2021 OPTION 1: Rate Stability Reserve Fund Balance achieved in 4 years; Capital Projects cash funded
$83.62 $97.19 $115.16 $121.33
OPTION 2: Rate Stability Reserve Fund Balance achieved in 8 years; Bonds issued for Capital Projects
$80.24 $81.47 $83.39 $86.00
OPTION 3: Rate Stability Reserve Fund Balance achieved in 12 years; Bonds issued for Capital Projects
$79.68 $80.93 $82.85 $85.47
With this correction, there is a negligible difference between Options 2 and 3, but Option 1 would
require an approximate 70% increase over the current $71 per ton by the year 2021. SWAC has
requested additional information on the advantages and disadvantages of using cash vs. issuing
bonds for capital projects. A general summary of the pros and cons of each option is shown
below.
CASH VS. BOND FINANCING FOR SOLID WASTE CAPITAL PROJECTS
CASH Pros Cons
No ongoing user fee collections for the project after construction
Project costs must be collected upfront - before start of project
Paid for up front - no ongoing debt service Higher user fees increases to accumulate needed cash up front
Frees up County’s General Obligation debt capacity for other uses
May be politically unpopular due to need for rapid fee increase
Lower overall project costs - no debt issue costs, debt service costs
Opportunity cost - lost investment income
User fees are increased rapidly, usually not decreased in the future
BONDS Pros Cons
County has the General Obligation debt capacity Higher project costs - debt service interest and bond issuance costs
Cash will be immediately available for the project Debt service and reporting over a longer period of time
User fee assessment for debt service over a longer period of time = smaller user fee increase
Ongoing user fee assessment for debt service for life of bond
Cost can be spread over the life of the asset; those who use the asset in the future are paying for it
Given the magnitude of the needed increase to cash-fund the capital projects planned in the next
six years, staff recommends issuing bonds for these projects in 2019, in conjunction with the
Road Division or other County departments to minimize administrative costs. SWAC discussion
in December seemed to generally also favor Option 2. This option has been used to calculate
rates over the four year period, averaging out the yearly increase needed to generate the total
revenue over the four year period. Attachment 1 contains spreadsheets with details of how these
figures were calculated.
PROPOSED OVTS FEES FOR MSW
2018 2019 2020 2021 Projected revenue requirement per ton MSW $80.24 $81.47 $83.39 $86.00
PROPOSED FEES (per ton MSW) (Current tipping fee is $71.00/ton)
$75.00 $80.00 $85.00 $90.00
Annual % increase 5.63% 6.67% 6.25% 5.88%
RECYCLING AND GARBAGE FACILITY (RAGF) PROPOSED RATES
Based on expenditure projections through 2021, allocating fixed (customer-related) and variable
(tonnage-related) costs (using the per ton allocation of the proposed OVTS tipping fees
developed above) for “can customers” and “loose load customers”, and rounding up or down to
make cash transactions easier for attendants and customers, the proposed RAGF rates are shown
below. Detailed spreadsheets showing calculations are included as Attachment 2.
PROPOSED RAGF FEES FOR MSW Proposed Fees Current 2018 2019 2020 2021