MPS Waste Audit Report by Andre Xiong For a copy of this report or to access more information about waste management / recycling at MPS, visit: http://mpsgoesgreen.mpls.k12.mn.us School name and grade: Today’s date: Audit date: Audit participants: Roosevelt High School 5-14-2010 3-18-2010 Andre Xiong, Hennepin County Environmental Services John Strom, Head Building Engineer Diane Daun, MPS Plant Operations Doug Link, Allied Waste Services ANALYSIS OF WASTE GENERATION AT YOUR SITE Waste generated at your site in March, 2010: In March, your school produced 11,600 lb of waste.1 Trash: 9,560 lb (82 %) Mixed recycling: 2,040 lb (18 %) Based on your school population of 1070 (915 students, 155 staff), each person in your school produced 6 pounds of waste during this month.2 It took 9 dumpsters to haul your 5,200 lb of trash.3 The waste you recycled in March will result in 2,040 less pounds of material going to the incinerator as well as the production of new materials from it. Making new products from recycled material is less expensive and more environmentally friendly than making them from raw materials. MPS is now collecting information about waste and recycling rates by school. The analysis below is based on data for the month which this audit took place at your site. To access weights from other months, please visit: www.mpsgoesgreen.com and click on ‘Green Reports’. District cost of trash and recycling disposal for your site in March, 2010 6: Monthly haul charge $1.90/yd Processing fee rate $/ton Processing fee based on weight MN State tax 17% Hennepin Co. tax 14.5% Trash, actual $608 $43 $206 $34.94 $29.80 Total Cost $878 Mixed Recycling $91 $0 $0 exempt exempt $103 Trash, had you not recycled $608 $43 $249 $42.40 $36.16 $936 In March, your school diverted 2,040 lb of waste towards recycling; saving the district $58 in disposal fees that would have incurred from adding that 780 lb to the trash instead. These savings allow the district to enhance its resource management strategy and offer programs like organics recycling and improved mixed recycling. Increasing your recycling rates would yield even higher savings throughout the school year. ON-SITE AUDIT RESULTS & DISCUSSION Included below are findings and recommendations based on the audit of your building’s waste management practices.7 Organics Recycling: You were not recycling organics in addition to mixed recycling. Approximately 35% of a school building’s' waste is compostable. Recycling compostable waste saves the district money from reduced hauling fees and taxes, helps the environment, and provides students an educational, hands-on way to learn about environmental stewardship. If your school is interested in starting an organics recycling program, there is an opportunity for additional schools to add an organics program in fall, 2010. Start-up costs will be covered by a grant. For information about how to launch an organics recycling program at your school, please visit: http://mpsgoesgreen.mpls.k12.mn.us/Organics_Recycling.html Recycling and waste reduction practices: You were not stacking trays prior to disposal. Note: Trays, despite how little they weigh, take up massive volume and fill up bags quickly, requiring them to be changed out frequently. Stacking trays to be disposed of separately will allow much more room in the container for other waste items. This practice saves the district money from less bag usage, reduces plastic in the environment, and allows more space in dumpster(s). You were collecting liquid waste in a separate container. A great way to minimize the weight of your waste is to divert liquid waste down the drain. Weight is one key basis that MPS’ hauler uses to charge the district for trash and recycling. In addition, because MPS sends its trash to the incinerator, dry waste results in a more efficient burn which is better for the environment. Have students dump milk and other liquids into designated buckets to reduce weight of bags as well as leaking. Contact your Plant Operations supervisor for buckets if you don’t have any on hand. You were using MPS Goes Green signage. Congratulations on helping standardize the district-wide MPS Goes Green message. Remember that there are informational signs in English, Spanish, Hmong and Somali available on the MPS website. Also, there are fun ‘What to Collect’ signs on the website that are appropriate for a K-8 audience. You [ were/were not ] using custom-made educational materials as well. *not sufficient data* Note: Members of your building community know what will work in your building. Encourage staff and students to create their own promotional materials in addition to those provided by MPS. This involvement promotes ownership and responsibility amongst students and staff which leads to a successful recycling program. Be creative. On your signs, use examples of real items that students commonly run into at their school or create a video or skits for a school assembly. None of the surveyed classrooms displayed posters and labels to aid in sorting. Posters and labels help students and staff comply with the recycling program. Teachers, take as little as a minute of your time to post up signage by recycling containers to encourage recycling in the classroom. Labeling containers and displaying recycling information reduces contamination in the recycling containers. Minimal effort is required to post up educational materials yet has major positive effects. Please check the MPS website for a variety of informational signs you can use in classrooms. Another step you can take is to incorporate environmental sustainability information into coursework. The MPS Goes Green website provides curriculum materials you may find useful. You often used color coding to promote sorting. Congratulations on using the MPS-designated colors (blue = mixed recycling, green = organics recycling, red/gray = trash) to promoting recycling and proper sorting. Note: Make sure to follow the designated color scheme—many of your containers’ color did not correspond with their designated use—and cover up any recycling labels on containers that do not correspond with its designated use. (i.e. recycling sign on a red barrel). Contact your Plant Operations Supervisor for stickers that can be used for this purpose. Interior containers: All classrooms sampled had recycling containers. MPS will make every effort to provide every (class) room with recycling containers, please contact Plant Operations Supervisor for extra containers. Paper makes up a tremendous portion of classroom waste, yet an astounding amount of recyclable paper is still making its way into trash bins. The labor required to throw paper into the trash or recycling bin are equal. Give students the opportunity to recycle in the classroom by providing recycling bins in all classrooms. Promote proper use of recycling bins through signage and classroom activities. See the MPS Goes Green website for ideas, http://mpsgoesgreen.mpls.k12.mn.us/ You sometimes provided both trash and recycling containers at the same location (in classrooms). Due to the large amount of recyclable material generated at a typical school building, placing recycling containers wherever there are trash containers is an easy way to ensure that the right items go in the right bins. Even if there is a recycling container in the same room or close by, individuals are likely to toss their recyclables in the trash if the recycling container is not next to the trash. Making recycling convenient is important to increasing recycling rates. The waste hauler’s single stream, no-sort recycling makes it even easier and requires only one container for all recycling. You were not bagging mixed recycling containers Congratulations on further reducing your school’s environmental impact by minimizing plastic bag use. MPS’ waste hauler prefers recyclables un-bagged because the bags become a problem at the materials recovery facility (MRF) where the recyclables are sorted and processed. At the MRF, in order to keep the plastic bags from getting wrapped around the sorting equipment, they must be separated and disposed. The plastic bags do not get recycled. Furthermore, the recyclables can easily be contained and transported through the use of bins, dumpsters, and trucks. Keep up this environmentally friendly, cost effective practice. Contamination assessment: Number of sampled bags of trash: 2 Sample 1 had no contamination. Sample 2 had excessive contamination (paper and cans.) Contaminants in your trash are any items that can be recycled or composted. Common items such as paper, glass/plastic bottles, and cans require much more energy to produce from raw materials than from their recycled counterparts. These items also add weight to trash, thereby, increasing disposal fees for the district. A collaborative effort from your school community is needed to prevent recyclables from becoming trash. Number of sampled bags of recycling: 2 Sample 1 had no contamination. Sample 2 had minimal contamination (tissues.) Your recycling stream was essentially free of trash! This means that the contents of your recycling dumpster will be used to make quality recycled products. When you have excessive contamination in your recycling it could mean that the hauler will reject your entire load to the trash. It is very important that your school community continues to keep the recycling stream as good of quality as possible. If you would like clarification on whether or not certain items are recyclable, please contact me. Exterior dumpsters: Not all dumpsters were labeled. Differentiate dumpsters with labels provided by Allied Waste. Disposing of your waste streams in the proper dumpsters is the crucial final step your waste takes before it leaves your school property. If you end up putting sorted materials (mixed recycling and/or organics) in the trash dumpster, -- or contaminate sorted materials with trash, it undermines the entire recycling effort and can be very discouraging for all of the staff, students, and parents who participate in the recycling program. Waste were not correctly disposed of in their corresponding dumpster. There were cardboard in the trash dumpster. Disposing of your waste streams in the proper dumpsters is the crucial final step your waste takes before it leaves your school property. If you end up putting sorted materials (mixed recycling and/or organics) in the trash dumpster, -- or contaminate sorted materials with trash, it undermines the entire recycling effort and can be very discouraging for all of the staff, students, and parents who participate in the recycling program. Your dumpsters were not effectively arranged to encourage recycling. It is a best practice to place recycling dumpsters in a convenient location. Placing the recycling dumpster(s) closer than trash dumpster discourages recyclables from ending up in the trash dumpster. If your school is participating in organics, it is especially important to put that dumpster close due to the heavy weight of those bags. If you would like to move your dumpster location or arrangement, please contact your Plant Operations supervisor. Your trash dumpsters [ two at 8 yd3 each, picked up 5x weekly ] are typically full at pick-up. Contact your Plant Operations supervisor immediately if your dumpsters are overflowing on a regular basis. If you have not already, consider incorporating organics recycling or other waste reduction strategies to reduce the amount of trash rather than increasing dumpster size to accommodate increasing trash. Your mixed recycling dumpster [ 6 yd3, picked up 2x weekly ] is typically full at pick-up. Congratulations for filling your mixed recycling dumpster to near its capacity. Dumpster disposal fees are charged based on size and service frequency, so an underutilized dumpster costs the district extra money. Increasing capacity or service frequency is perfectly fine if your school’s recycling efforts have improved that much. Summary of Recommendations -Incorporating organics recycling will significantly reduce trash by diverting food waste (including the countless milk cartons, now-compostable trays, and paper towels) into its own dumpster to be converted into compost rather than buried or incinerated as trash. -Require students to stack trays to dispose of separately from main trash containers. -Do not use bins for any other purpose than their designated use: red/gray for trash and blue for recycling. -Provide a bucket in cafeteria to divert liquid waste from trash—dispose of in sink instead. -Notify Plant Operations supervisor to rearrange dumpsters to promote recycling and proper disposal by placing all dumpsters in one central location rather than in different locations. -Establish a school-wide set-up that best promotes recycling in classrooms: -Post up signs/posters by containers to differentiate recycling from trash. -Position trash and recycling containers together to promote sorting. -Place containers in prominent locations, such as by doors or teachers’ desks, rather than scattered around. -Limit the amount of containers in class rooms—one recycling and one trash should suffice. If your school needs to modify its hauling schedule / dumpster size or access additional materials to make your waste management/recycling program successful, please contact your Plant Operations Supervisor. For questions regarding the audit and audit report, please contact Andre Xiong. Andre Xiong MN GreenCorps School Waste Prevention Specialist Hennepin County Dept. of Environmental Services 417 N. 5th Street, Minneapolis, MN 55401 phone: 612-543-1316 email: andre.x.xiong@co.hennepin.mn.us Appendix / Sources 1 Monthly waste generation data was provided by MPS contract hauler, Allied Waste Services. Data on dumpster sizes and hauling schedules were also obtained from Allied. 2 Student enrollment numbers were obtained through MPS student account, available to the public online. Staff enrollment numbers were obtained through payroll. 3 Allied Waste estimates one cubic yard of trash weighs approximately 100 lbs. 4 Ginny Black, from MN Pollution Control Agency, estimates approximately 50% of organic waste remains as finished compost after decomposition. 5 It was decided upon to use 32% as the figure for organic waste composition of total waste generated at schools. The study was conducted in southern California by California Integrated Waste Management Board for 2002. 6 Calculations: Monthly haul charge = [ $1.90 X dumpster size (yd3) X frequency of pickup in a week ] X 4 weeks (month) Processing fee = processing rate X weight (tons) Total cost = monthly haul charge + processing fee + tax Savings incurred from recycling = total cost (gross weight) ▬ total cost (trash weight) 7 Audit procedures: o Audits were scheduled for 1 hour and included: 1. Interview with head building engineer 2. Interior walkthrough 3. Contamination assessment 4. Exterior walkthrough o Audits were conducted by Hennepin County Environmental Services’ GreenCorps member; alongside an Allied Waste representative and the Plant Ops supervisor for that site. o Questions during audit were answered based on head engineers’ observations and perceptions. o Walk-through portion of audit consisted of observing (as needed): 2 hallways (or other common areas) 3 classrooms 1 bathroom Cafeteria Dumpsters o Contamination assessment portion of audit consisted of visually assessing: 2 bags of trash 2 bags of mixed recycling 2 bags of organic waste 8 Not all schools were able to supply samples for contamination assessment due to various reasons. In such cases, samples were attained in these other manners (where possible): Observing bags already disposed of in dumpsters Observing un-bagged waste in dumpsters equivalent to bag Observing active containers on the floor Clarification on contaminants: Non-recyclable paper include: food-soiled paper, napkins, paperware, milk cartons. Non-recyclable plastics include: shrinkwrap, plasticware, food containers. Cardboard is allowed in single stream collection, so it is categorized with ‘paper’ for our purposes. Food waste is only considered a contaminant in trash where organics recycling is in place.