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I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br />I <br /> I <br /> I <br /> I <br /> I <br /> I <br /> I <br /> I <br /> I <br /> <br />Page Five <br /> <br />Y~d waste (grass clippings and leaves) represents approximately 17% of the <br />total waste stream by volume. This volume may vary 6epending on the <br />season. It has been reported that in the spring and fall as much as S0% of the <br />waste being collected in urban areas is leaves. Grass clippings represent <br />approximately 3 to 5% of the waste stream. Composting of yard wastes is a <br />relatively safe and simple process, requires limited equipment and manpower, <br />and is much less costly than landfilling by comparison. However, there may <br />be some difficulties in implementing a system. Composting is simply a <br />matter of letting nature do its normal work with micro-organisms to reduce <br />the yard waste to its lowest form, a beneficial soil amendment. Yard waste <br />composting in the metropolitan area has been limited to the composting of <br />leaves primarily because leaves represent an extremely large portion of the <br />yard waste stream and are generated in a short period of time in large enough <br />quantities to facilitate offering leaf compost facilities. The cornposting of <br />grass clippings is somewhat more difficult and requires more attention and <br />may produce some odors. <br /> <br />Methods of leaf col leation for composting sites include: I) voluntary drop off; <br />2) separate collection by city and/or refuse haulers of bogged leaves; and 3) <br />residents raking leaves into the street on assigned days for collection by the <br />city. Voluntary drop off centers for leaf compasfing, like drop off centers <br />for other recyclables, to be effective must be located close to the point of <br />leaf generation. For this reason, it would seem mast appropriate to think of <br />terms of several collection sites possibly related to municipal service areas <br />(public works areas or parks). <br /> <br />Sah~ging is the process of removing materials of value by hand picking them <br />from the mixed waste stream for later sale or reuse. Salvaging has very <br />little impact in reducing the County's s~lid waste disposal needs. <br /> <br />MEC~NICAL/PROCESSING ABATEMENT STI:~TEGIES <br /> <br />Even with the best of efforts in waste reduction and waste source separation, <br />there will still remain a large volume of waste in the mixed municipal waste <br />stream which will need to be lanctf ii led or else processed to reduce the <br />amount needing to be landfilled. Waste processing would include such <br />activities as mechanical separation, shredding, baling, incineration, biological <br />treatment, modular combustion units, mass burning waste to energy, and <br />refuse derived fuel. <br /> <br /> <br />