A1 ADMINISTRATIVE REPORT Date: May 7, 1996 Dept. File: 4600 TO: Vancouver City Council FROM: General Manager of Engineering Services SUBJECT: Refuse Disposal Fees RECOMMENDATION A. THAT the refuse disposal fees for disposal of solid waste at the Vancouver South Transfer Station and Vancouver Landfill be established as shown in Appendix A, effective July 1, 1996. B. THAT $4,500 be provided from the Residential Drop-off (RDO) fee revenues for the publicizing of the RDO fees. C. THAT the Director of Legal Services be instructed to bring forward the necessary By-law amendments. COUNCIL POLICY Council has set the Vancouver commercial tipping fee equal to the Regional tipping fee. Council has set residential drop-off (RDO) fees on a cost recovery basis at the Vancouver Landfill and the Vancouver South Transfer Station. The RDO fees have been set at a rate less than the commercial tipping fees. PURPOSE This report recommends lowering Vancouver's commercial tipping fee, increasing the RDO fees for truck and trailer loads at the Vancouver Landfill, and changing the RDO fee vehicle category at both the Vancouver South Transfer Station and Vancouver Landfill. BACKGROUND The solid waste agreement between the City of Vancouver, GVRD and Delta requires the City to charge the regional tipping fee for all commercial waste delivered to the City's disposal facilities. However, the agreement allows the City to charge a different fee for residential waste delivered by residents. Accordingly, City Council has approved a lower fee structure for residential drop-off (RDO) waste to make it reasonably economical for residents to dispose of their residential waste. The RDO fees are set on a cost-recovery basis. A flat fee is charged for all loads weighing 500 kg. or less. The purpose of the flat rate is to expedite RDO load processing at the weighscales. Most RDO loads are delivered in pickup trucks and trailers. For RDO loads between 501 kg. and 900 kg., the fee increases on a graduated scale. For loads greater than 900 kg., the full regional tipping fee, currently $69/tonne, applies. The RDO waste received at the Vancouver Landfill is delivered mainly by residents of Delta and Richmond, and to a lesser extent from White Rock. Most RDO waste delivered to the Vancouver South Transfer Station comes from Vancouver residents. DISCUSSION The GVRD has approved lowering the regional tipping fee from $69 per tonne to $65 per tonne effective July 1, 1996. Accordingly, the City must also lower the commercial tipping fee charged at its disposal facilities. The GVRD is lowering the regional tipping fee to reflect principally lower capital debt costs. By lowering the tipping fee, the GVRD has decreased the incentive for private waste haulers to export waste to a lower cost disposal facility outside the Lower Mainland. The lower regional fee will benefit the member municipalities who pay the regional fee for residential waste disposal. However, Vancouver, Delta and Surrey will see a decline in their revenues. Vancouver's surplus commercial tipping fee revenues are currently used to fund the City's recycling programs, and the balance is transferred to the Solid Waste Capital Reserve. The lower tipping fee will decrease Vancouver's annual transfer to the Solid Waste Capital Reserve by about $600,000. The RDO fees were last increased on July 4, 1994. However, the cost per tonne of disposing RDO refuse at the Landfill has increased since then. The increased cost per tonne is due to increased Landfill operating costs and lower RDO tonnages. Most of the RDO costs are fixed and therefore lower tonnages increases the cost per tonne. An increase in the flat RDO fees at the Landfill is necessary to keep them on a break-even basis. A minor change is also recommended for the graduated RDO fee scale. The existing fee for RDO loads between 501 and 700 kg is equal to 50% of the regional tipping fee. However, the RDO cost per tonne at both the Transfer Station and Landfill is now greater than 50% of the regional tipping fee. Therefore, it is recommended that the fee for this weight category be increased to 75% of the regional tipping fee. Some small haulers who provide a rubbish removal service to Vancouver homeowners have expressed a concern about the existing RDO fee structure. These haulers use trucks which are slightly larger than pickup trucks or vans. Therefore, they do not fall into the RDO vehicle category and must pay the full commercial tipping fee. However, their load weights and customer base are the same as those of the small haulers who use pickup trucks. Thus, these haulers believe they are not being treated the same as their competitors who use pickup trucks or vans. To address the haulers' concern, staff recommend applying the same fee structure to all truck or trailer loads. It is estimated that the loss in revenues from this change will be minor. The recommended fees are shown in Appendix A. It is recommended that the new fees be publicized in advance of implementation and that $4,500 be approved from the RDO fee revenues for this purpose. ENVIRONMENTAL IMPLICATIONS There are no environmental implications from the recommended fee increases. However, keeping residential disposal fees at a reasonable level minimizes the amount of illegal dumping by residents. CONCLUSION Effective July 1, 1996, the GVRD is lowering the regional tipping fee from $69 per tonne to $65 per tonne. The solid waste agreement between Vancouver, Delta and the GVRD requires that Vancouver charge the same fee at its disposal facilities. The RDO fees were last increased on July 4, 1994. Since then the cost per tonne of disposing refuse at the Vancouver Landfill RDO facility has increased. A fee increase is now required to keep the Landfill RDO operations on a break even basis. To address a concern of some small rubbish haulers, staff recommend the same fee structure be applied to all vehicle loads other than car and station wagon loads. Last, it is recommended the fee for 501 kg to 700 kg loads be increased to 75% of the regional tipping fee. * * * * * APPENDIX A DISPOSAL FEES 1. Disposal of refuse by way of the transfer station at 377 West Kent Avenue North: (a) where the load, not exceeding a weight of 500 kg, is carried by a: Existing Recommended (i) passenger vehicle (2 or 4 door sedan) $ 6.00 $ 6.00 (ii) station wagon $ 7.00 $ 7.00 (iii) pick-up truck or van $15.00 N/A replaced with (iii) vehicle other than (i) or (ii) N/A $15.00 (iv) trailer of a size cabable of being hauled by a passenger vehicle $15.00 N/A replaced with (iv) trailer N/A $15.00 (b) where the load is carried by any of the vehicles described in clause (a) and has a weight of: (i) 501 kg to 700 kg $0.045/kg $0.049/kg (ii) 701 kg to 900 kg $0.055/kg $0.049/kg (iii) 901 kg and greater $0.069/kg $0.065/kg 2. Disposal of refuse at the Landfill on Benson Road in the Corporation of Delta: (a) where the load, not exceeding a weight of 500 kg, is carried by a: (i) passenger vehicle (2 or 4 door sedan) $ 6.00 $ 6.00 (ii) station wagon $ 7.00 $ 7.00 (iii) pick-up truck $13.00 N/A replaced with (iii) vehicle other than (i) or (ii) N/A $15.00 (iv) trailer of a size capable of being hauled by a passenger vehicle $13.00 N/A replaced with (iv) trailer N/A $15.00 (b) where the load is carried by any of the vehicles described in clause (a) and has a weight of: (i) 501 kg to 700 kg $0.045/kg $0.049/kg (ii) 701 kg to 900 kg $0.055/kg $0.049/kg (iii) 901 kg or greater $0.069/kg $0.065/kg 3. Disposal of refuse other than as provided for in Sections 1, 2 and 4: (a) (i) where the load is covered $0.069/kg $0.065/kg (ii) where the load is uncovered $0.138/kg $0.130/kg ES3364 May 1, 1996 BJD: REFUSE DISPOSAL FEES COUNCIL REPORT A potential problem with the proposed solution to the small haulers' concern is that the weighmasters may become lax and not weigh non-pickup truck loads which are in the range of about 500 to 1,000 kg. (i.e., it is less work for the weighmasters to flat rate a load than to weigh a truck in and out) Thus, the City loses revenues if this happens and the sentence on page 3 stating that the revenue loss will be minor will be proven false. We may want to require that weighmasters weigh all truck loads to eliminate this potential loss in revenues. HHB ES3364