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City may cut trash service to once a week
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Binh Truong, with the city of Gainesville, tosses bags of trash into the truck Tuesday along College Avenue. David Dockery, the city’s public works director, said he will propose reducing trash service to once a week in order to cut spending. Dockery will make the presentation at Thursday’s City Council meeting. - photo by Tom Reed

Gainesville residents may soon lose their twice-weekly trash pickup.

The city’s public works director, David Dockery, will on Thursday propose that the City Council authorize reducing trash pickup to once a week.

Other changes Dockery will propose include requiring most residents to take their garbage to the curb in a city-provided receptacle and bringing city residents’ recycling service in-house.

The changes, while possibly requiring some up-front investment, are Dockery’s proposal to cut spending in a trying budget year.

The director of Public Works was charged by the city manager’s office and the City Council to "basically find a way to let solid waste pay their own way."

While the proposal will require purchasing trash receptacles for city residents, Dockery said he expects the plan to save the city about $300,000 per year — enough for the solid waste division to stand on its own without help from general fund tax dollars.

Part of those savings will be a reduction in staff, though Dockery said that does not necessarily mean employees will be laid off.

With once-weekly curbside collection, Dockery said the city can use fewer trucks and fewer crews to collect solid waste. If approved by the council, the city could use the extra trucks to pick up residents’ recyclables, a service for which the city has paid a private company approximately $200,000 a year. The proposed changes would mean residents’ recyclables and their garbage would be picked up on the same day.

Dockery said he is hopeful four solid waste employees can be moved to other positions in the city.

"We’re hopeful that we can do it in such a way that no one loses a job," he said.

Dockery said the proposal is the culmination of six months of evaluating different ways the city could wean its solid waste operation off of property and sales tax revenues. And with city revenues from sales tax at a low, Dockery had to consider other ways to eliminate the division’s reliance on those dollars.

Last year, City Council raised monthly collection fees to make the division more autonomous. But Dockery said Tuesday the revenues from the higher fees only helped the division pay fees at the landfill.

"We’ve considered privatization and combinations of public-private partnerships to do various things, but in the end, we’ve come down on keeping it in-house at a reduced level of service," Dockery said.

The proposed changes, if approved by the council, will make Gainesville’s trash collection service much like "the way most cities do it," Dockery said.

The city’s longtime back-door trash service is a "rarity," and one that the current economic situation does not afford, Dockery said.

However, if the council gives his proposal the go-ahead, Dockery said the city will still provide a medical waiver that will allow residents who are not physically able to roll their trash to the curb to still have back-door service.

"This is the way that most municipalities collect garbage," Dockery said. "The back-door pickup is a rarity, and fortunately, we’ve been able to provide that to our residents, but considering the economic crunch we’re all in right now, we just don’t feel its feasible to continue to do that."