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Sacramento, Calif., Hires SCS Engineers to Optimize Waste Management Program

Article-Sacramento, Calif., Hires SCS Engineers to Optimize Waste Management Program

SCS Engineers Celebrates 50th Anniversary
DWMR will use SCS Engineers’ analyses and current residential waste collection and disposal operations to identify options to optimize collection.

The County of Sacramento, Calif., Department of Waste Management & Recycling (DWMR) is contracting with SCS Engineers to study and analyze how to optimize the routing, collection and disposal of municipal solid waste, green waste, organics and single stream recycling in the unincorporated area of the county. The analyses will help Sacramento control costs, provide quality services to residents and lower its carbon footprint.

Using a three-cart system, the DWMR provides weekly residential garbage collection, every other week recycling, green waste collection and other waste collection services to approximately 155,000 residents in unincorporated Sacramento County.

Currently, vehicles cover 71 routes and collect a total of 151,000 tons of municipal solid waste, 77,000 tons of green waste and organics and nearly 37,000 tons of single stream recycling annually. Materials go to the county owned and operated North Area Recovery Station and the Waste Management owned and operated Sacramento Recycling Center and Transfer Station.

Approximately 60 percent of residential collection activity occurs in the northern half of unincorporated Sacramento County and 40 percent in the southern half. DWMR will use SCS Engineers’ analyses and the current residential waste collection and disposal operations to identify options for charting a path forward that will optimize collection efficiencies and reduce collection costs. The analyses examine the following areas:

  • Regulatory compliance, including comprehensive, cost-effective adherence to all applicable known and anticipated regulations and ordinances.
  • Financial and contractual controls, such as long-term agreements with haulers, processors, contractors, key suppliers and vendors, infrastructure maintenance and construction.
  • Route logistics and vehicle controls, such as the number of routes, type of vehicles, safety, carbon footprint reductions and workloads.
  • Community satisfaction with clear communications, ease of disposal, overall convenience and other factors to continuously improve residential service.

The SCS analyses include a model for creating alternative collection scenarios for waste and recycling operations and performing cost modeling. The model gives the county the benefit of insight into many potential options while considering various technology, best practices of the operations staff and fleet crews and rate structures.

“The data and the way it is analyzed and interpreted will lay the foundation for collecting waste and recycling in the unincorporated area of the county,” said Tracie Bills of SCS Engineers in a statement. “The cost savings and environmental benefits are significant supporting Sacramento residents into the future.”

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