Int 0347-1998-B
Recycling, Weekly Collections
IntroductionFiledCommittee on Environmental Protectionintroduced 1998-07-15
Filed — closed without being enacted.
Official record · Legistar
Agenda: 1998-07-15Passed: 1998-10-22
Committee on Environmental Protection — Department of Environmental Protection and Office of Long Term Planning and Sustainability and Office of Recovery and Resiliency.
How it compares
22% of similar bills passed
11 passed · 39 died
This bill: 85 days in committee
Similar bills: median 987 days · 509 days when passed
Compared against 50 Introduction bills in Committee on Environmental Protection.
Ranked by how closely each matches this bill's topic — closest first:
Int 0463-1998
Recycling, Weekly Collections
2dEnacted
Int 0175-1998
Waste Material Receptacle Regulation
1404dFiled
Int 0527-1999
Recyclable Paper etc, Illegal To Remove
1021dFiled
Int 0184-1998
Recyclable Biodegradable Packaging
1404dFiled
Int 0095-1998
Plastic Waste Bags
1439dFiled
Int 0282-1998
Solid Waste Management Plan
965dEnacted
+ 44 more comparable bills
Sponsors (42)
Peter F. Vallone(prime)
Stanley E. Michels
Noach Dear
Walter L. McCaffrey
Helen M. Marshall
John D. Sabini
Victor L. Robles
Adolfo Carrion
Martin Malave-Dilan
Mary Pinkett
Juanita E. Watkins
Stephen DiBrienza
Margarita Lopez
Lawrence A. Warden
Lucy Cruz
Julia Harrison
Philip Reed
June M. Eisland
Howard L. Lasher
Kathryn E. Freed
Una Clarke
Thomas K. Duane
Wendell Foster
Lloyd Henry
Gifford Miller
Jerome X. O'Donovan
Morton Povman
Madeline T. Provenzano
Angel Rodriguez
Archie W. Spigner
Priscilla A. Wooten
Kenneth K. Fisher
Annette M. Robinson
Anthony Weiner
Thomas White
Guillermo Linares
Pedro G. Espada
Tracy L. Boyland
Stephen J. Fiala
Mark Green
Lifecycle
HeardHearing Held by Committee
1998-10-08 · Committee on Environmental Protection
ActionAmendment Proposed by Comm
1998-10-08 · Committee on Environmental Protection
ActionAmended by Committee
1998-10-08 · Committee on Environmental Protection
AdvancedApproved by Committee
1998-10-08 · Committee on Environmental Protection
HeldLaid Over by Council
1998-10-08 · City Council
ActionReprnt Amnd Item Laid on Desk
1998-10-08 · Legislative Documents Unit
AdvancedApproved by Council
1998-10-22 · City Council
ActionSent to Mayor by Council
1998-10-22 · City Council
HeardHearing Held by Mayor
1998-11-09 · Mayor
ActionRecalled by Council
1998-11-17 · City Council
Full text
Be it enacted by the Council as follows:
Section 1. Declaration of Legislative Findings and Intent. The Council finds that the City of New York's landmark Recycling Law, enacted by the Council as Local Law 19 of 1989 ("Local Law 19"), is a clear demonstration of the Council's commitment to the management of the City's solid waste. Since the enactment of Local Law 19, the Council has aggressively fought off attempts by successive mayors to severely decrease or eliminate funding for the Recycling Program. The Council is outraged that the executive branch of City government has continuously failed to recognize what we in the legislature already know - compliance with the recycling tonnage mandates in Local Law 19 is a necessity as a matter of law and sound environmental public policy. The Council remains outraged by the current Administration's repeated resistance to comply with the Local Law 19 tonnage mandates and the revised timetables for compliance with these mandates as established by successive court orders.
The Council has also maintained its commitment to Local Law 19 and the Recycling Program in the solid waste management planning process. For example, in the 1992 Comprehensive Solid Waste Management Plan, the Council demanded and obtained an expedited schedule for the citywide implementation of the Program. In the 1996 update to and modification of the Comprehensive Solid Waste Management Plan, the Council required the expansion of the Recycling Program to include mixed paper and bulk metal and the City commenced implementation of the program. The Council believes that the addition of these materials has resulted in recent improvements in the Citywide recycling diversion rate.
By the passage of the Fiscal Year 1999 Adopted Budget and the enactment of this legislation, the Council hereby continues its commitment to Local Law 19 and the City's Recycling Program. The Fiscal Year 1999 Adopted Budget allocated funding to provide all of the City's 59 local service delivery districts with weekly recycling collection service. At present, only 18 of the City's 59 local service delivery districts receive weekly recycling collections.
In particular, the Council believes that the failure to implement weekly recycling Citywide has adversely impacted upon the residents of the 41 districts receiving only alternate week collections and decreased overall public participation in the Recycling Program. Many of the residents in these districts lack adequate space to store designated recyclable materials for two weeks, which has resulted in problems ranging from unpleasant odors to vermin infestation. In light of these problems, some residents have chosen to dispose of their designated recyclable materials with their refuse, which the City collects, at a minimum, two times per week. The Council believes that the provision of weekly recycling collections to all districts within the City, supplemented by a comprehensive education and outreach program and a mayoral commitment to the Recycling Program, will serve to further increase the City's diversion rate and enable the City to comply with Local Law 19 and relevant court orders.
Finally, the State-mandated closure of the Fresh Kills landfill by January 1, 2002 provides further incentive for the City to increase the City's recycling diversion rate. It is axiomatic that as the City increases the amount of materials it recycles there will be a corresponding decrease in the amount of residential waste that needs to be disposed of at the Fresh Kills landfill. Increased recycling also decreases the City's reliance on out-of-City export as a means of disposing of the City's residential waste. The City's decreased reliance on export benefits the overall quality of life for those communities throughout the City that would be besieged by applications for new or expanded transfer stations and through which the City's residential waste would be exported.
�2. Subchapter two of chapter three of title sixteen of the administrative code of the city of New York, as added by local law number 19 for the year 1989, is amended by adding a new section 16-305.1 to read as follows:
�16-305.1 Weekly collection of designated recyclable materials. a. Notwithstanding the provisions of section 16-305 of this chapter, the department, or any successor agency or entity designated to provide services pursuant to this chapter or any succeeding laws, shall commence and maintain the collection of designated recyclable materials on at least one day each week throughout each of the city's local service delivery districts in accordance with the following schedule:
1. not later than December 21, 1998 in eleven of the local service delivery districts not receiving weekly collection of designated recyclable materials as of July 1, 1998;
2. not later than February 8, 1999 in fifteen of the local service delivery districts not receiving weekly collection of designated recyclable materials as of December 22, 1998;
3. not later than April 26, 1999 in every other local service delivery district not receiving weekly collection of designated recyclable materials as of February 9, 1999.
b. Every local service delivery district that was receiving weekly collection of designated recyclable materials prior to the effective date of this section shall continue to receive such services.
c. The commissioner shall utilize the following criteria to determine which local service delivery districts shall receive collection of designated recyclable materials as required by subdivision a of this section: (i) the eleven local service delivery districts with the lowest diversion rate of designated recyclable materials as of July 1, 1998 among those local service delivery districts not receiving weekly collection of designated recyclable materials as of July 1, 1998 shall begin receiving collection of designated recyclable materials on at least one day per week not later than December 21, 1998; (ii) the fifteen local service delivery districts with the lowest diversion rate of designated recyclable materials as of October 1, 1998 among those local service delivery districts not receiving weekly collection of designated recyclable materials as of December 22, 1998 shall begin receiving collection of designated recyclable materials on at least one day per week not later than February 8, 1999; and (iii) all other local service delivery districts not receiving weekly collection of designated recyclable materials shall begin receiving collection of designated recyclable materials on at least one day per week not later than April 26, 1999.
d. For the purposes of this section, the following terms shall have the following meanings: (i) "designated recyclable materials" means solid waste that the commissioner has designated as recyclable pursuant to section 16-305 or section 16-307 of this chapter; (ii) "diversion rate" means the percentage, by weight, of the designated recyclable materials diverted from the solid waste stream for recycling, calculated as the quantity diverted divided by the total solid waste generated; and (iii) "local service delivery district" means a local service delivery district as described in chapter sixty-nine of the charter.
�3. This local law shall take effect immediately.
hl\em\jh
347-Boct98-Revised-co-sponsor
10/8/98 -11:00 a.m.
7
1