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Making a Dent in Construction and Demolition Debris or Stephen M Bantillo City of San Jose, Environmental Services Department Integrated Waste Management.

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Presentation on theme: "Making a Dent in Construction and Demolition Debris or Stephen M Bantillo City of San Jose, Environmental Services Department Integrated Waste Management."— Presentation transcript:

1 Making a Dent in Construction and Demolition Debris or Stephen M Bantillo City of San Jose, Environmental Services Department Integrated Waste Management 777 N. First Street, Suite 300, San Jose, CA 95112 (408) 277-3846 / (408) 277-3669 fax / stephen.bantillo@ci.sj.ca.us Getting More and Less Than You Bargained For Baltimore, MD September 17, 2003

2 CDDD Overview Builder/Contractor applies for permit Deposit assessed based on square footage and type of project

3 CDDD Overview C&D materials hauled to Certified Facility

4 CDDD Overview Contractor returns receipts/records to City for Deposit refund

5 Deposit Amounts Building SegmentRate $/SqFt Residential New Construction$0.20 Non-Residential New Construction$0.10 Residential Alterations$1.16 Non-Residential Alterations$0.35 Residential Demolition$0.35 Non-Residential Demolition$0.10 Roof with tear-off Flat Rate$100

6 City-Certified Facilities Two Types: Administrative Certification Inert processors recover at least 90% Full Certification Mixed C&D facilities recover at least 50%

7 Certified Facilities 8 Mixed C&D/Landfills/Transfer 7 Rock/Asphalt/Quarry 3 Metal 2 Carpet 1 Wood 1 Reuse

8 Laying The Groundwork: §Identify The Target §Economics §Stakeholders §Infrastructure

9 Results of 1998 Waste Characterization Study Composition of Materials Going to Landfill

10 Results of 1998 Gate Survey Source of Materials Going to Landfill

11 Results of 1999 Gate Survey C&D Materials Going to Landfill >300,000 tpy 160,000 tpy buried

12 Economic Study Determine costs associated with the handling of C&D materials in and out-of-town Establish rates based on cost differential for recycling/diversion

13 Stakeholder Process Focus Groups One-on-One Group Meetings

14 Stakeholder Process cont. Who was involved? External: Banking Education Developers Architects Contractors Chamber Internal: City staff Public Works Redevelopment Housing Planning Green Building Labor Haulers Processors Landfills Home Builders Assoc.

15 Stakeholder Process cont. Why Important? Feedback on system design ID key support policies, processes, and interests Navigate the political process for approval by administration

16 C&D Infrastructure Grants FY 1999/2000$250,000 FY 2000/2001$500,000 3 Landfills$333,000 4 Processors$217,000 1 Individual$200,000

17 January 2000 §$36K “Portable MRF” §$10K C&D Line §$140K Mixed C&D Line §$64K “Rocket” Mixed C&D Line February 2001 §$200K Carpet Recovery §$71K Wood Waste Recycling System §$100K Roofing/Wood Recycling System §$129K Organics Removal System C&D Infrastructure Grants

18 What Have We Learned? There are more types of projects than you can shake a 2X4 at! Sweat the details with the Permit Center / Building Department (and everyone else) Provide clear written instructions to customers The other guy’s project makes more waste

19 www.sjrecycles.org

20 Total Project Value$848,712,920 Average $242,559 Median$28,000 High$108,000,000 Low$100 Program Data

21 Total SqFt9,681,258 Average2,768 Median400 High615,000 Low1 Program Data

22 Total Deposit Value$2,676,226 Average$766 Median$350 High$58,110 Low $1.05 Program Data


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