November-December 2006

The Role of Consultants in Solid Waste Management

In cities and other large jurisdictions, consulting firms are widely used by solid waste divisions. But how about the small to medium solid waste operations? We randomly selected seven of them and asked them if they use consultants and if so, how and why.

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By Charles D. Bader

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The solid waste division of the Matanuska-Susitna Borough, headquartered in Palmer Alaska is modestly sized. Its landfill accepts just 185 tpd, and it doesn’t have such niceties as curbside collection. Even so, the borough’s solid waste division manager, Greg Goodale, uses not one but three separate consultants to help in his operations.

Intrigued by that fact, we wondered just how widely had consultants penetrated the solid waste business. So we decided to ask other solid waste managers at small-to-medium districts around the country if they used consultants and if so what functions these consultants performed.

Our first call, selected at random, was to Sara Bixby, who is director of the South Central Iowa Solid Waste Agency in Tracy, IA. It was a fortunate beginning, because Sara Bixby is one very organized lady who not only directs the South Central’s operations, but who also serves as a member of the board of the Iowa Society of Solid Waste Operations. We were doubly fortunate because the South Central had just completed, via a competitive RFP process, selecting “an engineering/consulting firm to provide strategic and tactical expertise for the design, operations, regulatory compliance, and management of the agency’s facilities and programs for the next five-year period.”

When we asked what tasks the winning consultant would be asked to perform, she whipped out a page of the RFP entitled “Anticipated Service Requirements” which read:

The Agency’s anticipated service requirements during the next five years may include but are not limited to:

  • Hydrologic monitoring, including water level and leachate head level measurements
  • Landfill and transfer station site inspections
  • Preparation of required reports
  • Development of annual engineer’s estimates of closure and post-closure costs for the landfill and transfer station
  • Calculation of airspace used and remaining in active fill areas
  • Determination of in-place waste density and cover soil use
  • Assessment of soil availability and suitability for use in liner and cover systems
  • Development of permit documents for both facilities
  • Responses to DNR correspondence
  • MSW and C&D debris cell design, development, expansion and closure
  • QA/QC and CQA for all relevant projects
  • Landfill gas system evaluation, design, and implementation
  • Landfill and transfer station operations consulting
  • Expanded design and implementation of efforts to address stormwater, surface water, sediment, and erosion issues related to old mining operations
  • Changes in approaches to maintaining and monitoring the closed Marion County Landfill
  • Building upgrades including floor repair; heating and fire suppression systems evaluations
  • Strategic planning processes
  • Involvement in comprehensive solid waste management plan update preparation
  • Evaluation of market opportunities
  • Presentations to the Agency Board
  • Other services as required.

We were surprised and impressed by the sheer magnitude and thoroughness of this task list, particularly when it included “other services as required,” followed by this remarkable paragraph:
“Your proposal should include a brief description of no more than five one-time or innovative projects you believe may be appropriate for Agency consideration in the next five-year period. Explain your rationale for including them. Each description should provide an overview of the project effort, summary of potential benefits, a probable cost range, and risks associated with completion of the project.”

This was certainly far-sighted planning for any solid waste operation, and we were flabbergasted that an operation that had only one transfer station and a 165 tpd landfill was seeking a consultant of this breadth and depth. Bixby explained: “It’s even more important for an agency of our size to have ‘a consultant of this breadth and depth.’ Large agencies typically have more staff with a broader range of skills; we have a small staff and so need to hire that additional cross-functional expertise. The relationship between the agency and consultant is critical to our success.”

 As a result of this new view, we decided to talk to a random selection of other small-to-medium–sized municipal or county solid waste operations to determine if South Central Iowa’s approach was an anomaly and to determine if and how they used consultants. Including South Central Iowa, we interviewed directors of seven such operations. We learned that every one of them used a consultant or consultants, but that every one of them did so uniquely in order to meet its unique operational requirements.

Matanuska-Susitna Borough, AK
We started in Alaska, with the Matanuska-Susitna Borough Solid Waste Division, which had intrigued us from the outset. The Matanuska-Susitna Borough is unique because of its huge size—an area roughly equivalent to that of the entire state of West Virginia. Because of its dimension, its single landfill is served by 11 different transfer stations, some of which are 300 miles away. (The division also has four closed landfills that must be monitored.) As a result, Goodale’s staff is stretched thin just to keep the division’s operations running smoothly, and consultants are needed to efficiently augment this staff.

The three primary tasks that Goodale uses consultants for are:

  • Engineering services
  • Water and landfill gas monitoring
  • Surveying services

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Goodale decided to use a different specialized consultant for each of these tasks rather than use a single consultant with a sufficiently broad engineering capability. Using the RFP procurement process for each of these tasks, the division selected the Englewood, CO-based CH2M Hill for the engineering services (with a concentration on new cell design and landfill sequencing projects). The environmental consulting firm of Shannon & Wilson Inc., with headquarters in Seattle, was selected to perform the water and landfill gas monitoring at the five landfills. And Alaska Rim Engineering was selected to perform baseline surveys for new sites.

All three firms are located nearby. Alaska Rim is right in Palmer, and both CH2M Hill and Shannon & Wilson have offices in Anchorage, just 50 miles away. It isn’t that Goodale regards distance as a drawback, however. Occasionally, he will use Matrix Consulting in Palo Alto, CA, for economic evaluations, and the process of transferring data back and forth worked as well, as if Matrix Consulting were there in Palmer. In this case, at least, there proved to be no need to have a consultant located in Alaska. Next Page >

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