|


Good
planning and proper equipment help control costs and
trash flow.
By
Joseph Lynn Tilton
Technology
to the Rescue
Industry
Challenges
Efficiency
at the Transfer Station
Midwest
Operator Gains Market Share
Down
in Virginia
On
the Brink of Change
Solid waste
operators have a challenge that other city services
dont: competition. "Nobody competes for police
or fire, and theres just a little competition
in schools," comments John Hadfield, executive
director for the Southeastern Public Service Authority
(SPSA) of Virginia. This competition, however, has been
a blessing for taxpayers as their municipal operations
strive to provide a higher level of service at a lower
cost.
"Waste
collection is pretty organized in probably two-thirds
of what is collected," says Harvey Gershman, a
solid waste management consultant with Gershman, Brickner
& Bratton of Fairfax, VA. "The private-sector
competes, and they are organized reasonably efficiently.
The public sector is getting better, but there is room
for a lot more improvement. There are significant opportunities
through improved orchestration of waste logistics [OWL].
"In
most places, disposal capacity is at a very high level.
Only in portions of the Northeast US and Northwest US
is disposal an issue," explains Gershman. "In
most places, as we have seen, there is an abundance
of disposal capacity competing for waste by lower prices.
"Infrastructure
to separate and sort waste is expensive, and the results
are poor at best. Health concerns and labor issues will
make sorting by humans unacceptable as an option. Equipment
will have to be developed to sort, or I do not see this
as being a realistic option. Economics will continue
to drive the direction of waste disposal, and to me,
in the near future it looks like landfilling without
a lot of sorting or separation will be the order of
the day."
So what is
happening on the municipal level? What are cities doing
to improve their OWL? One of the most highly regarded
collection systems is that found in San Diego, CA. Charles
Woolever, deputy director of the Refuse Collection Division,
reports that the metro area includes 315,000 residential
and small-business stops. Their solid waste is currently
handled by 168 trucks running about 130 routes a day,
collecting five days a week. This means more than 30
million service stops per year.
"Our
collection has always been among the most efficient
services in the country. But eight years ago it was
all manual, with 40% of the fleet made up of sideloaders
with one person handling 10 tons per day, and the remainder
of the fleet rearloaders with two workers and a collection
target of 14.5 tons per day. We had an incentive system.
When they finished the work, they were allowed to go
home for the day and be paid for the whole day. Unfortunately
this bred customer service issues, including some complaints
of shoddy work."
Technology
to the Rescue
 |
| Collection
trucks are guided to the proper scale by color-coded
signs. |
Then, over
a five-year period, vehicles were traded in for automated
sideloaders, which helped reduce the need for 75 staff
positions, including five supervisors. "No one
was laid off," Woolever emphasizes. "And at
the same time weve been expanding our recycling
program from 40,000 homes in the pilot study to a total
of 284,000 residences and small businesses that are
still like a residential pickup. We decided to go with
a generic truck for both refuse and recycling for curbside
pickup."
The voluntary
program enjoys close to a 50% diversion into recyclables.
"San Diego has a long history of volunteerism.
We are now designing our yardwaste collection to be
biweekly as well, and we will alternate it with the
recyclable pickup schedule." San Diegos ultimate
goal is to pick up that yardwaste with the same generic
truck.
Because the
landfill is centrally located, San Diego has no transfer
stations, but it utilizes two material recovery facilities
(MRFs). Route trucks can get in and out of the MRF in
about 10 minutes, versus more than 20 minutes for the
landfill.
Woolever
explains that San Diegos waste collection budget
totaled $48.4 million this year, with trash collection
taking up $32.7 million, street litter containers $1.3
million, and the recycling program $14.3 million. There
are no resident fees. "We make 16.4 million service
stops per year for residential/small business trash.
Last year we collected 375,000 tons of trash, 71,000
tons of curbside recyclable materials, and 39,000 tons
of yardwaste." (Yardwaste principally goes to the
citys composting program.)
He then comments
on the computer programs that help make the operation
more efficient. "We have an integrated system that
has been built by our own San Diego Data Processing
Corporation. We started by building a GIS [geographic
information system] countywide as the backbone, which
each department can customize for its own purposes.
Arc Info is the tool to access all the databases. We
also acquired and are using RouteSmart to plan our expansion
areas for converting to automated collection and for
designing recycling routes."
The EPACS
(environmental programs and collection systems) is the
customer service tool San Diego has integrated with
its GIS so all data in the city can be accessed. "As
soon as a resident calls, the system used by our online
operators recognizes the phone number and populates
the screen about that customer so we can serve that
person better," Woolever says.
The Nextel
phone system helps supervisors immediately contact the
customers involved. In addition, the citys developing
a global positioning system it is calling "Packer
Tracker" so supervisors can observe the progress
of each route truck as its collecting that day.
"We will know whether the missed stop is due to
driver error or to a customers failure to put
the container out by 7 a.m. At 2.3 miles per gallon,
its not very efficient to go back for a missed
stop because the customer was late."
Furthermore,
when route trucks go over the scales at the landfill,
RAD (refuse and disposal) automatically identifies and
records the truck and net weight. Woolever comments,
"Our Information Systems Manager Nader Tiranndazi
is a genius. Give him a vision and he can come up with
a data system solution."
With RAD,
theyve also gone to ticketless transactions at
the landfill. "Before we did that we usually had
50 vehicles in line at three scales. Some days we had
100 trucks backed up to the off-ramp. We would have
had to spend a couple million to remodel the site to
handle the traffic, so RAD and ticketless transactions
at the fee booth saved us a remodeling job," relates
Woolever.
Another benefit
for efficient collection is the citys ARTS (automated
refuse tonnage system). "ARTS is used for dispatch,"
he explains, "so we who know whos gone on
what route, with what equipment, and whether its
collecting waste or recyclables. Through ARTS, supervisors
can see real-time reports on individual trucks. That
is, they can monitor each load as it weighs in at the
landfill. They can get a feel for how heavy it is today,
or how light, and whether any steps are needed to avoid
overtime." It also captures historical data, which
can be analyzed for comparing trends.
San Diego
has onboard scales on nearly all its collection vehicles.
"Were using TransData Scales, which help
us optimize payloads and avoid overloading vehicles.
As trucks pack out, the process gets slower and slower.
So if you know that youll need to send two loads
to the landfill, you can pack both vehicles with the
same-size load rather than max out the first load, then
pick up a partial second load."
Woolever
emphasizes, "High efficiency and high customer
satisfaction are the goal, with the customer coming
first. Were a public service; they are our bosses.
Were also working really hard in the area of social
responsibility, so were converting our fleet to
liquid natural gas as part of an effort to clean the
air."
San Diego
also is occupied with improving the future. Its four
locations for vehicle storage have been consolidated
to a single site near the landfill. "We have a
long-term lease with the Marine Corps for that landfill.
Weve recently obtained a permit to put in a backdoor
road, which will save five miles per vehicle."
Theyre
also seeking to reduce fuel consumption by packing at
idle speed when all thats needed for the hydraulic
pump is to run the PTO at 700 rpm, instead of throttling
up to 1,200 or 1,300 rpm. "Initial indication is
its saving us 10 gallons per vehicle per day,
and those vehicles average 40 to 50 gallons daily. As
we go to natural gas, we will use a dual-fuel diesel
igniter system [licensed to Caterpillar] so we can retain
all the benefits of the diesel-engine horsepower and
torque. Our initial results showed that were substituting
82.3% of the diesel with this dual-fuel system."
Woolever
credits Richard Hays, the director of the citys
Environmental Services Department, for his vision in
utilizing technology more completely. "Another
of Richard Hayss vision is to use a private-sector
partner to refine the landfill gas and convert it into
a liquid methane motor fuel for use in our packers.
By doing that, well reduce the greenhouse effect
because, instead of flaring that gas, well be
burning it in the trucks."
San Diego
is even exploring the use of biodiesel, from recycled
grease. In addition, its looking at possibly turning
a closed landfill into a photovoltaic facility capable
of developing a megawatt of electricity per day. Their
new operating station includes plans for a 37-kW photovoltaic
array, which will meet 80% of the facilities needs.
Woolever sums up all the reason for all these programs:
"Our goal is to show initiative, to be part of
the solution for any problem associated in any way with
waste collection."
Industry
Challenges
"From
an industry standpoint, the difficulty is not so much
in administration but in dealing with unknowns,"
declares Bill Brown, president of TMS Solutions in Rochester,
NY. Brown has been dealing with wastestream software
since 1977 and notes that TMSs focus is on developing
software for niche markets, with major emphasis on the
waste industry.
Speaking
of unknowns, he recalls the time a $15 million industrial
waste recycling plant in Rochester somehow acquired
ammunition in a load of waste. "The bullets went
off inside the conveyor belts. Flying bullets were not
part of the plan at all, and they had to shut down.
Then the county pulled the plug on funding. After months
of inactivity, the county-owned plant was converted
to its present mission as a standard recycling and transfer
station."
Brown agrees
the technology is there to make waste collection and
disposal a tighter, more efficient operation through
OWL. "There is no such thing as a perfect world,
but each individual business within the waste industry
can be managed properly and very tightly. The key is
to be sure the software will meet your needs. Learn
how to test the technology youre thinking of buying."
He recommends
systems that log the loads as theyre picked up.
"They give patterns for even residential customers
and can alert the driver to bypass the container due
to late payment. On-the-go management makes for a more
productive day."
For those
with distant landfill destinations, Brown sees scales
and software combining to ensure maximum legal loads.
"Australia has quite a few transfer stations, and
I see that trend continuing. The focus needs to be on
working smarter. Technology doesnt always provide
a substitute for common sense."
Efficiency
at the Transfer Station
 |
| Contracted
haulers use Metro Park East's new automated scale
for quicker access in and out of the facility. |
"We
are market competitive," reports Harold Anderson,
chief counsel for the Solid Waste Authority of Ohio.
"We are an independent government agency in Grove
City, and our territory includes 13 municipalities and
20 to 30 townships, with a 1.2 million total population.
We operate one of the largest publicly owned landfills
in the country, with 854,000 tons accepted last year.
Under Ohio law no vegetative yardwaste, no hazardous
waste, no tires can be part of the solid wastestream.
All else is fair game."
Anderson
adds that the operation doesnt collect solid waste,
but it operates three transfer stations, which handle
250 truckloads per day. "We have a number of active
recycling programs that we operate, including residential
recycling programs in 11 multifamily apartment complexes
in the city of Columbus, paper collection from approximately
400 commercial businesses, and even household hazardous
waste collection. We run those programs with the idea
of making collection of these materials as cost-effective
as possible."
He reports
that a successful pilot program with Columbus includes
bins that take trash on one side and recyclables on
the other. "A single truck picks up the bin, and
recyclables are dumped into one compartment and solid
waste in another. Weve been able to achieve significant
diversion in the pilot and believe it may help extend
the life of our landfill. Although final averages have
not been compiled, many weeks saw gross diversion reach
35% to 38%. The less we fill up landfills, the better
off our constituent communities will be because landfills
are obviously expensive to site and build, and we wish
to reduce our communities reliance on them."
 |
| The
orange color-code lane is for customers to weigh
in; the green color-coded lane is for approved contract
customers. |
One of the
newer features at the three transfer stations and landfill
is a completely automatic scaling system. "The
software package, IL Scalesystems, allows us to store
tare weights so we can generate electronic tickets,
saving vehicles five to 10 minutes per visit. Some operators
will send 60 to 70 vehicles per day, so its a
significant savings for the collection companies."
The Solid
Waste Authority of Ohio also recently implemented a
Web-based tracking software, Dossier 32 by Arsenault
Associates, which allows it to track materials needed
and used in its maintenance programs. "A computer-controlled
maintenance system helps us with just-in-time inventory
as well as with examining where we are having higher
maintenance needs and where we could make changes in
the operation."
A year ago
the authority installed a tipper at the landfill so
users could avoid the expense of live-floor trailers
and maintenance associated with driving on the working
face of the landfill. "It has significantly decreased
turnaround time for transfer vehicles, saving us eight
minutes per vehicle for our 83 loads tipped per day."
The authority
also has software that allows it to track what each
truck has carried to the landfill, how many trips to
the landfill, mileage, and cycle times and driving times,
and each truck is equipped with an automatic vehicle
identification system that helps more effectively utilize
the transfer fleet.
Midwest
Operator Gains Market Share
The Metro
Waste Authority, based in Des Moines, IA, also uses
marketing strategy to help make the MSW operation more
efficient. Historically it handled collections from
17 member communities, serving a total of about 400,000
residents. Now it serves 18 communities and 800,000
citizens.
As with their
counterparts throughout the United States, increased
regulatory pressure is a concern. Operations Manager
Jeff Dworek says, "Regulations seem to be getting
more stringent. Air quality is the latest. Were
monitoring the landfill to make sure were not
releasing any surface emissions from the old disposal
area."
The landfill
is closed only on Sundays and three holidays a year,
and Dworek points out that individual residents use
the site. "They can unload on concrete into eight
rolloff containers. We want to be more customer-friendly.
We have to try to meet our customers needs. We
had to do interesting things to gain back market share.
Weve signed up 90% of our customers to long-term
contracts that offered lowered prices for total waste
collection." This strategy has increased tonnage
from 350,000 tpy to about 440,000 tpy.
Commercial
customers have access to an express lane with an automated
scale system that reduces weighing time to less than
30 seconds. "Were using WasteWORKS by Carolina
Software. Commercial drivers learned the system with
just an hours instruction because once they know
their ID codes, its a very easy system to learn.
It took from one to three days to have all of our people
comfortable with the system." But the system has
helped them reduce labor requirements by about 50%.
 |
| This
input form is used to report, edit, and remove delinquent
customer names from the central database. |
"We
have to remain competitive," Dworek reminds, "yet
meet all the regulatory requirements. Weve also
seen a 20% increase in airspace utilization, which extends
the life of our landfill by 20%. Weve reduced
tipping fees from $31 per ton to $26 per ton, offering
a $5 rebate, and have had that program running for three
years now."
Another strategy
includes running 25 trucks out of their transfer station,
while boosting transfer production from 300 tons to
550 tons today. "Were also looking at extending
the storage capacity this spring. One challenge, though,
is we have only two compactor units, and trying to get
trip cycles more efficient is tricky. We try to average
five loads per day per transfer vehicle, with the landfill
17 miles away.
"Because
of WasteWIZARD, our trucks can go into the express lane
at the landfill, cutting down their cycle time."
Dworek also tweaks production by filling six trucks
just before closing so they can be sent out first thing
in the morning. "At gate opening, were moving
120 tons."
Down
in Virginia
Speaking
from his office in Chesapeake, VA, John Hadfield reiterates,
"Weve a lot of disposal competition in Virginia.
Our agency covers a geographic area of about 2,000 square
miles in the southeast corner of the state. There are
over a million people in the area as well as four huge
private landfills within 100 miles. Theyre designed
to take waste from the Northeast, but they also compete
for waste from our region."
One of the
elements involved in SPSAs quest for better OWL
is a waste energy plant that utilizes 2,000 tpd of waste.
"It generates steam and electricity, with both
going to the Norfolk Naval Shipyard. Excess electricity
is sold to the local utility group," Hadfield says.
Southeastern operates eight transfer stations handling
anywhere from 50 to 1,300 tpd and a curbside recycling
collection program serving about 155,000 homes with
23 vehicles running routes four days a week. Recyclables
are collected every other week. Participation averages
about 35%, fairly common for a voluntary program. SPSA
also has 450 employees and 75 transfer vehicles pulling
open-top trailers with live-floor bottoms.
Hadfield
comments on a couple of programs that just didnt
fly. "We have 25 ash trailers hauling from the
power plant. We tried onboard scales, hoping to speed
loading time and maximize loads. But we still had to
recalibrate the tare weight every time we unloaded because
as much as 1,500 pounds of ash sticks to the sides and
bottom of the trailers.
"We
also tried a radio frequency [RF] scanner to help account
for who was recycling and who was not. We put RF tags
on the 18-gallon bins and a scanner on the truck. But
after six months or so we found the scanners wouldnt
stand the weather or the motion of the trucks, so we
had to abandon that system.
 |
| WasteWIZARD,
seen here at Metro Park East Landfill, enables automated
transactions as drivers come across the scale. |
"But
a continuous emission monitoring system helps us keep
a history on all emissions at the waste energy plant.
It allows us to optimize the fire so we get better output
from burning waste, yet can tell when were pushing
the limits on emission. This keeps us out of regulatory
trouble."
Hadfield
also reports that besides an automatic timekeeping program,
which has eliminated one payroll clerk and provides
for better tracking of overtime and time spent on specific
tasks, SPSA has installed a data monitoring system on
all trucks. "We can tell speed and idle times.
We cant tell where they are, but we can tell what
theyre doing. We use it more for our safety program
because it records speed before any accident and keeps
us posted on the braking systems. Its part of
a better focused maintenance program for all our vehicles."
Again, as
the focus is on solving the challenges involved in the
wastestream, municipal-owned operations are getting
more efficient, more effective. The end result is that
solid waste handling gets more and more economical,
which encourages residents to use the public system
to help them solve their private needs.
Author
Joseph Lynn Tilton is a frequent contributor to MSW
Management.
|