1999-2000 Georgia solid waste management annual report

Georgia Solid Waste Management Report
1999-2000

June 2001

SWMR 1999-2000

DCA Georgia Department of Community Affairs

Georgia Department of Community Affairs
60 Executive Park South, NE Atlanta, Georgia 30329-2231 (404) 679-4940
An Equal Opportunity Employer
If you would like to receive this publication in an alternative format, please contact the Georgia Department of Community Affairs at (404) 679-4915 or 1 (800) 736-1155 (TDD).
This report is also available on-line at http://www.dca.state.ga.us/solidwaste/swar.html
Printed on Recycled Paper

Table of Contents

Forward Executive Summary Purpose of this Report Per Capita MSW Disposal Remaining Landfill Capacity Landfill Tipping Fees Imported Waste Disposal Compost Happens Residential Waste and Recycling Collection Dumpster Decline Community Solid Waste Management Systems Paying to Throw Looking ahead Assistance to Local Governments Coming Full Circle Appendix A: Governments Ineligible
for SW Assistance Loans Appendix B: Remaining Landfill Capacity Appendix C: Community Indicators Ranking Appendix D: Recycling Jurisdictions by RDC Appendix E: Grants and Loans Glossary of Terms Acronyms For more information

2 3 5
61
9 12 13 14 16 17 21 22 23 25 28 38 41
42 46 51 76 84 86 86

Forward
The Georgia Department of Community Affairs is pleased to prepare and submit the Georgia Solid Waste Management Report, 1999-2000, in accordance with Georgia Code Section 12-8-31, the Georgia Comprehensive Solid Waste Management Act of 1990. We would like to thank the cooperation and support of our partners, the Environmental Protection and Pollution Prevention Assistance divisions of the Georgia Department of Natural Resources and the Georgia Environmental Facilities Authority. Local governments have performed admirably to meet the enormous solid waste management policy challenges and changes of the last decade. There are no black box solutions that will reduce the amount of waste we generate and lessen our environmental footprint on our state. Much hard work lies ahead, but with continued partnerships and perseverance, Georgia's cities and counties will meet and exceed the solid waste management challenges that face them.
2
JIM HIGDON Commissioner Georgia Department of Community Affairs
SWMR 1999-2000

DCA Georgia Department of Community Affairs

Executive Summary

In its Georgia Solid Waste Management Report 1999-2000, the Department of Community Affairs has compiled landfill disposal activity and remaining capacity data, as reported to the Georgia Department of Natural Resources, Environmental Protection Division (EPD). This data is merged with an analysis of the FY 1999 Annual Solid Waste Management Survey and Full Cost Report, administered by DCA. The intended result is not only a snapshot of solid waste management at the state and local levels, but also a developing image of these efforts over time.

The report shows that solid waste management is improving

in Georgia, at both the state and local levels. Recycling

programs are flourishing, innovative ideas for reuse are

becoming realities, and unlined landfills are being replaced

with newer safer lined facilities. Communities providing

green boxes or Dumpsters as a disposal option are

replacing these uncontrolled drop-off sites with staffed

recycling and waste disposal convenience centers, and

many of the solid waste management efforts have shifted

their focus from cleanup to prevention, including the scrap

tire management program administered by EPD. Our climbing individual disposal rate has slowed, though the

3

25% reduction of MSW goal remains elusive.

Georgia's increasing MSW per capita disposal rate stabilizes

Georgians continue to throw away garbage at a rate exceeding the level necessary to attain the State's 25% waste reduction goal set by the Georgia Comprehensive Solid Waste Management Act of 1990. However, the historical trend of annually increasing per capita Municipal Solid Waste disposal has slowed and leveled-off, at a MSW per capita disposal rate of approximately 6.3 lbs./person/ day.

Dumpster Decline

The number of communities using unmonitored Dumpsters as their primary method of residential waste collection continues to dwindle. Some of Georgia's cities, a few of them quite large, reported using green boxes in their annual solid waste survey, but nearly all of the additions were to supplement existing waste collection operations, rather than replace them. Rural communities are continuing to switch from unattended groups of Dumpsters scattered across the county to fewer, more centrally located staffed convenience drop-off centers.

Recycling issues

The abundance of landfill capacity combined with Georgia's comparatively low tipping fees makes disposal an easy option, thereby reducing the economic incentive

for local governments to implement and maintain recycling programs. As local governments weigh the cost of recycling programs against cheap disposal, it will become increasingly challenging to make a case for implementing or maintaining recycling programs at the local level.

Despite this and volatile markets for recyclables, the number of local governments arranging for recycling continues to climb, along with the variety of materials they collect for recycling.

C&D disposal

Construction and Demolition disposal is rapidly increasing in Georgia. While there is adequate capacity for now, the accelerated pace of C&D disposal bears watching. As the metro Atlanta area emerges from under federal clean air restrictions and road-building funds again flow to the region, the resulting construction will likely contribute even more construction debris to the state's C&D landfills. The expansion of the burn ban from 13 counties to 45 in the metro Atlanta area will probably also add to the amount of C&D disposal.

Imported waste

While the percentage of out-of-state garbage brought to

4

Georgia for disposal remains a small percentage (5%) of the MSW disposed, there was a large increase in FY 1999

over the previous year, and waste imports climbed again in

FY 2000, though not nearly as dramatically. This growth in

out-of-state waste imports was significant enough to offset

the leveling-off of our own MSW disposal rate when

measuring the progress towards meeting the State's 25%

waste reduction disposal goal. Perhaps it is time to re-

evaluate the State's waste disposal reduction goal and our

strategy for attaining it given this phenomenon, coupled

with the changes in solid waste management practices in

the past decade and the environmental priorities of the

state for the next decade.

Remaining Capacity

An adequate supply of disposal capacity in our landfills that seemed so far away in the mid-1990s is secure at present, and continues to expand. Georgia now has an estimated 22 years of remaining landfill capacity. Private and public waste industry officials expect landfill capacity growth to continue to outpace disposal in coming years. Most of this capacity is located in relatively few facilities, and today more than 95% of the state's remaining capacity is found in less than half of the total number of permitted landfills in Georgia. The concern over dwindling landfill capacity that was much of the impetus for aggressive solid waste management at the state and local level has been successfully addressed. Increased public concern for a safe environment demands that waste reduction policies remain in place, however.

Public-Private Shift
The private sector is assuming an increasing role in solid waste management, particularly when it comes to landfill operation. While almost 80% of the MSW landfills in the state are publicly owned, over 65% of the MSW waste disposed in the state is disposed in privately owned facilities. Disposal capacity gains in the state have come with new, large, private facilities, as local governments close their small landfills.

SWMR 1999-2000

DCA Georgia Department of Community Affairs
Purpose of this Report
*Due to the reporting and statistical compilation time required to obtain this information, this report and subsequent annual reports will provide a statistical update of the disposal capacity, progress toward the State's Municipal Solid Waste disposal goal, and state programs activities for the past fiscal year. There will be a one-year delay in reporting the solid waste management activities of local government programs due to the reporting and compilation time required to analyze information reported by the local governments in the Solid Waste Management Survey and Full Cost Report.

The purpose of this report is to provide an update on the status of solid waste management in Georgia as required by the Georgia Comprehensive Solid Waste Management Act of 1990 {O.C.G.A. 12-8-31 (d)}.
The Georgia Department of Community Affairs (DCA) prepares this report with the cooperation of the Department of Natural Resources' (DNR) Environmental Protection Division (EPD), the Georgia Environmental Facilities Authority (GEFA), and the Pollution Prevention Assistance Division (P2AD) of DNR.
The FY 1999 & 2000 Report covers the period July 1, 1998 through June 30, 2000, and contains:
a statement of progress achieved in meeting the State's 25% municipal solid waste disposal reduction goal established in subsection (c) of Code Section 12-8-21;
the remaining capacity of permitted solid waste handling facilities in Georgia;
the number and types of solid waste handling facilities in 5
Georgia;
the status of local and regional solid waste management planning in Georgia;
the number and types of solid waste grants and loans made to local governments;
a compilation and analysis of solid waste management data provided by cities and counties as reported in their 1999 Solid Waste Management Survey and Full Cost Reports;*
any revisions in the state solid waste management plan deemed necessary; and
recommendations for improving the management of solid waste in the state.

Per Capita MSW Disposal - Progress Toward Goal

Georgia's MSW Disposal Rates Level Off . . . But Other Factors Contribute to Rising Overall Disposal Rates

Georgia's economy boomed into the new century, along with our population. However, our landfills are taking some of the fallout from the good times. The overall per capita disposal rate for all waste disposed in Georgia has continued to rise, but based upon the best available information reported, the per capita disposal rate for MSW has leveled off at 6.65 lbs./person/day.

In the early 1990s, Georgia was facing a dilemma of too

much garbage, and not enough places to put it. Unless

action was taken, the state was projected to run out of

landfill space. The obvious solution, constructing more

landfills, would not be an easy fix during this period.

Identifying and choosing a new landfill location agreeable

to local residents was often challenging at best. Obtaining

the necessary permits from the state Environmental

Protection Division when new federal landfill siting and

construction rules were being developed added additional
6 complexities and delays. It often took several years to site

and construct a new landfill. In 1992, there was less than 10

years of disposal capacity, measured in

tightly compacted cubic yards, most of 10

which was located in metro Atlanta.

Action was needed.

9

O.C.G.A. 12-8-21(c) "It is the intent of the General Assembly that every effort be undertaken to reduce on a state-wide per capita basis the amount of municipal solid waste being received at disposal facilities during fiscal year 1992 by 25 percent by July 1, 1996;" Municipal Solid Waste (MSW) includes what we commonly perceive of as garbage: household trash, food residue and packaging waste. It also includes sanitary waste from septic tanks, commercial solid waste. It does not include waste from mining, farming, or industrial processes.
Per Capita Daily Waste Disposal FY 93-FY 00

In an attempt to make the most of the

8

room in existing landfills, the Legislature

established a municipal solid waste

7

Pounds Per Person, Per Dayy

disposal goal encouraging a 25%

reduction from the 1992 waste disposed

6

in landfills by July 1, 1996 on a statewide

per capita basis. Numerous changes

5

were made at the local and state level

to help achieve the goal, including

4

changes in waste-handling programs 3
and the spread of local recycling

programs. The popularity of local

2

recycling programs, despite fluctuating

market prices for materials and the

1

availability of inexpensive landfill disposal,

is encouraging. Currently 501 local

0

governments have made recycling services available to their residents and

1993

1994

1995

Total Waste

1996

1997

Fiscal Year

MSW

Georgia MSW

1998

1999

C&D

Total Goal

2000

each year since 1997, we have seen the

number of communities collecting different recyclables

grow. Many jurisdictions privatized solid waste

management. These changes collectively failed to attain

the 25% reduction goal, but many local jurisdictions

reported increased diversion rates. For a closer look at local

SWMR 1999-2000

DCA Georgia Department of Community Affairs

waste reduction efforts, see the section entitled `Residential Waste and Recycling Collection' on page 17.

The national per capita MSW generation rate has

increased from 3.25 pounds in 1970 to 4.4 pounds in 1997.

The increase in waste generation since 1970 has

Georgia Waste Disposal and Population

been correlated with increased economic activity as measured by the gross domestic

Fiscal Year
1992 1993

Population 2000
Census*
6,649,005 6,819,832

Total Waste Landfilled Millions of Tons 8.60 8.25

Total Waste Pounds/ person/ day 7.09 6.63

Tons Out of Total GA MSW

MSW State MSW only

Waste** Pounds/ Pounds/

in Tons person/ person/

day day

N/A

N/A N/A N/A

6,926,022 107,656 5.56 5.48

product and personal consumption expenditures. Nationwide, increases in per capita consumption of nondurable goods (newspapers and other paper products, textiles, plastics, etc.) and durable goods (major appliances, automobile tires) have contributed

1994 6,990,658 8.58

6.73 7,222,291 138,946 5.66 5.55

to increased disposal rates.

1995 7,161,485 1996 7,332,311 1997 7,503,138 1998 7,673,965 1999 7,844,792

9.54 9.78 9.86 10.75 11.43

7.30 7,684,271 149,481 5.88 5.77 7.31 7,222,499 160,000 5.40 5.28 7.20 8,107,310 172,150 5.79 5.66 7.68 8,981,223 193,819 6.44 6.31 7.98 9,382,622 453,875 6.55 6.24

Georgia has shared in the nation's healthy economy, creating a bounty of employment that has resulted in a jobless rate lower than the national average. (3.67% vs. 4.1%) Construction

2000 8,015,626 12.71

8.69 10,236,208 511,472 6.65 6.30

work has boomed through the late 90s, with

*Flat rate of increase, based on the 1990 Census and 2000 Census. Population figures are

construction jobs growing from 145,600 in 1995 to

reported as of the first day of the Fiscal Year.

200,200 in 2000, according to the U.S. Bureau of

**Virtually all out-of-state waste is MSW

Labor Statistics.

As you can see by the chart ("Georgia Waste

Disposal and Population" to the left), Municipal Solid Waste (MSW) disposal in Georgia dropped significantly in 1996.

7

The decrease coincided with the State's 1996 ban on yard

trimmings and the approaching deadline calling for a 25%

reduction in the per capita MSW disposal rate. Many local

governments had expanded their residential recycling

programs in an effort to meet this goal, and many report

exceeding the 25% reduction rate. This decline in 1996 also

coincided with a slight decline in the national per capita

waste generation rate from 4.4 lbs/person/day in 1995 to

4.3 lbs/person/day in 1996. Overall, the statewide MSW

disposal rate continued to climb until Fiscal Year 1998.

As best as we can determine based on information reported to the Environmental Protection Division (EPD), Georgia's per capita MSW rate leveled off in FY98 and has remained relatively constant through FY00. During the FY00 reporting period, Georgians disposed of 6.65 pounds of municipal solid waste a day.* Based upon regional and national waste generation statistics, we suspect this rate overstates the per capita MSW disposal rate. The disposal rates reported to EPD reflect all waste entering a MSW landfill, not just MSW. Landfill owners/operators are not required to report the type of waste they accept for disposal, thus the reported figures generally include Construction and Demolition (C&D) materials, industrial and agricultural waste, and other waste not categorized as MSW. However, landfill owners and operators are required to report the disposal rates for out-of-state waste disposed in their facilities. When excluding out-of-state waste imports, over which local governments and the state have limited control, the Georgia daily per capita MSW rate is even

more encouraging in terms of making progress toward the state's 25% waste disposal reduction goal. The rate actually dipped from 6.31 lbs./person/day in FY98 to 6.24 lbs./ person/day in FY99 and climbed only slightly in FY00 back to 6.3 lbs./person/day. The impact of out-of-state waste imports on our progress toward the state's 25% reduction goal is becoming increasingly significant. Imported MSW is not exempted from the reduction goal and must be factored into the overall equation. While MSW imports remain a small fraction of Georgia's overall waste stream, at just a little over 4% of the total, the increase in waste imports in recent years has been enough to offset the leveling-off of our own MSW disposal rate. Imported waste has grown from representing .14 lbs./person/day in 1998 to .35 lbs./person/ day in 2000. There is some border exchange of waste resulting in solid waste exports, but the amounts are unknown. With the current abundance of landfill capacity, low landfill-tipping fees, and convenient rail and barge access, this trend will require continued monitoring. For an expanded discussion of this issue, please see the Imported Waste Section of this Report on page 13. The stabilization of Georgia's per capita MSW disposal rate over the last three years is encouraging. In order to
8 maintain this progress the waste reduction and recycling
efforts of local governments need to be supported and encouraged. With expanded local government recycling programs we could expect to see a downward trend in MSW disposal rates and demonstrated progress toward the State's reduction goal. While it appears that the local government waste reduction and recycling programs are having their intended effect in reducing the MSW disposal rate, the overall disposal rate for the State continues to grow. Since 1993, the combined total of MSW, C&D, out-of-state waste, and other waste streams sent to Georgia landfills has climbed from 6.63 pounds to 8.69 pounds per Georgian per day. To achieve a 25% reduction in the total waste stream, not just municipal solid waste (MSW) as the Solid Waste Management Act established, Georgians would have to throw out no more than 5.33 pounds per person per day. Rising imported waste and C&D disposal highlight two potential barriers to reducing Georgia's overall waste disposal stream.
SWMR 1999-2000

DCA Georgia Department of Community Affairs

Remaining Landfill Capacity

The challenge of insufficient landfill space that faced Georgia during the early 1990s has largely been met, with new permitted landfill space more than doubling disposal capacity since Fiscal Year 1995.

Capacity, or the amount of available space in landfills for tightly compacted waste, swelled from 139 million cubic yards in FY 94 to over 220 million cubic yards in FY 97, and again to over 308 million cubic yards in FY 00. To help visualize 308 million cubic yards, it would be the equivalent of erecting a "Stone Mountain" of trash, with 15 Georgia Domes filled and placed on top of it. In FY 99 alone, Georgia added the equivalent of more than nine Georgia Domes to total landfill capacity available in the state.

According to information reported to the Georgia

Environmental Protection Division, at current disposal rates

and if no additional disposal facilities were built, Georgia

would not run out of landfill space until late in 2023. On a

regional basis, the Northeast Georgia Regional

Development Center (RDC) was the only region in which

public and private remaining disposal capacity added up

to less than 10 years. A mere six years ago, only four of the

state's 16 RDCs had disposal capacity within their region of

more than 10 years. In 2000, five RDCs (Coosa Valley,

Lower Chattahoochee, Middle Flint, Middle Georgia and

Southeast Georgia) had more than 30 years remaining

capacity within their regions. The region reporting the

greatest change in the last reporting period was the

Southeast Georgia RDC. With the addition of nearly 10

million cubic yards of capacity at Waste

Management Inc.'s facility beside the

Okefenokee National Wildlife Refuge,

Southeast Georgia RDC went from

having the least amount of landfill

disposal capacity within its borders to

350,000,000

nearly leading the state, with nearly 32

years of remaining disposal capacity.

300,000,000

Only public and private facilities in

Coosa Valley RDC totaled more

250,000,000

capacity, with more than 35 years at

current landfill disposal rates.

200,000,000

Remaining Landfill Capacity
FY2000
12 6
5

1

13

3

2

9

11

10 8

7 4

16

14

15

1 Atlanta Regional Commission 2 Central Savannah River Area 3 Chattahoochee Flint 4 Coastal Georgia 5 Coosa Valley 6 Georgia Mountains 7 Heart of Georgia Altamaha 8 Lower Chattahoochee

9 McIntosh Trail 10 Middle Flint 11 Middle Georgia 12 North Georgia 13 Northeast Georgia 14 South Georgia 15 Southeast Georgia 16 Southwest Georgia

Years of Remaining Capacity

5 - 10

11 - 15

15 +

Source: Georgia Department of Community Affairs, Office of

Environmental Management & the Georgia Environmental Protection Division disposal reports.

9

Total Remaining Landfill Capacity in Cubic Yards and Years

10+ years 9.13 years 11 years 12.5 years 18.2 years 25 years 23.5 years

The increases in landfill disposal capacity are the result of a solid waste management trend that emerged in the mid-90s; a trend that is largely driven by economies of scale. While the state has more disposal capacity today than it had in the past decade, this capacity is contained in fewer landfills. In FY 99, nearly half of the state's total disposal

150,000,000
100,000,000
50,000,000
1994

1995

1996

1997

1998

Fiscal Years

1999

2000

Georgia's Largest Landfills
COUNTY SITE NAME

1 Cherokee 2 Taylor 3 Banks 4 DeKalb 5 Gordon 6 Gwinnett 7 Butts 8 Charlton 9 Whitfield 10 DeKalb

Cherokee Co.-Pine Bluff Landfill, Inc. Allied Services, LLC -SR 90/SR 137 Chambers R&B Landfill Site # 2 DeKalb Co.-Seminole Rd. Phase 2A, 3 & 4 Gordon Co.-Redbone Ridges Rd. BFI- Richland Creek Rd. Butts Co.-Pine Ridge Recycling Chesser Island Road Landfill, Inc. Whitfield Co.-Dalton, Old Dixie Hwy. WMI-Live Oak #2 Subtotal

11 Wayne Wayne Co.-SR23, Broadhurst

12 Hall

Hall Co.-Candler Rd. SR 60

13 Floyd

Rome Walker Mtn. Rd. Site 2

14 Chatham Superior Landfill & Recycling Center

15 Muscogee Columbus, Pine Grove

16 Houston Houston Co.-SR 247 Klondike

17 Dougherty Dougherty Co.-Fleming/Gaissert Rd.

18 Twiggs Twiggs Co.-US 80

19 Houston Houston Co.-SR 247 Klondike C&D Landfill

20 Fulton Chadwick Rd. Landfill, Inc.

21 Clayton Clayton Co. SR 3 Lovejoy Site # 3

10 22 DeKalb

BFI-Hickory Ridge Subtotal

Total

* Did not report

capacity could be found in eight landfills. Of

the total remaining capacity, two-thirds of it

REMAINING CAPACITY

rested in a mere sixteen (16) landfills.

(in cubic yards)

FY 00

FY 99

34,305,316 33,848,802

33,681,806 35,540,014

23,367,898 24,114,265

11,169,712 11,341,089

This trend continued into FY 2000, with some of the state's largest landfills adding still more capacity. For the most recent reporting period, 95 % of the state's landfill capacity can be found in 46 of the 96 landfills in the state. The

11,085,091 11,219,698 gains in capacity have come while older

10,965,340 10,932,000 10,334,342 10,265,808 9,976,227

12,152,728 11,876,096
598,848 10,708,108
*

landfills are being phased out and closed. Since 1972, more than 320 EPD-permitted landfills have either closed or stopped accepting waste.

166,083,540 151,399,648 MSW landfills accept what we commonly

6,854,670 6,613,345 6,552,853 6,490,640

7,251,272 6,753,581 6,714,000 7,160,315

perceive of as garbage: household trash, food residue, and packaging waste. MSW facilities also accept sanitary waste from septic tanks, and commercial solid waste, but not waste

5,870,400 5,713,831 5,457,119 4,870,060 4,483,248

6,100,500 5,909,905 5,678,663 2,757,671 4,496,287

from mining, farming or industrial processes. C&D facilities accept `dry' waste such as construction debris and vegetation from landclearing activities.

4,421,084 4,066,728 3,543,488 64,937,466 231,021,006

5,236,150 4,206,969 4,232,493 66,497,806 217,897,454

During FY 99 and FY 00, an additional 12 Municipal Solid Waste and five Construction and Demolition landfills ceased operations, and 27 MSW and five C&D landfills received closure certificates, according to the EPD.

During the same period, eight MSW and two C&D landfills

were permitted. MSW capacity grew from 259,383,011

cubic yards to 279,234,710, a 7.7% increase, and C&D

capacity increased from 16,359,909 to 25,736,780, a 57.3 %

increase.

350,000,000 300,000,000 250,000,000 200,000,000

Remaining Disposal Capacity by Type

While siting new landfills will remain a contentious issue for local governments for the foreseeable future, the capacity
crunch appears to be resolved, at least for now. Georgia's continued economic growth, the potential for increased out-ofstate waste imports and the inevitable natural disasters facing our state are some of the main forces aligned against ensuring adequate capacity. Another major factor influencing the rate at which this capacity may be consumed is the relatively low landfill tipping fees in the state.

150,000,000

Remaining Capacity, in cubic yards

100,000,000

50,000,000

-

1993

1994

1995

1996

1997

1998

1999

2000

Fiscal Years

MSWL SL C&D/L Total

SWMR 1999-2000

DCA Georgia Department of Community Affairs

MSW Disposal

FY 00 Public-Private MSW Disposed, in tons
Public 34%

FY 00 Public-Private MSW Landfill Ownership
69 MSW Landfills
Private 22%

Private 66%

FY 00 Public-Private MSW Remaining Capacity

Public 78%

Private 56%

Public* 44%

*Includes unlined, non Subtitle D facilities

FY 00 Lined-Unlined Waste Disposed, in tons
Unlined Landfills 17%
17%

FY 00 Lined-Unlined MSW Remaining Capacity
Unlined MSW 4%

Lined LineLd8a3La%nnddffililslls
83%

Lined MSW 96%

C&D Disposal

FY 00 Public-Private C&D Disposal
Public 10%

FY 00 Public-Private C&D Landfill Ownership
Private 35%

FY 00 Public-Private C&D Remaining Capacity
Public 31%

Private 90%

Public 65%

Private 69%

11

Closure: Easier Said than Done

Closing a landfill in Georgia isn't as simple as padlocking the gate and walking away. There are many steps involved in securing a landfill, with decades of expensive monitoring necessary to ensure the levels of methane gas produced by decomposing waste are safe and that groundwater resources are protected both below and around the site. Closing a landfill is one of the most expensive aspects of operating a modern landfill.

To close a landfill, a landfill owner/operator must notify the Environmental Protection Division of its closure within 30 days after the facility stops receiving waste. From the date of the notification, landfill operators have 180 days to properly close the facility.

Regardless of whether a landfill was permitted and constructed to Federal Subtitle D requirements, the facility must be closed in accordance with these standards as incorporated into EPD rules. When closing a Georgia landfill, an owner/ operator must install a cap that demonstrates the same permeability rate as the facility's liner. In most cases, this will require a composite cap composed of either an 18-inch clay liner covered with topsoil and vegetation or if the landfill was built using a synthetic liner, it will more than likely require the use of a synthetic cap covered with a drainage soil layer and vegetation. The installation of erosion control `Best Management Practices' such as terracing or riprap is typically used to maintain the integrity of the cap. The ultimate goal of a cap constructed to subtitle D standards is to keep all moisture out of the closed landfill.
The liner and erosion control system must be installed under the supervision of a certified, licensed engineer, who prepares a certification statement for EPD, testifying the facility was closed in accordance with state regulations. After EPD review and inspection has verified the facility meets their regulations, a certificate of closure is issued. This certificate specifies the course of care and maintenance required for the facility over the next 30 years of post-closure care.

Post-closure activities include maintenance of the cap including its vegetative cover, erosion control, leachate management and treatment, as well as methane gas and groundwater monitoring.

12

Landfill Tipping Fees

$20 to 24.99 $25 to 29.99 $30 to 34.99 $35 +

MSW

Source: DCA phone survey

C&D

In the summer of 2000, DCA conducted a telephone survey of 40 MSW landfills and 43 C&D landfills, accounting for approximately 80% of the total solid waste disposed of in Georgia. DCA found landfill tipping fees to be less than most states, and less than half the average tipping fee in the Northeast. The statewide average for Municipal Solid Waste was $29.18 per ton, and the average tipping fee for Construction and Demolition waste in Georgia was $26.74 per ton. By comparison, the regional average for C&D and MSW waste in the Northeast was approximately $60 per ton, according to an April 2000 survey by BioCycle magazine.

SWMR 1999-2000

DCA Georgia Department of Community Affairs
Imported Waste

The amount of waste brought to Georgia from other states and dumped in our landfills more than doubled from FY 98 to FY 99 and continued to climb during FY 00. While the amount of out-of-state waste imports is a small part of the overall waste disposal stream in Georgia, the increasing disposal trend is worth noting and monitoring.

From FY 93 to FY 98, annual out-of-state waste disposal grew gradually but significantly from 107,656 tons to 193,819 tons, a 180% increase over six years. In FY 99, imported waste jumped to 453,875 tons, a 234% increase over the previous year. In FY 00, 512,298 tons of waste entered Georgia, a 13% increase over FY 99. Virtually all of the waste brought to Georgia for disposal goes into Municipal Solid Waste landfills and is used to calculate the state's progress toward meeting its 25% waste disposal reduction goal.

Out-of-state waste entering Georgia MSW landfills

accounts for only 5% of our MSW disposal stream and only

4% of our total waste disposal stream. But with a newfound

abundance of landfill capacity and relatively low tipping

fees compared with our neighbors, Georgia could find

13

itself accepting a rising tide of waste from outside its

borders.

Georgia's average tipping fee for MSW and C&D in FY 00

was $27.96, compared with a 1998 regional average of

$30.89. More vehicles carrying waste increases the

likelihood of unsecured loads sending litter to our

roadways, and imported waste would

6.00%

Imported Waste

quickly offset years of effort by local governments to reach the state's 25% MSW reduction goal established by

the Solid Waste Management Act.

5.00%

4.00%

Percentage of MSW Disposal

3.00%

2.00%

1.00%

0.00%

1993

1994

1 995

1996

1997

1998

Fiscal Years

1999

2000

Disposal

Most of the Municipal Solid Waste (MSW) and Construction & Demolition (C&D) waste generated in the state enters private facilities, and those relationships are reflected in the state's remaining landfill capacity, though to different degrees. Most of Georgia's landfilled waste entered the 27 private MSW and C&D facilities in the state (see page 11).
In FY00, landfill owners/operators reported 6,714,658 tons of MSW entering the 15 private MSW landfills, while 3,521,550 tons entered the 54 publicly owned facilities in the state. Since 1993, the number of MSW landfills owned and operated by cities and counties has dropped by nearly twothirds. Including C&D landfills, there has been a 60% decrease in the number of landfills operated by local governments since 1993. However, during the same period the number of local governments operating solid waste transfer stations has more than doubled, rising from 35 to 71.
Since 1997 alone, there has been a 22% reduction in the total number of landfills operating in Georgia. However over this same period, landfill disposal capacity in the state has continued to climb. For Fiscal Year 1999, EPD permitted
14 seven new MSW landfills, with nearly 45,000,000 cubic yards
of capacity combined. That's enough to fill about 17 Georgia Domes with tightly compacted trash. In FY93 67% of the state's disposal capacity was contained in privately owned and operated facilities. In FY00 56% of the disposal capacity in the state was controlled by the private sector. Federal Subtitle D regulations requiring liners, leachate control, and other environmental protection measures, coupled with the privatization of the waste industry have been a driving force in reducing the number of landfills in the state. Seeking economies of scale, many landfill owners/ operators are allowing their smaller, older landfills to close. These facilities are being replaced by larger, regional landfills. These facilities are not only accepting the waste that had been going to the closed landfills, they're accepting waste from local governments seeking to provide more costeffective waste services for their citizens. Solid waste transfer stations are a popular method for local governments to provide inexpensive waste management services for their citizens. The "Types of Permitted Solid Waste Management Facilities" table to the right shows the decline in the number of MSW landfills in Georgia, but it also reveals a potentially worrisome reliance upon a different type of landfill - - inert landfilling. Inert landfills don't receive nearly the regulatory oversight of C&D or MSW facilities, but they are spreading across Georgia. Usually located at construction sites, these small facilities are an inexpensive way to dispose of inert waste such as road-building debris, concrete, trees and stumps.
While we have seen a rise in the use of inert landfills in the state and waste generators in Georgia continue to landfill

Governments Operating Solid Waste Facilities
140

120

100

80

60

40

20

0 1993

1994

1995

1996

1997

1998

1999

MSW Landfill Inert Landfill C&D Landfill Transfer Station

Types of Permitted Solid Waste Management Facilities

Inert Landfills Collection Operations Transfer Stations On-Site-Thermal Treatment Facilities On-Site Processing Facilities Municipal Solid Waste Landfills Construction/Demolition Landfills Materials Recovery Facility* Composting Facilities Waste to Energy Facility Air Curtain Destructor Commercial Industrial Waste Landfill

FY 1997 FY 1998 FY 1999 FY 2000

1,990 2,101 2,167 2,304

398 469 538 610

127 139 161 176

77 79 79 83

54 54 75 84

95 76 70 69

33 34 32 34

3

3

5

5

2

2

4

3

1

1

1

1

0

0

1

3

1

1

1

1

Source: EPD Operating as of July 1 of indicated fiscal year As of July 1, 2000, 136 solid waste disposal facilities were in post closure care.
*A Materials Recovery Facility accepts and sorts recyclables only. A Recovered Materials Processing Facility accepts waste and separates recyclables for sale.

SWMR 1999-2000

DCA Georgia Department of Community Affairs

increasing amounts of waste, the good news is that a rising percentage of that waste is entering newer, safer landfills. Landfill liners have been required since 1992 for new Municipal Solid Waste landfills in Georgia. Approximately 95% of MSW, or common household and commercial trash, is disposed in lined, Subtitle D landfills. Federal Subtitle D regulations were adopted by Georgia in 1993, and called for environmental safeguards requiring synthetic liners to be incorporated below a new landfill and above a closed facility.

There are 12 landfills in the state that are permitted to

accept MSW that do not meet Subtitle D design standards

(See "Remaining Capacity in Unlined

Remaining Capacity in Unlined Landfills accepting MSW

landfills accepting MSW" to the left).

County Facility name

Tons Remaining Estimated closure disposed capacity

These facilities are still operating under their original Environmental Protection

Bibb Troup Putnam Decatur Liberty Douglas Grady McIntosh

Macon-Walker Road Phase 2 (SL) LaGrange I-85/SR 109 (SL) Putnam Co.-CR 29 (L) & (SL) Decatur Co.-SR 309 Bainbridge Phase 2 (SL) U.S. Army-Ft. Stewart Main Cantonment (SL) Douglas County-Cedar Mt/Worthan Road Phase 1 (SL) Cairo-Sixth Ave. (SL) McIntosh County-King Road (SL)

FY 00 91,342.05 72,942.98 44,228.77 30,977.25 24,965.00 22,872.40 19,558.56 16,134.00

2,933,963 2,930,829
78,651 322,623 901,423 711,419 209,613 648,722

August 2015 September 2016
April 2000 October 2005
July 2018 August 2001 August 2005 January 2035

Division-approved permits, and have not reached their closure capacity. Until they do, they are undergoing the same operating and methane and groundwater monitoring as their newer counterparts. When they close they will be capped under Subtitle D design regulations.

Haralson Franklin Elbert Appling Jasper Paulding

Haralson County-U.S. 78 Bremen Phase 2 Franklin County-Harrison Bridge Road Phase 1 (SL) Elbert County-Hull Chapel Road Phase 1 (SL) Appling County-Roaring Creek Phases 1 & 2 (SL) Jasper County-SR 212 Monticello (SL) Paulding County-Gulledge Road North Tract 1 (SL)

12,464.95 11,266.33 10,017.59

210,369

Closed January 2000 June 2011
Closed March 2000

There is no time limit for these landfills to meet Subtitle D regulations, but they

15

4,464.29 675,611

June 2042 will not be granted expansion permits.

3,408.80 29,903

December 2001 Most are in rural areas and are filling at

2,066.35 12,000

July 2004 a very slow rate. It is likely that Georgia

Dawson Dawson County-Shoal Hole Road (SL)

484.00

Closed November 1999 will continue sending a very small

Hall Muscogee Total

Hall County-Allen Creek Phase A (SL) Columbus-Schatulga Road W Fill Phase 2 (SL)

10.00 367,203.32

Closed November 1999 Closed August 1999

percentage of its MSW to unlined landfills for decades to come. Approximately 77% of the waste

disposed in all landfills enters lined facilities. Of Georgia's 69

MSW landfills, 51 are lined, Subtitle D facilities. Lined MSW

landfills accepted waste at a much faster rate than unlined,

at 52,258 cubic yards per day. That's the equivalent of 418

tractor-trailer loads of household garbage every day.

Unlined MSW landfills took in only 2,472 cubic yards each

Yard Trimmings Management

FY 1998

%

%

FY 1999

%

%

day, or about 20 tractor-trailer loads.
As an alternative to inert landfilling and in order to provide less expensive disposal options than MSW landfilling and to

County City County City

conserve MSW landfill space, Construction & Demolition

Promote Home Composting and Grasscycling 25

11

25

17

Provide for collection and disposal

54

59

49

58

Collection Options

Staffed drop-off facilities

47

6

45

6

(C&D) disposal capacity in the state has grown. Like MSW facilities, the public sector owns and operates a greater percentage of the number of C&D facilities in the state, 65%,

Unstaffed drop-off facilities Curbside collection Accepted at landfill/transfer station Other Processing Methods Composting Solid waste landfill Inert landfill

12

5

8

4

19

94

18

97

57

13

61

14

12

3

14

1

23

25

17

29

1

11

1

12

51

34

55

33

but it controls only 31% of the total C&D disposal capacity. In FY00, C&D landfill operators reported 2,120,480 tons of C&D waste entering the 11 private landfills in the state while only 232,174 tons were reported as entering the 20 publicly owned C&D landfills (see page 11).

Grind/chip into mulch Burning

63

93

70

66

0

8

3

8

Other

1

2

4

4

Compost Happens
Composting is one way to reduce the load on Georgia's landfills. Whether on a large scale or small, certain wastes can be broken down naturally into a rich soil additive, saving waste disposal costs, and landfill space. A North Carolina State University study found a quarter of all household waste is yard trimmings and food scraps that can be composted. The federal Environmental Protection Agency reports that nationwide, Americans generate 22.1 million tons of food scraps and 27.7 million tons of yard trimmings annually. That's nearly 50 million tons of material that could be composted, and kept out of landfills. Seventy percent of all Georgia counties and 66% of its cities are mulching residential yard trimmings, according to the FY 99 Solid Waste Management Survey, administered by DCA. For counties, 17 % report composting residential yard trimmings, and 29% of cities compost.
16 Home composting will remain a priority for
DCA until more Georgians are involved, either through their local governments or individually. "I think it hasn't occurred to them, and it's just too easy to throw out yard trimmings and food scraps," said Michael Hintze, who heads up DCA's home composting program, which includes grants for composting bin distribution events. DCA distributed a new brochure entitled "Home Composting in Georgia" among more than 40 communities, and is partnering with the recently formed Georgia Composting Association and the University of Georgia Extension Office to promote home composting.
SWMR 1999-2000

DCA Georgia Department of Community Affairs
Residential Waste and Recycling Collection

Waste Collection

While governments may be getting out of the landfill business, they're not getting out of the solid waste collection business. Eighty four percent of the local governments responding to the annual survey reported they provided or arranged for residential waste collection. There are several notable trends worth considering when examining waste collection services since the enactment of the Comprehensive Solid Waste Management Act. First is the number of local governments providing or arranging for solid waste collection services peaked in FY96 with 595 local governments reporting that they provided this service. As is evident in the Residential Waste and Recycling Collection table below, many communities report a partnership of private and public waste collection service providers in their communities.

From FY92 to FY99, the spread of solid waste management

collection services has been shared by the public and private

sector. While the number of local governments reporting the use

of private waste collection services has fluctuated during this

period and actually peaked in FY 97, private sector vendors

17

in FY 99 provided residential solid waste collection in 65% of

the communities whose local governments reported

arranging for residential waste collection. This was up from

37% in FY 92.

Another notable trend is the decline (550 in FY 97 to 460 in FY 98) in the number of communities reporting curbside

RReessiiddeennttiiaallWWaasstteeCaonldleRcteiocnycalnadblResecCyocllliencgtion Number of local governments responding to survey

FY FY FY FY FY FY FY FY 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999
686 688 689 683 682 681 675 676

Local governments providing/arranging for residential waste collection 517** 571 584 590 595 581 551 568

By public sector (own government, another government, authority) 510 609 600 488 500 455 561 559

By private vendor

191 247 329 371 382 404 302 371

Local governments providing residential collection options, by type Curbside/backdoor Staffed drop-off Unstaffed drop-off Dumpsters

N/A 505 540 563 569 550 460 459 N/A N/A N/A 51 58 61 68 80 N/A N/A N/A 47 44 62 45 55 N/A 167 167 122 121 103 94 110

Local governments making residential recycling services available

218 452 473 508 513 492 497 501

By public sector (own government, another government, authority*) 252 314 331 270 269 395 463 461

By private vendor

190 184 135 198 247 206 34 190

By non-profit organization

N/A N/A N/A 141 161 114 209 137

*Jurisdictions were not asked if solid waste authorities provided recycling services until the FY 1997 survey

**In many cases, local governments arrange for waste or recyclables collection with a combination of private and public sector vendors. This results in totals that are greater than the number of governments providing/arranging for collection.

Number of jurisdictions collecting Residential

collection of solid waste in 1998 as can be seen in the

materials by type: FFY 1999975-F-Y11999999
Automobile components/fluids tires auto batteries

FY* FY

FY

1997 1998 1999

142 136 157

97

94 101

Residential Waste and Recyclables Collection table. A possible contributing factor for this decline may be the way in which local governments were asked to report this information. In FY 1998, DCA did not ask local governments to report both "curbside" and "backdoor" collection

antifreeze

n/a

23

19

services; these two categories were combined. In previous

motor oil oil filters Metals aluminum steel cans

107 114 117

n/a

19

24

404 401 408 188 189 193

years, some local governments may have reported providing both curbside and backdoor services, thus by combining the category some double reporting was eliminated.

scrap metal aerosol cans Paper newspaper magazines corrugated cardboard

217 224 239

34

48

52

445 456 465 309 313 331 328 341 364

The last notable trend is one the Department of Community Affairs has been tracking for some time. Although the number of local governments using Dumpsters, or more commonly referred to as "green boxes," to collect residential waste rose from FY 98 to FY 99, the number of

phone books paper board other paper Miscellaneous #1 and #2 plastic other plastic glass

205 235 270 98 124 148 230 240 267
321 314 327 99 106 115 328 333 333

counties using green boxes declined. Interestingly, there were more cities using green boxes in FY99 than there were in FY 98, although with the exception of one city with a population less than 1,500, the Dumpsters were added to supplement existing curbside residential waste collection programs. (See Dumpster Decline, page 21.)

white goods Christmas trees

244 260 280 269 271 278

Recyclables Collection

construction/demolition

18

agricultural chemical containers

Household Hazardous Waste

paint

cleaning products

pesticides

57

61

62

27

27

29

n/a

18

26

n/a

11

14

n/a

6

9

There has been a strong tradition of public, private, and non-profit partnerships used to provide recycling services throughout Georgia. Private sector involvement in recyclables collection peaked in Fiscal Year 1996, and local governments or authorities have stepped in to keep

other household hazardous waste n/a

7

8

recycling services in place. The number of local

*Prior to FY 1997, residential and business/commercial collection were counted together. For a more detailed breakdown, see

governments offering or arranging for residential collection of recyclables has remained fairly constant in recent years.

Appendix D, page 51.

Among Georgia's cities offering yard trimmings

management, 97% offer curbside collection while counties,

Residential Waste Collection

having a larger area to serve, preferred the

600

centralized methods of using

transfer stations, drop-off

centers and landfills to

500

collect their residential yard

trimmings. Composting,

400

chipping/mulching and

Number of Jurisdictions
j

depositing in an inert landfill

are the most common

300

methods used to manage

yard trimmings. Processed

200

yard trimmings diverted from

Georgia's landfills were

mainly given away to the

100

public, or used by local

governments as landscaping

0 FY 1993

FY 1994

FY 1995

FY 1996

FY 1997

FY 1998

FY 1999

materials. The number of Georgia's

Curbside Staffed Drop-off Green Boxes Un-Staffed Drop-off

cities with programs

SWMR 1999-2000

DCA Georgia Department of Community Affairs

promoting home composting or grasscycling grew, from 11% in FY 1998 to 17% in FY 1999. While the number of counties reporting this service remained a constant 25% from FY98 to FY99, the number of local governments reporting collection or disposal services of yard trimmings dropped. During FY98, 54% of counties provided collection services compared to 49% in FY99. The percentage of cities dropped slightly, from 59% to 58%.

Number of jurisdictions collecting Commercial

materials by type: FFYY119979-5FY- 11999999

FY* FY

FY

1997 1998 1999

Automobile components/fluids

tires

101 107 117

auto batteries

80

86

81

motor oil

81

85

83

DCA does not require local jurisdictions to report the amount of materials recycled within their jurisdictions, but they are required to report what materials are collected for recycling within their community. The required reporting does not address the scale of the local operation, which would be difficult to quantify, but rather quantifies the recycling programs that are available throughout the state. The responses indicate an encouraging level of the state of recycling in Georgia. What the reporting shows, with the exception of antifreeze, is that more and more residential recycling programs are being introduced at the local level every year, despite a consistently unpredictable market for recycled materials. Thanks in large part to Keep Georgia Beautiful's Bring One for the Chipper program, Christmas tree recycling programs continue to flourish across the state. See table "Number of Jurisdictions Collecting Residential Recycling Materials by Type: FY 19971999" to the left.
Local recycling programs for businesses are also becoming more commonplace, with only programs for automotive batteries and motor oil recycling losing ground. Paper products saw especially impressive gains. See "Number of Jurisdictions Collecting Commercial Materials by Type: FY 1995-1999" to the right.

Metals aluminum scrap metal
Paper newspaper magazines corrugated cardboard white paper green bar computer paper phone books other paper
Miscellaneous plastic glass other wood waste pallets restaurant grease

280 291 303 n/a 183 188

317 324 345 226 238 268 298 298 328 216 211 237 182 184 209 157 193 214 176 172 195

224 220 246

225 231 241

n/a

55

58

n/a

68

71

n/a

22

25

19

*Prior to FY 1997, residential and business/commercial collection were counted together. For a more detailed breakdown, see Appendix D, page 51.

Recycled Market Prices
60

50

40

30

20

10

0

7/6/98 8/10/98 9/7/98 10/5/98 11/2/98 12/7/98 2/8/99 3/8/99 4/5/99 5/17/99 6/7/99 7/5/99 8/16/99 9/6/99 10/4/99 11/15/99 12/6/99

Newsprint Glass

Aluminum* PET Plastic*

Corrugated Cardboard

Average Dollars per ton in Atlanta, as reported in Waste News

For trend analysis only; should not be used to develop a recycling operation business performa.

*Average cents per pound

Nationally and regionally, market prices for recycled materials have ridden a rollercoaster, and Atlanta prices as quoted in Waste News are no exception for five of the most commonly collected recyclable materials in Georgia. See "Recycled Market Prices" graph on page 19.
Newsprint prices started climbing at the end of FY 1999, and remained level until the end of that calendar year. Aluminum cans and glass remained fairly steady for the same period, but PET plastic took a nose dive from $12 a ton in August 1998 to $5 per ton in Feb. 1999, before struggling back to $7 per ton in Dec. 99. Two national plastics groups concluded that while recycling increased, those efforts were outpaced by consumption attributed to increased sales of bottle water and sports drinks. As a result, the national recycling rate for PET plastic fell.
Corrugated cardboard prices collapsed from an even $40 per ton early in FY 99, before climbing sharply to $48 per ton in the beginning of FY 2000. The American Forest and Paper Association reported the national paper recovery rate increased slightly during FY 99.
Since 1992, newsprint has been reported as the most widely collected recyclable material in Georgia, followed by aluminum, corrugated cardboard, magazines and
20 glass.

Residential Recycling Service Providers FY 96-FY 99
600

500

400

300

200

100

0 FY 1996

FY 1997

FY 1998

FY 1999

Recycling Services Available Own Local Government Service Private Vendors Non-profit Provide

SWMR 1999-2000

DCA Georgia Department of Community Affairs
Dumpster Decline

Dumpsters, that brand name for the bulky green metal trash containers that cluster in rural communities across Georgia, are in decline.

Sort of.

Far fewer local governments are using green boxes than in 1993, when 167 counties and cities reported using this collection method.

The number of county governments using green boxes has dwindled steadily since 1992, when 99 of Georgia's counties used them. In FY 99, only 42 counties still used this system of collection, and many of the sites have become fenced-in staffed facilities.

Georgia cities appear to be right back where they started in 1992, with 67 municipalities reporting the use of green boxes in the last fiscal year. Thirty-three cities began or resumed using green boxes during FY 99, outpacing the number of cities that dropped them (13).
21
A closer look at the numbers reveals an explanation for this unsettling discovery. The numbers may be back, but the service level is different.

Most of these cities are very small, with all but three having populations below 5,000, and most (15) with populations of 500 or less. Of the 20 cities adding green box collection in FY 99 that did not use the method in FY 98, all but one was supplementing existing curbside collection methods. Only the city of Chester (1990 pop. 1,072) reported using green boxes as its sole method of residential waste collection.

Further, most of the cities augmenting their curbside collection programs with green boxes added only a handful of Dumpsters; five or fewer in most cases.

180

160

140

120

100

80

60

40

20

0

FY

FY

1993 1994

FY 1995

FY 1996

FY 1997

FY 1998

Continued progress toward phasing out the use of Dumpsters is a priority for many communities as they seek to manage the solid waste generated in their communities responsibly. DCA has readily assisted since 1992, and with the continued funding support to local governments from GEFA, we expect the phasing out of green boxes to continue.
Total Counties using green boxes Cities using green boxes FY 1999

Community Solid Waste Management Systems

Full Cost

Georgia's local governments reported a full cost of $366.2 million for solid waste management services in FY 99, down 1.3% from the $370.9 million they reported in FY 98. Local governments used operating revenues to pay for 81.8% of their full cost of solid waste management, and other dedicated revenues paid for 7.3% of their full cost. Among counties, operating revenues paid for 73% of their full cost, and other dedicated revenues accounted for 11.7% of their full cost. The split for the full cost of solid waste management for cities was 88.8% from operating revenues and 3.8% from other dedicated revenues.

Counties spent substantially less for solid waste management servcies in FY 99 than in previous years. While five fewer counties responded to the survey, that alone doesn't account for a 24% drop in spending. Collection and disposal accounted for most of the spending decrease from FY 98 levels. For cities, the reverse is true. Municipal spending increased from FY 98 levels by 4%, with the majority of the increase occurring in collection and
22 disposal.

Reported public education efforts among cities dropped substantially from FY 98 levels to return to mid-90s spending patterns, with about 0.5% of solid waste management costs going to education. Public education spending held steady at $1.4 million for counties.
Community indicators

Jurisdictions Arranging for Solid Waste Management Services, by Type: FY 93-FY 99

One tool local governments can use to

gauge how well they are managing their

600

solid waste is to review their solid waste

management index ranking in DCA's

Community Indicators. Annually, DCA awards 500

points to local governments for implementing

recycling programs, solid waste

management education efforts, and

400

Number of Jurisdictions

environmentally sound yard trimmings

management programs. The points earned

are used to establish an environmental

300

ranking in DCA's Community Indicator listing.

Community Indicators provide information on

individual cities and counties to provide a

200

sense of how well a particular community is

doing in important areas such as education,

health, environment, and local government 100 service delivery. Communities are awarded

points for having their Solid Waste

Management Plans and up-to-date Short Term Work Programs in place. Aggressive

0 FY 1993

FY 1994

FY 1995

FY 1996

FY 1997

FY 1998

FY 1999

recycling programs also earn points, along

Curbside Staffed Drop-off Green Boxes Un-Staffed Drop-off

SWMR 1999-2000

DCA Georgia Department of Community Affairs

with educational programs to promote them. DCA's Community Indicator program was developed in cooperation with the Association County Commissioners of Georgia (ACCG) and Georgia Municipal Association (GMA). DCA formed the Community Indicators Advisory Committee to seek guidance on the types of measures that would be most useful to Georgia's local governments and citizens. Made up of individuals from state, regional and local governments along with the State University System, the advisory committee membership brought various types of expertise to the project and helped to establish the current review parameters. Appendix C of this report provides a listing of the solid waste management index of the Community Indicators for individual governments in FY 98 and FY 99. To see a community's complete Community Indicator profile, look on the Department of Community Affairs' Web site, at www.dca.state.ga.us. Click on the `Research' icon at the top of the page, and then look under `Local Government Information' for `Community Indicators.'

Paying to Throw
Equity funding for solid waste disposal programs creates an incentive for Georgians to recycle.
The Pay-As-You-Throw program does precisely that. Residents are charged based on how much waste they throw out, creating a very real incentive to recycle what they can, and throw out less stuff. The household that disposes of ten bags of garbage per week pays more than the household that disposes of two bags per week.
Sixteen counties and 13 cities operate PAYT programs in Georgia.
Duluth began a PAYT program in 1979. Residents pay $21.23 for a case of 20, 32-gallon trash bags. The city provides curbside recycling, collecting plastics, most metals and paper. Complaints are rare, and illegal dumping hasn't been a problem, says Duluth's Justin Kirouac.
Fear of illegal dumping and residents reluctant to change have been two common, but surmountable challenges to successfully starting a PAYT program. An existing recycling system is a must, and nearly all communities report that public education can make or break a program. Many communities also claim that despite their initial concerns, illegal dumping did not significantly increase, especially if ordinances were in place and enforced to minimize illegal dumping. Finally, the way in which solid waste management costs were covered before the PAYT program began can have a strong influence on public reaction to the program.

Joan Ellars of Keep Marietta Beautiful recalled a period

with lots of phone calls when the city began collecting

23

trash in 1994, and the charge appeared on residents'

power bill. Residents are given stickers to place on 32-

gallon or smaller can, and charged at the end of the

month, based on how many cans they filled.

"They called me words I'd never heard, but after a month, it was a piece of cake," Ellars said. "For those who are scared to start up, you have every right to be scared. But once you get it going, it goes amazingly smooth."

Local governments that conducted extensive education programs for several months before the PAYT program began found that the response to the program was much
more positive. But the educational component was only sufficient if funds were dedicated to this purpose up front. Part of the solid waste management budget must be dedicated to conducting a public education campaign. AthensClarke County budgeted $175,000, or 7% of its total solid waste budget, on public education related to PAYT and recycling programs in 1999.

Another factor that seems to have a strong influence on whether residents support a PAYT program is whether they were paying an itemized fee for solid waste collection and disposal prior to the implementation of the PAYT program. In communities where solid waste

management costs were covered by general revenues, or property taxes, PAYT fees were seen as an added tax and opposed by some residents. However, in communities where the PAYT rates replaced a flat fee for solid waste collection and disposal, most residents appreciated the opportunity to gain some control over how much they pay to throw.
24
SWMR 1999-2000

Cities and counties in Georgia with rate-based waste disposal programs
Athens-Clarke Co Coweta Co Dawson Co Douglas Co Fulton Co Hart Co Jackson Co Liberty Co Oconee Co Oglethorpe Co Pierce Co Polk Co Randolph Co Rockdale Co Stephens Co Tift Co Walton Co Alpharetta Cleveland Decatur Douglasville Duluth Marietta Morrow Pine Lake Snellville St. Marys Thomasville Tifton West Point

DCA Georgia Department of Community Affairs
Looking ahead

Imported Waste, FY 93- FY 00

Fiscal Year 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000

Tons Disposed
100,000 140,000 106,000 160,000 170,000 190,000 450,000 510,000

Percent of MSW Tons Disposed
1.48% 1.88% 1.99% 2.06% 2.12% 2.16% 4.84% 5.00%

Meeting the 25% MSW Disposal Reduction Goal

As documented in this report, local governments have for the most part, embraced their responsibility to reduce and recycle the municipal solid waste generated within their jurisdictions. Even with the highly volatile recycling markets, we have seen a steady increase in the number of communities providing recycling collection services in their community. With the leveling-off of the Georgia per capita MSW disposal rate, it is apparent that these programs are having an impact. Our future efforts need to:

Increase recycling participation rates in existing programs

Quantify the recyclable components of the MSW stream being disposed and target the high volume components for further diversion

Target special waste steams like C&D for reduction

Increase commercial & business waste reduction/ recycling activities

Review and refine waste disposal reporting

requirements

25

Identify and support regional infrastructure for recycling collection and processing

Encourage fee structures that support waste reduction and recycling efforts

Imported Waste

The amount of out-of-state waste imports has increased dramatically in the past two years. Given the state's current wealth of solid waste disposal capacity, coupled with very competitive regional disposal fees, this trend may continue or even accelerate in the next few years. What is not readily known is the disposal capacity in our surrounding states and the amount of waste exported from Georgia. To help more fully understand and manage this dynamic, efforts need to be undertaken to review and enhance local solid waste management tools, including but not limited to the ability for local governments to assess host community fees. In addition, we should continue to carefully monitor the remaining disposal capacity in the state on a regional basis.

Specialized Recycling Activities -- Electronics

Thousands of Georgians own personal computers and other electronic equipment which they frequently replace with a new system having the latest bells and whistles. Meanwhile their old PCs and equipment are often discarded. If not managed properly, the heavy metals including lead, contained in this equipment may pose a threat to the environment. With a growing number of PCs reaching the end of their useful lives, it is important to

launch an education effort targeted to consumers and landfill operators. Recycling options need to be explored and promoted. Finally, training needs to be provided to recycling coordinators in the state to prepare them and their communities for implementing electronics recycling programs.
Solid Waste Management Planning
The 10-year, local government Comprehensive Solid Waste Management Plans prepared in the early `90s are reaching the close of their planning period. When these plans were first drafted, disposal capacity drove a large part of the planning process. While available disposal capacity has grown in the state, renewed planning efforts are needed to maintain this capacity. In addition, the current solid waste management infrastructure in the state needs to be reviewed to identify potential weaknesses and regional cooperative opportunities to maximize solid waste facility operations and waste management services. The renewed solid waste management planning efforts need to focus on a holistic environmental and service approach, weighing the community and environment benefits of new recyclable and solid waste collection and processing options. Finally, the new solid waste management plans need to focus more on identifying waste reduction and
26 recycling performance measures instead of concentrating
exclusively on an arbitrary numeric reduction goal.
Scrap Tire Enforcement and Education
Now that the majority of the illegal tire piles throughout the state have been cleaned up, our attention must shift to prevention efforts. With highly volatile markets for processed scrap tires and the tight operating margins that exist for scrap tire processors, a constant vigilance of the scrap tire collection and processing mechanism in the state must be maintained to ensure proper and environmentally safe management of scrap tires.
Beginning in FY 00, EPD intends for P2AD to define and administer a research program to enhance the use of scrap tires and other recovered materials. Since the Scrap Tire Management Program was established in FY 93, $633,000 has gone to various local governments to support research and demonstration projects using recovered materials, such as jogging tracks surfaced with recycled tire rubber.
The number of jurisdictions collecting tires rose over 60% from 1992 to 1999. EPD's Scrap Tire Program has succeeded with its initial mission of removing the dangerous piles of enormous tires that blighted Georgia's landscape. Since implementing its mission in FY 93, the Scrap Tire Management Program has removed an estimated 8.2 million tires from Georgia, at a cost of $10.21 million.
DCA will continue to work with EPD to produce educational materials for distribution to citizens and tire retailers statewide, to help maximize tire life and ensure proper disposal.
SWMR 1999-2000

DCA Georgia Department of Community Affairs

EPA's Methane Outreach Program
The Georgia Environmental Facilities Authority (GEFA) will continue to provide grants and loans to local governments, through its Waste Reduction and Recycling Grant and Solid Waste Facility Loan programs.
GEFA would like to see more involvement with the US Environmental Protection Agency's Methane Outreach Program. Since 1994, the federal program has identified Municipal Solid Waste landfills that are candidates to supply a steady source of methane.
Recent federal EPA regulations require landfill methane gas be managed at some landfills, either through flaring or as an energy source.
"Why not put it to productive use if you can," said James Thompson, GEFA program manager. "It doesn't cost too terribly much, and it could make a little money if there's a user nearby."
Four landfills in Georgia are currently tapping into their supply of methane to provide energy. They are: Atlanta's Southern States-Bolton Road landfill, Norcross' WMI-BJ Landfill, Augusta's Richmond County-Dean Bridge Road Landfill and Macon's Walker Road Landfill.
At Blue Circle Cement's Atlanta Plant, methane from the adjacent Southern States-Bolton Road landfill is piped in to fire cement kilns, reducing the facility's dependency on fossil fuels.
Local development authorities can also use the untapped fuel source as an economic incentive for industries needing steam or gas to build next to MSW landfills.
Other landfills that may be good candidates for landfill methane gas to energy projects as determined by the EPA have more than 1 million tons of methane-generating waste in place. In Georgia, those facilities include:

Arnold Road

Fayette County Landfill

Lawrenceville, GA

Fayetteville, GA

27

Atlanta-Gun Club Road Atlanta, GA

Fleming/Gaissert Road Flemington, GA

Atlanta-Key Road Atlanta, GA

Hall County-Allen Creek Gainesville, GA

Baker Place Road Grovetown, GA

Seminole Road Decatur, GA

BFI-Roberts Road Atlanta, GA

Speedway-SR 324 Winder, GA

Chambers-Bolton Road Atlanta, GA
City of ForsythOld Brent Road Forsyth, GA

UWL Inc-Richland Creek Road Buford, GA
Watts Road Atlanta, GA

Columbus-Schatulga Road Columbus, GA

WMI-Live Oak Conley, GA

Assistance to Local Governments: FY 1999-2000
Solid Waste Management Grants and Loans

The State of Georgia helps local governments manage their solid waste streams through grants and low-interest loan programs administered by several agencies. The Department of Community Affairs, Georgia Environmental Facilities Authority and Environmental Protection Division share information on grant project proposals submitted by local governments to ensure that State support is consistent with statewide solid waste management priorities and local solid waste management plans.

Solid waste management assistance grants and loans to local

Solid Waste Management Grants and Loans, FY 96-FY 00

governments have increased steadily over the last six years, swelling from just about $4.6 million in 1996 to more than $10

Type of Grant or Loan

FY 1996

FY 1997

FY 1998

FY 1999

million for FY 99. Grant amounts have FY 2000 varied widely, with some significant

Scrap Tire Management Enforcement and Education Grant
Scrap Tire Cleanup Grant

$976,837 $710,500 $1,312,894 $1,598,206 $1,993,070 dips. For example, Waste Reduction

$252,219 $2,396,750 $631,273 $2,965,224

*

and Recycling grants fell from over $4

Waste Reduction and Recycling Grants

$107,530 $4,027,600 $1,000,000 $517,475 $800,000 million in FY 97 to barely $500,000 in FY

Local Development Fund /Local Government Efficiency Grants
GEFA Loans Regional Solid Waste Incentive Grants (GEFA)

$106,918
$2,654,274 $532,244

$8,123
$1,068,000 N/A

$24,077
$6,922,055 N/A

*
$5,036,001 N/A

$10,000 99. WRR grants are funded from the $90,000 Solid Waste Trust Fund, which is N/A financed by a $1 fee charged for

28 Totals

$4,630,022 $8,210,973 $9,890,299 $10,116,906 $2,893,071 every new tire sold in Georgia, and is administered by EPD.

*No grants awarded

The $1 per tire fee generates

approximately $6.5 million annually. Most of the money has

been targeted for cleaning up scrap tire piles and

encouraging tire recycling through education and research.

Local governments within all 16 of Georgia's Regional Development Centers received state solid waste management financial assistance during FY 99. Jurisdictions within Coosa Valley RDC received the most total assistance, through $2.5 million in GEFA loans for landfill expansions coupled with more than $250,000 in grant funds aimed at removing scrap tires, or preventing their illegal disposal in the future. Jurisdictions in North Georgia RDC received the least assistance, with $27,504 in scrap tire grants.

For a complete breakdown of FY 99 and FY 00 grants, see Appendix E, page 76.

GEORGIA DEPARTMENT OF COMMUNITY AFFAIRS

The Local Development Fund has provided funding for a wide variety of local government initiatives, including solid waste management. No LDF grants for solid waste management were awarded in FY 99, due to increasing demand from other programs. For FY 00, Effingham County received a $10,000 grant to purchase materials for a paper recycling program.

GEORGIA ENVIRONMENTAL FACILITIES AUTHORITY

Waste Reduction and Recycling Grants

This grant program helped 27 local governments with recycling and waste reduction projects during FY 99. A total of $517,475

SWMR 1999-2000

DCA Georgia Department of Community Affairs
was awarded to the communities, spread across Georgia. To list a few examples, funds helped purchase balers for recycling centers in Coffee County and the cities of Thomson and LaGrange, helped enclose the City of Valdosta's current recycling facility, and helped install fiberglass containers for cardboard and paper recycling in the City of Nahunta.
WRR Grants put $800,000 to use in 32 local communities during FY 00. WRR grant money helped build a recycling center in Lincoln County, helped buy a baler and loader for Dooly County and helped eliminate Dumpsters in Wilkinson County.
Funding for the WRR Grants comes from the Solid Waste Trust Fund.
Solid Waste Facility Loan Program
GEFA makes low interest loans available to cities, counties and local government authorities to fund environmental infrastructure needs. These loans help communities align themselves to better attract economic development and help relieve the financial burden required to meet tightening state and federal environmental standards. In FY 99, GEFA loaned $5,036,001 to six counties and one city, for projects including landfill closure and groundwater monitoring. In FY 00, GEFA loaned $90,000 to Tattnall County for monitoring wells.
For a complete breakdown of FY 99 and FY 00 loans, see Appendix E, page 76.
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION DIVISION, DNR
Scrap Tire Management Enforcement and Education Grants
This grant program helps communities rid themselves of unsightly and hazardous scrap tire piles, and establish programs to prevent them from cropping up in the future. Grants are funded through the Solid Waste Trust Fund, with participating governments providing a 25% cash match. In FY 99, 39 local governments received scrap tire enforcement and education grants, at an average of $40,980 each, for a total of $1,598,206. In FY 00, 42 local governments received a total of $1,993,071in Scrap Tire Management Enforcement and Education Grants, a $47,454 average for each jurisdiction.
In FY 99, 71 local governments received scrap tire grants to help pay for tire clean-up projects or recycling events aimed at encouraging citizens to bring in their scrap tires, for no charge. The average grant was $41,764, and the total disbursed was $2,965,224. The bulk of this funding went to two local governments for scrap tire pile clean-ups: Crawford County received $708,529 and Liberty County received $1,218,2801.
Now, the program is shifting to a proactive stance aimed at preventing similar piles from getting started. For that reason, scrap tire clean-up grants and grants for scrap tire amnesty days were not funded during FY 2000. Nearly $400,000 more went to Scrap Tire Education and Enforcement grant funding than in FY 99, however.

DCA is working with EPD to produce educational materials for distribution to citizens and tire retailers statewide, to help maximize tire life and ensure proper disposal.
For a complete breakdown of FY 99 and FY 00 grants, see Appendix E, page 76.

Local Government Grants and Loans by RDC

Regional Development Center FY 1999

FY 2000

Atlanta Regional Commission

Grants

$191,160.00 $445,247.00

Loans

0

0

Central Savannah River Area

Grants

$177,132.00 $197,696.00

Loans

0

0

Chattahoochee-Flint

Grants

$40,000.00

0

Loans

0

0

Coastal Georgia

Grants

$1,317,530.50 $148,992.00

Loans

0

0

Coosa Valley

Grants

$251,027.50 $138,130.00

Loans

$2,500,000.00

0

Georgia Mountains

Grants Loans

$319,201.00 $406,875.00

$342,109.43 0

29

Heart of Georgia-Altamaha

Grants

$623,243.50 $331,460.96

Loans

$120,159.00 $90,000.00

Lower Chattahoochee

Grants

$54,845.00

0

Loans

$179,553.00

0

McIntosh Trail

Grants

$139,928.00 $182,222.00

Loans

0

0

Middle Flint

Grants

$139,687.00 $64,981.00

Loans

$1,479,414.00

0

Middle Georgia

Grants

$983,083.53 $261,757.00

Loans

$350,000.00

0

North Georgia

Grants

$27,504.64

0

Loans

0

0

Northeast Georgia

Grants

$456,009.25 $402,369.31

Loans

0

0

South Georgia

Grants

$86,467.00

0

Loans

0

0

Southeast Georgia

Grants

$106,125.00 $41,404.00

Loans

0

0

Southwest Georgia

Grants

$165,661.35 $246,702.05

Loans

0

0

Grant Total

$5,036,001.00 $2,803,070.75

Loan Total

$5,078,605.27 $90,000.00

Department of Community Affairs

Examples of direct assistance to local governments by the Department of Community Affairs' Office of Environmental Management are numerous. By offering workshops, answering requests for technical assistance and pairing public and private sectors, staff members helped Georgia cities and counties better manage their solid waste.

Keep Georgia Beautiful's Annual "Bring One for the Chipper" Christmas tree recycling events were a success. The annual event supports the state's ban on landfilling yard waste. A total of 268 communities throughout the state participated in 1999 and 2000. As always, 100,000 tree seedlings were given away to participants each year.

Coordinated efforts with Earth's 911, a

private nonprofit organization established

to promote local environmental programs

via the World Wide Web and telephone.

The Department took the lead to develop

Georgia's Earth's 911 Web page to

30

promote environmental activities throughout the state. The site can be

accessed by dialing 1-800Cleanup and

entering your ZIP code or by searching

www.1800cleanup.org. Office of Environmental

Management staff conducted a survey and compiled a

database of recycling drop-off locations throughout the

state for posting on the site.

In FY 99 Keep Georgia Beautiful embarked on its 20th birthday celebration bus tour across Georgia, covering 2,000 miles to 28 cities over 12 days in October. The sponsored media event received extensive press coverage, with news outlets covering events at all stops.

In FY 00, the Century Tree Challenge program sought to place long-living trees in Georgia's urban areas.

Office of Environmental Management staff gave presentations to educators, students, local government officials and staff, private industry groups, local law enforcement and state lawmakers. Topics ranged from sustainable development to certification for landfill operators.

Keep Georgia Beautiful held its 21st and 22nd Annual Awards Luncheons at the Georgia World Congress Center. Hundreds of guests from across Georgia attended and were recognized for their local solid

SWMR 1999-2000

DCA Georgia Department of Community Affairs
THE GEORGIA DEPARTMENT OF COMMUNITY AFFAIRS, OFFICE OF ENVIRONMENTA L M A N AG E M E N T
60 Executive Park South, NE q Atlanta, Georgia 30329 q 404.679.4940 w w w.dca.state.ga.us

waste-reduction efforts, with Gov. Roy Barnes serving as guest speaker in 2000 and Lt. Gov. Mark Taylor in 1999.

The Georgia Environmental Education Teacher Resource Guide was mailed to Keep America Beautiful affiliates. Keep Georgia Beautiful/DCA cosponsored the publication with the federal Environmental Protection Agency, The Georgia Conservancy, Georgia Power, and The Chevron Companies. KGB staff also mailed a yearend Environmental Education update to 650 people.

Keep America Beautiful welcomed six new Georgia affiliates. Keep Dade Beautiful, Keep Bartow Beautiful, Keep Effingham Beautiful, Keep Bulloch Beautiful and Keep Toccoa-Stephens County Beautiful
became certified. Towns, Union and Lumpkin counties formed Georgia's third regional Keep America Beautiful affiliate, Keep Our Mountains Beautiful. As of July 2000, there were 60 Keep America Beautiful affiliates in Georgia.

Solid Waste Trust Fund dollars again supported Georgia's annual Great American Cleanup Events across

31

the state during 1999 and 2000. The events, organized by

Keep Georgia Beautiful, brought out 62,548 volunteers,

who removed an estimated 2,887 tons of trash from 6,300

miles of Georgia roadways.

Visited several private and public waste reduction facilities, observing the processes involved and offering technical advice for possible improvements.

Keep Georgia Beautiful staff gave a presentation to the first conference of the Georgia Association of Code Enforcement stressing the need for partnerships between the KAB affiliates and local code enforcement officers.

Attended the Association County Commissioners of Georgia and Georgia Municipal Association conferences to give local elected officials opportunities to record radio public service announcements on environmental issues. A total of nearly 130 announcements were recorded during the 1999 and 2000 conferences. The public service announcements were distributed and aired statewide.

Met with an electronics recycling and processing company to discuss ways of diverting used computer equipment from landfills. Subsequent staff efforts have included dissemination of staff-produced literature on the subject, attending workshops and working with other state agencies to deal with the issue of electronic waste.

As a direct result of a panel discussion at the KGB Executive Directors Conference, the POST (Peace

Officers Standards and Training) Council adopted the Crimes Against the Environment training curriculum. The course became part of POST training in January 1999.

Finalized a contract agreement with the Georgia Recycling Coalition (GRC) enabling GRC to develop and coordinate America Recycles Day in Georgia in November 1999 and 2000. The events were part of the National Recycling Coalition's America Recycles Day.

To assist in comprehensive solid waste management planning and regional solid waste management efforts, the Department initiated an effort to identify all recycling processing facilities -- materials recovery facilities, recovered materials processing facilities, and composting/mulching facilities in the state. Once identified, the facilities will be plotted on the Department's Geographic Information System (GIS), processing capacity information will be obtained, and regional recyclable processing and marketing efforts will be encouraged.

Distributed surveys to the home composting

demonstration sites in the state to follow up and gather

information on the success of the sites since their

construction in 1992/93. This information will be used to

32

help identify future needs to promote home composting in the state.

Compiled and produced the Georgia Recycling Coordinators Directory. The directory contains a listing of all local government, military, and university recycling coordinators in the state both by name and by jurisdiction served. It also contains a list of state solid waste management resource staff, and is posted on DCA's Web site, www.dca.state.ga.us.

Met with EPA's Solid Waste Team to discuss markets development and Georgia's involvement in the Agency's Region IV area. Subsequent projects included the development of a PET plastics school recycling collection demonstration program and markets development.

Met with representatives from Florida's SWIX to discuss the possibility of using their services to create a solid waste exchange
information Web site for Georgia. The Web site would allow business and local governments to post waste by-products on a list and/or search a list of by-products they may need as a raw material resource. The Georgia Waste Exchange is online at www.georgia.wastexchange.org.

Maintained a State Recycling Coordinator position. The Recycling Coordinator provides individualized technical assistance, workshops, and publications to recycling industry representatives, local governments and citizens. During FY00 the Recycling Coordinator responded to

SWMR 1999-2000

DCA Georgia Department of Community Affairs

over 650 telephone calls for assistance and recycling information. The Coordinator also developed and hosted training workshops for local recycling coordinators, stressing the basics of program management. The Coordinator maintains a resource library of waste reduction and recycling publications for use by local governments and other interested parties.
Used Solid Waste Trust Fund dollars to purchase educational materials promoting recycling and waste reduction. Over two hundred and fifty (250) Waste-In-Place curriculum guides were purchased. Georgia Teachers throughout the state were instructed on the use of the middle school solid waste management curriculum. Other funding sources were used to obtain several Enviroscape models for use in classrooms throughout the state. The Enviroscapes model surface and groundwater flows through landfills and our communities to demonstrate how an individual's actions impact water quality. The models may be checked-out from the Department for use by educators and Georgia Keep America Beautiful Executive Directors.
Participated in the NFL Environmental Team's corrugated
cardboard recycling efforts at the pre-Super Bowl events 33
and recycling efforts at the stadium suites on game day. The effort recovered 18 tons of corrugated cardboard, 1.2 tons of office paper, and nearly four tons of commingled recyclables. Additionally, 12.5 tons of food were donated to local food banks.
Prepared a scrap tire management education campaign for the Environmental Protection Division (EPD), targeted at consumers purchasing new tires. Tire retailers will distribute the brochures to consumers and display the posters which were developed by the Department to explain the state's $1/tire management fee. Sixty-three (63) organizations in forty-two (42) counties requested and received copies of this brochure. In total, more than 31,000 brochures were distributed to local governments in 15 of Georgia's 16 Regional Development Centers.
The Department wrote and produced a composting video highlighting the yard trimmings and biosolids composting operation in the City of Douglas. The video documents the City's program and alerts interested parties to the issues they need to consider when implementing a municipal composting operation. Over 50 copies of the video have been distributed throughout the state and southeast region.
Provided technical assistance to local governments and Regional Development Centers as they prepared fiveyear short-term work program (STWP) updates to their local solid waste management plans. Approximately sixty (60) local governments were required to submit a five-

year update before December 31, 1999. Also initiated efforts with ten additional Local Governments that had their STWP update due on or before December 31, 2000. Reviewed and approved STWP updates submitted by local governments.
Provided technical assistance to local governments interested in developing local solid waste management ordinances, implementing full-cost accounting practices and preparing and implementing solid waste management grant programs. Staff drafted requests for proposals (RFPs) for equipment or services, initiating or expanding public education and outreach activities, and other solid waste management services. Staff conducted Waste In Place training workshops, evaluated local recycling programs and helped local governments develop bids for solid waste management operations.
Produced several workshops for local governments, including a Pay-As-You-Throw workshop at the Coastal Georgia Center, with about 50 local government and private agency officials attending. Made presentations to other local governments, military and solid waste groups detailing recycling and waste reduction initiatives. Representatives of approximately fifty (50) local governments, including elected officials and solid
34 waste/recycling personnel, were represented at a "first of
its kind" Pay-As-You-Throw roundtable discussion sponsored by the Department March 21st at the Georgia Music Hall of Fame in Macon. The roundtable meeting provided a forum for peer-to-peer exchange of information related to implementing a unit based pricing system for solid waste collection and disposal.

Waste-Exchange Solution Saves Money, Landfill Space

Lockheed Martin Aeronautical Systems in Marietta reduced its wood waste being sent to a landfill by providing a local company with good shipping pallets from its receiving department. The direct reuse of the pallets reduces solid waste, saves disposal expense, and benefits the local company.
Lockheed Martin receives sheet metal stock on 4'by 12' hardwood pallets. Once emptied the pallets were taken to a central location, broken apart, and sent to a landfill for disposal. To trim disposal costs, the company began searching for ways to reuse these pallets.
An investigation found returning the pallets to the out-ofstate supplier was not cost effective due to handling and transportation expenses. A local company agreed to pick up the pallets on a predetermined schedule at no cost to Lockheed. This eliminated Lockheed's handling and

disposal costs while reducing the amount of solid waste being sent to a landfill.
The reuse of the hardwood pallets by a local company will save Lockheed $6,374 per year in handling and disposal costs, and cost nothing to establish. Additionally, it is estimated that the local sheet metal company will avoid the cost of purchasing new pallets, saving approximately $30,000 annually.
While financially attractive to both companies, the P2ADdriven solution also prevented about 47 tons of material from entering a local landfill each year.
To foster similar success, Georgia is working with the Southern Waste Information Exchange to develop its own exchange database, located on the Internet at www.georgia.wastexchange.org.

SWMR 1999-2000

DCA Georgia Department of Community Affairs

P2AD Solid Waste Reduction Activities
Pollution Prevention Assistance Division staff provided onsite assistance to over 30 manufacturing operations in a variety of industries, including carpet and textile, pulp and paper, food processing, mining, cement manufacturing and manufactured housing. All assessments evaluated solid waste reduction opportunities. For example, Maxell Corporation has reduced solid waste disposal by 60 percent from 1998 levels, while Synthetic Industries has reduced solid waste disposal 25 percent annually since 1997.
Staff responded to more than 230 requests for assistance from commercial or institutional businesses.
In FY 00, P2AD added a new staff person to handle byproduct recovery and recycling requests from business and industry. Focus areas have included electronics, carpet and wood waste. Responded to over 100 technical requests to assist companies find alternatives uses for waste by-products.
Staff has responded to requests for recycling manufacturing by-products or locating businesses that can use the material in their own processes. In one case, engineers worked with a manufactured housing
company to annually recover 280 tons of wood waste by 35
finger jointing, resulting in annual savings of $50,000.
P2AD continued to sponsor Greenprints, a conference on sustainable design and construction in Atlanta. Other Construction and Demolition waste reduction efforts included sustainability (Green building) training and providing assistance to builders on finding markets for materials.
More than 500 people attended waste reduction workshops held for the mining, carpet and manufactured housing industries, wood manufacturers and food processors. During FY 00, staff spoke to or trained more than 1,400 people on subjects including compost, land application, HHW, recycling and waste reduction opportunities in the hospitality sector.
Administered a demonstration project to evaluate the use of various waste by-products, including scrap tires, carpet fibers and fly ash, as soil stabilizers on rural roads in Spalding, Candler and Habersham counties.
Began a partnership with all military bases in Georgia, active and reserve, to foster waste reduction. In one success story, Fort McPherson began accepting PET plastic from a nearby city. The Solid Waste and Recycling Work Team coordinated closely with EPD to remove a regulatory barrier that had been preventing bases from starting household hazardous waste programs. The same team is developing a program to increase carpet recycling and the purchase of recycled content carpet within the military.

Hired a specialist to work with the hospitality sector on waste reduction and recycling initiatives. Focus has included fats, oils and grease reduction among the metro Atlanta food service establishments, and providing assistance to hotels and inns.
Staff worked with the agricultural industry to provide expertise in land application of biosolids, drywall, compost, animal waste and industrial by-products.
Helped establish a pollution prevention team at Georgia Power's Plant Bowen electric generation plant near Cartersville.
Worked on AHA/EPA's Chemical Waste Minimization Work Team to identify and prioritize hazardous chemicals used in hospitals and identified waste minimization opportunities for priority chemicals by department.
Staff have provided ongoing assistance to the Rome/ Floyd County Recycling Center, which held its first HHW collection event in May 2000.
Funded a staff position at UGA to evaluate land application of waste by-products as agricultural supplements. Typical by-products that are prime candidates for land application include animal manure and poultry litter, composted yard waste, municipal
36 biosolids, gypsum and wood ash. Twenty experimental
plots are located at the Redbud site in northwest Georgia. P2AD staff also published a Cooperate Extension bulletin on "Beneficial Use of Biosolids in Agriculture."
Responded to more than 1,300 calls from citizens regarding the proper management of household hazardous waste (HHW), and to numerous local government requests for technical assistance, including how to operate HHW collection programs. Staff distributed an additional 160 "Guide to Best Management Practices for Household Hazardous Waste and Radon" binders.
Hosted an agricultural pollution prevention workshop in Calhoun attended by more than 70 people from the agricultural industry. Attendees learned about proper application of chicken litter as a fertilizer, rotational cattle grazing and wooded buffers to protect water quality, and a method of identifying high risk farming practices.
Continued contract with UGA's Department of Biological and Agricultural Engineering to complete the wood waste characterization assessment. They are also continuing work on waste stream assessments for food processing waste and municipal biosolids. These assessments will be used to target technical resources to geographic areas with problem waste streams, and identify recycling market development opportunities.
SWMR 1999-2000

DCA Georgia Department of Community Affairs

Georgia Environmental Facilities Authority Funding
Disbursed $1,317,475 in Waste Reduction and Recycling grants during FY 99 and FY 00. The funds went to 60 local governments, improving local waste reduction efforts by helping to pay for equipment at recycling centers, planning for local programs and expanding or establishing local recycling programs.
Loaned more than $5 million to seven local governments through GEFAs Solid Waste Loan Program. Funds helped pay for landfill expansions and groundwater monitoring at landfills, and helped build recycling centers.
Department of Natural Resources, Environmental Protection Division
Scrap Tire Program
Through FY 00, over $27 million of Solid Waste Trust Fund monies have been dedicated to assist local governments in their scrap tire and solid waste management issues. These funds have either directly been awarded to local governments or have been awarded to EPD's state agency partners to assist them.
During FY 00 two new positions were created as part of the 37
expansion of the Local Government Enforcement and Education Grant Program. This expanding program reflects a shift from the Scrap Tire Program's initial charge of cleaning up scrap tire piles, which has largely been accomplished, to a more proactive effort aimed at preventing their illegal disposal.
EPD developed a training course for local government environmental officers to supplement the one-on-one training it offers. The group training provided grantees the opportunity to learn about environmental compliance in a classroom setting and provided an opportunity to network with other environmental professionals.
With stakeholder input, EPD wrote and provided training on administrative aspects of the Enforcement and Education Grant Program. Two grant application workshops were held to assist local governments in applying for the FY 2000 grant cycle.
EPD staff met regularly with representatives from DCA, P2AD, GEFA and the Department of Administrative Services to coordinate waste management efforts. Topics ranged from strategic planning to review of grant applications and day-to-day waste management issues.
Six new local government enforcement and education programs were added during FY 00, and 31 local governments received funding to continue established programs. Also, four initial assessment grants were awarded to local governments to identify the extent of a city or county's illegal dumping problems.

Coming Full Circle

Burning car tires makes most people cringe, but the notion makes Tia Bohannon proud.
Using whole automobile tires as a fuel supplement at the Blue Circle Cement Atlanta Plant off Bolton Road will actually decrease the plant's air emissions by up to 30%, and allow the company to meet tighter nitrogen oxides (NOx) guidelines aimed at clearing Atlanta's smoggy skies.
"I'm excited about the NOx reduction," said Bohannon, environmental manager at the facility, located across the Chattahoochee River from Georgia Power's Plant McDonough. "I'm excited about the amount of fossil fuels that we'll save."
After more than two and a half years and $1.8 million in capital improvements, the new design became operational in September. Whole tires replaced 15% of the coal and petroleum-coke mixture used to fire the facility's twin kilns.
Blue Circle officials met with Georgia Environmental Protection Division (EPD) staff in 1999 to discuss NOx
38 reduction plans, set to go into effect in 2003. The
reduced NOx emissions from the facility are included in EPD's State Implementation Plan (SIP,) forwarded to the federal Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) in October 1999.
The common perception of flaming tires sending filthy soot into the air has nothing to do with the process at Blue Circle.
"The tires are being introduced into our kilns at about 2,000 degrees, so (combustion) is almost instantaneous," Bohannon said.
Limestone, clay, iron ore and sand delivered by rail is ground into a fine powder, and heated in the twin kilns. Each is 420 feet long, and 12 feet in diameter. Conveyor systems dump whole tires, up to 52 inches in diameter, into the pipe-like kilns. One tire will drop into each kiln through an electrically actuated door in the kiln wall, as the door revolves to the top position. Anything surviving the hellish 30-minute journey through the kiln becomes part of the cement clinker, the plant's final product.
Each kiln burns about 90 tires per hour, and the 24/7 facility will gobble about a million tires annually, after time off for periodic maintenance. EPD has given approval for the facility to burn as much as 4 tons of tires hourly, or 3.5 million passenger tires annually.
The cement plant has a contract with Greenman Technologies of Georgia Inc., to bring car and truck tires to the facility. The tires will either be free for Blue Circle, or the company may actually charge a fee to accept the tires,
SWMR 1999-2000

A conveyor system, shown under construction at Blue Circle Cement's Atlanta plant in August, feeds whole tires into a cyclindrical kiln, shown at right.

DCA Georgia Department of Community Affairs
Where Georgia's Tires Go Tire Derived Fuel (47%-Chips, 12%-whole tires) Septic Drain Fields (19%) Crumb rubber stock (10%) Scrap waste that is landfilled (12%)
A hydraulically activated door, shown in
foreground, opens once per revolution to accept a
whole tire.

which are collected from metro Atlanta.
Georgians generate an estimated 8 million used tires annually. However, the half-dozen EPD-approved scrap tire processors in Georgia handled 12.1 million tires in 1998. Approximately 9.2 million came from Georgia, but the rest were hauled in from Florida, Tennessee and South Carolina.
While pulpwood and paper mills use chipped tires as fuel, most use far below what they are permitted to burn, said Brian Wright, environmental engineer for the EPD's Scrap Tire Program. Blue Circle Cement's Atlanta plant is the second facility in the state allowed to burn whole tires as a fuel source. The steel belts supply needed metals in the manufactured cement thus allowing Blue Circle to use less iron ore.
Bohannon admits Blue Circle faced a public relations challenge when it began applying for the numerous permits needed to burn tires as fuel. But with an open approach, including tours of trial runs for the public and Atlanta and Fulton County government officials, mistrust gave way to acceptance.
"We really did put a lot of effort into getting the word out," Bohannon said. " We needed to get our neighbors in here to see there is no black smoke, there is no odor."
Jim Current, manager of EPD's mineral permitting unit, said 39
burning tires at the facility is a good thing, viewed from any angle.
"We certainly encouraged them to do this," Current said. "Air Quality (branch of EPD) was very supportive of this project."
Instead of sitting in an illegal dump or catching fire, 1.5 million tires will come off metro Atlanta vehicles every year, and contribute to cleaner skies over the Peach State.
"If there's a down side, you'd have to get Blue Circle to explain it, because I don't know of one," said Jeff Carter, manager of EPD's planning and support program, which is writing the SIP.

40 Appendices

Appendix A: Governments Ineligible

41

for SW Assistance Loans

Appendix B: Remaining Landfill Capacity

42

Appendix C: Community Indicators Ranking

46

Appendix D: Recycling Jurisdictions by RDC

51

Appendix E: Grants and Loans

76

Glossary of Terms

84

Acronyms

86

For more information

86

SWMR 1999-2000

DCA Georgia Department of Community Affairs
Appendix A: Governments Ineligible for SW Assistance Loans

Local Governments Without Approved Solid Waste Management Plans
FY 2000 City of Cumming City of Jasper City of Lithia Springs City of Nelson City of Talking Rock Pickens County

Local Governments Not Having Approved Solid Waste Management Short Term Work Programs FY 1999 (As of June 30, 1999)
Cities

Allentown Arnoldsville Ball Ground Bishop Bowersville Bowman Broxton Buckhead Canon Carnesville Chatsworth Chickamauga Corinth Danielsville

Dawsonville East Point Eton Fairburn Forest Park Franklin Springs Irwinton Jefferson Jersey LaFayette Lavonia Loganville Lookout Mountin Luthersville

Macon Mineral Bluff Monticello Nicholls Payne City Pembroke Rossville Royston Shady Dale Sharon Sharpsburg Talmo Tiger Waleska

Counties

Cobb

Jasper

Twiggs

Dawson Franklin

Murray Taliaferro

Walker

41

FY 2000 (As of June 30, 2000)

Cities

Allenhurst Austell Bibb City Bowersville Chatsworth Dawsonville East Point Eton Fairburn

Flemington Forest Park Gum Branch Hampton Hinesville Jersey Locust Grove Luthersville McDonough

Midway Millen Mineral Bluff Riceboro Sharon Sharpsburg Stockbridge Walthourville

Counties

Cobb Dawson Fulton

Henry Jenkins Liberty

Murray Taliaferro

Local Governments Not Responding to 1999 Solid Waste Survey and Full Cost Report

Andersonville Argyle Cohutta Corinth Damascus

Demorest Doraville Elbert County Jenkins County Mineral Bluff

Sharpsburg Sparta Talmo

Local Governments Not Responding to 2000 Solid Waste Survey and Full Cost Report

Auburn Avalon Bibb City Broxton Cohutta Damascus

Lovejoy Lyons Martin Metter Midway Milledgeville

Sharpsburg Sparta Talking Rock Tallulah Falls Talmo Taylor

Dawson County East Point Eatonton Ellaville Ephesus Gum Branch

Millen Mineral Bluff Morganton Oak Park Orchard Hill Register

Turin Unadilla Vernon Walker White Whitesburg

Hampton Higgston Jenkins

Rest Haven Riceboro Rutledge

Woodland Woolsey

Appendix B
Remaining Landfill Capacity

FY2000

FY1994

Dade
Catoosa North Georgia

Towns Rabun

Walker Whitfield Murray

Fannin Union

Chattooga

Gordon

Coosa
Floyd
Valley Bartow

Gilmer Pickens Cherokee

Lumpkin Dawson

White Habersham Stephens

Georgia Mountains
Banks Franklin Hall

Forsyth

Jackson

Madison

Hart Elbert

Polk

Cobb

Northeast Georgia

Paulding

Atlanta Gwinnett Barrow

Clarke

Haralson

Regional
DeKalb

Oglethorpe

Oconee Walton

Wilkes

Lincoln

Commission

Douglas

Rockdale

Carroll

Fulton Clayton

Morgan

Taliaferro

Newton

Greene

Columbia

Henry

McDuffie

Fayette Coweta

Warren Richmond

42

Chattahoochee

Butts Jasper

Putnam

Hancock

Spalding

Central Savannah

Heard Flint

Glascock

McIntosh Pike Lamar

River Area

Troup

Baldwin
Trail Monroe Jones

Jefferson Washington

Burke

Meriwether Upson

Bibb

Wilkinson

Middle Georgia

Harris

Talbot

Crawford

Twiggs

Johnson

Jenkins

Screven

Taylor

Peach

Emanuel

Muscogee

Marion

Chattahoochee

Macon

Schley

Houston

Bleckley

Laurens

Treutlen

Candler

Bulloch

Effingham

Lower

Pulaski

Montgomery

Middle Flint Chatta-

Dodge

Wheeler

Toombs Evans

Dooly

hoochee

Sumter

Stewart Webster

Heart of Georgia - Altamaha

Wilcox

Telfair

Tattnall

Bryan Chatham

Quitman

Randolph Terrell

Lee

Crisp Turner

Ben Hill

Jeff Davis

Appling

Coastal

Long

Liberty

Georgia

Clay

Calhoun

Worth Dougherty

Irwin Coffee Bacon

Tift

Wayne McIntosh

Baker Early

South

Pierce

Southwest Georgia

Berrien

Atkinson

Ware

Glynn

Georgia

Miller

Mitchell

Colquitt

Brantley

Cook

Lanier Southeast Georgia

Seminole Decatur

Grady Thomas

Brooks

Clinch

Lowndes

Charlton

Camden

Echols

Source: Georgia Department of Community Affairs, Office of Environmental Management & the Georgia Environmental Protection Division disposal reports.
SWMR 1999-2000

Years of Remaining Capacity

< 5

5 - 10

11 - 15

15 +

DCA Georgia Department of Community Affairs
Appendix B: Remaining Landfill Capacity

County Site Name Private Facility Type Liner Total FY 99 Tons Total FY 00 Tons Remaining Capacity (Cy) Estimated Fill Date

Atlanta Regional Commission

Cherokee Cherokee Co-Pine Bluff Landfill, Inc.

Y MSWL Y 654,762.35 656,430.44 34,305,316 5/31/30

Cherokee Cherokee Co-Swims-SR 92 Ph 4

Y C&D

94,692.00 99,121.00 31,000 7/1/01

Clayton

Clayton Co-SR 3 Lovejoy Site # 3

MSWL Y 60,069.78 66,763.28 4,066,728 12/30/30

Cobb

Cobb Co-County Farm Rd #2 Phs 1-2-3 (L)

L

3,388.36

88.20

3/31/00

DeKalb

WMI-Live Oak #1 (SL)

Y MSWL Y

DeKalb

DeKalb Co-Seminole Rd Ph 2 (SL)

C&D

66,029.00 47,684.00 625,879 2/28/07

DeKalb

Land Reclamation-Rogers Lake Rd (C&D)

YL

100,082.04 136,206.60 2,877,514 1/1/11

DeKalb

APAC/GA-Donzi Ln Ph 5a (L)

YL

439,541.37 635,671.65 1,694,559 4/30/03

DeKalb

APAC/GA-Donzi Ln Ph 5b (L)

YL

DeKalb

Phillips-Scales Rd C&D (L)

Y C&D

173,099.18 54,522.96 408,695 3/5/05

DeKalb

WMI-Live Oak #2 (SL)

Y MSWL Y 1,181,956.74 1,458,696.00 9,976,227 12/21/04

DeKalb

BFI-Hickory Ridge (MSWL)

Y MSWL Y 451,916.50 607,021.87 3,543,488 12/31/05

DeKalb

BFI-East DeKalb Landfill

Y C&D

182,109.32 432,555.05 3,271,270 4/30/08

DeKalb

DeKalb Co-Seminole Rd Ph 2a,3&4 (SL)

MSWL Y 296,315.00 251,565.00 11,169,712 7/1/27

Douglas Fulton

Douglas Co-Cedar Mt/Worthan Rd Ph 1 (SL) Chadwick Rd Landfill, Inc.

SL YL

17,961.84 22,872.40 711,419 8/21/12

398,602.85 466,070.00 4,421,084 9/30/06

43

Fulton

Chambers-Bolton Rd (SL)

Y MSWL Y 31,163.45 128,695.16 281,353 12/31/01

Gwinnett BFI-Richland Creek Rd (SL)

Y MSWL Y 640,107.11 776,589.54 10,965,340 10/31/10

Gwinnett Button Gwinnett-Arnold Rd Ph 3 (SL)

MSWL Y 88,201.00 46,635.14

3/24/00

Total

4,879,997.89 5,887,188.29 88,349 6/14

Central Savannah River Area

Burke Columbia Columbia Jefferson Jenkins Richmond Richmond Washington Total

Burke Co-Clarke Rd (SL) Columbia Co-Baker Place Rd (SL), Ph 2 Columbia Co-Sample & Son (C And D) Jefferson Co-CR 138 MSWL Jenkins Co-CR54 Phase 2 MSWL & C&D Sit US Army-Ft Gordon Gibson Rd Ph 1-3 (SL) Richmond Co-Deans Bridge Rd Ph 2c (SL) Washington Co-Kaolin Rd S #3 (SL)

C&D MSWL Y Y C&D MSWL Y C&D C&D MSWL Y MSWL Y

18,144.00 108,398.00 27,933.00
5,988.47 9,853.73 5,106.21 183,738.12 13,690.86 372,852.39

7,592.00 86,093.00 39,236.00 9,451.25 8,476.20 3,513.22 176,047.51 13,553.79 343,962.97

134,195 481,950 1,750,437 1,230,820 851,059 57,480 1,391,083 1,333,244 7,230,268

3/16/00 3/28/04 7/1/55 7/1/59 11/27/56 12/30/28 4/11/05 4/22/42
1/17

Chattahoochee Flint

Coweta

Coweta Co-Ishman Ballard Rd C/D Landfill

C&D

Troup

Lagrange-I 85/SR 109 (SL)

SL

Troup

Troup Co-SR 109 Mountville Ph 2 (SL)

C&D

Total

1,606.82 83,563.49 3,460.27 88,630.58

7,515.62 72,942.98 4,975.42 88,434.02

255,964 2,930,829
220,894 3,407,687

6/30/17 9/17/16 6/15/24
5/21

Coastal Georgia

Camden Chatham Chatham Chatham Chatham Chatham
Glynn
Liberty Liberty McIntosh Total

Camden Co-SR110 MSWL Chatham Co-Chevis Rd (L) Savannah-Dean Forest Rd (SL) Chatham Co-Thomas Ave (L) Superior Landfill & Recycling Center Savannah Regional Industrial Landfill
Eller-Whitlock Ave
US Army-Ft Stewart Main Cantonment (SL) US Army-Ft Stewart Main Cantonment (L) McIntosh Co-King Rd (SL)

MSWL Y

L

MSWL Y

L

Y MSWL Y

Y LI

Y

YL

SL

L

SL

85,229.05 8,046.59 98,812.59 3,418.11 271,410.13 123,104.00
19,959.00
21,740.00 3,603.00 7, 787.00 643,109.47

141,628.06 571.00
101,480.02 0
330,313.77 117,271.00

2,921,033 -
859,358 -
6,490,640 3,915,930

10/31/10
7/1/05
2/28/13 7/1/17

24,965.00 658.00
16,134.00 733,020.85

901,423 240
648,722 15,737,346

7/1/18 7/1/01 1/31/35 12/15

Appendix B: Remaining Landfill Capacity continued

County Site Name Private Facility Type Liner Total FY 99 Tons Total FY 00 Tons Remaining Capacity (Cy) Estimated Fill Date

Coosa Valley

Bartow Bartow Catoosa Floyd Gordon Haralson Paulding

Bartow Co-SR 294 Emerson (SL) Ph 1 (C&D) Bartow Co-SR 294 Emerson MSWL Ph 2&3 Catoosa Co-SR151, Site No. 2 MSWL Rome Walker Mtn Rd, Site 2 Gordon Co-Redbone Ridges Rd (SL) Haralson Co-US 78 Bremen Ph 2 (SL) Paulding Co-Gulledge Rd N Tract 1 (SL)

C&D MSWL Y MSWL Y MSWL Y MSWL Y SL SL

27,919.10 80,477.79 147,730.47 133,241.40 70,855.99 25,691.17
964.00

26,203.42 78,753.25 76,782.83 123,088.35 97,018.06 12,464.95 2,066.35

171,000 127,000 546,274 6,552,853 11,085,091
12,000

10/3/00 5/1/00 1/1/08 6/18/26 6/30/82 1/3/00 7/1/04

Polk Walker Total

Polk Co-Grady Rd (SL) LaFayette-Coffman Springs Rd (L)

MSWL Y L

26.67

36.46 3,958,885

345.92

251.57 97,585

487,252.51 416,664.24 22,550,688

7/1/71 7/1/92 10/36

Georgia Mountains

Banks

Chambers R & B Landfill Site #2

Y MSWL Y 308,842.00 522,472.00 23,367,898 10/31/23

Dawson

Dawson Co-Shoal Hole Rd (SL)

SL

21,164.33

484.00

11/1/99

Franklin

Franklin Co-Harrison Bridge Rd Ph 1 (SL)

SL

5,040.27 11,266.33 210,369 6/1/11

Habersham Habersham Co- SR13 MSWL

MSWL Y 22,307.60 23,159.54 1,117,504 1/8/33

Hall

Hall Co-Allen Creek Ph A (SL)

SL

41.00

10.00

11/10/99

Hall

Reliable Tire Service, Monroe Dr.

Y C&D

107,860.00 123,693.67 2,739,342 7/31/14

44

Rabun

Rabun Co-Boggs Mtn Rd C/D Landfill

C&D

N/A 2,219.30 318,600 9/6/91

Hall

Hall Co-Candler Rd (SR 60)

MSWL Y 58,471.28 63,034.43 6,613,345 8/13/52

Stephens Stephens Co-SR 145 Ph 2&3 (SL)

C&D

1,723.82 3,282.15 39,063 9/1/04

Total

525,450.30 749,621.42 34,406,121 9/27

Heart Of Georgia-Altamaha

Appling Candler Evans Laurens Telfair Toombs Wayne Total

Appling Co-Roaring Creek Ph 1&2 (SL) Candler Co-SR 121 Phase 2 MSWL Evans Co-Sikes Branch Claxton (L) Laurens Co-Old Macon Road MSWL Telfair Co-CR 144 MSWL Toombs Co-S1898, Phase 3 (MSWL) Wayne Co-SR23 Broadhurst MSWL

SL MSWL Y L MSWL Y MSWL Y MSWL MSWL Y

13,303.37 11,527.77
N/A 46,629.53 30,969.67 37,745.00 261,110.81 407,248.33

4,464.29 13,593.77 7,928.93 46,034.89 32,992.44 49,942.00 417,163.63 572,119.95

675,611 374,616 46,710 217,539 597,285
6,854,670 8,766

6/20/42 3/14/14 6/22/02 6/30/03 7/1/17
9/27/12 8/15

Lower Chattahoochee

Muscogee Muscogee Total

Columbus, Pine Grove MSWL Columbus-Schatulga Rd. W Fill Ph 2

MSWL Y SL

106,269.42 1,427.00
107,696.42

113,326.15 113,326.15

5,870,400 5,870,400

6/30/32 11/31

McIntosh Trail

Butts Lamar Spalding Total

Butts Co-Pine Ridge Recycling MSWL Lamar Co-Cedar Grove Regional MSWL Spalding Co-Griffin/Shoal Creek Rd

Y MSWL Y MSWL Y C&D

493,913.11 87,663.90 25,909.20 607,486.21

541,388.94 81,808.93 38,482.49 661,680.36

10,932,000 750,098 215,850
11,897,948

10/31/11 12/30/05
7/1/03 8/12

Middle Flint

Crisp Taylor Total

Crisp Co-US 41s Site 2 (Ph 4) MSWL Allied Services, LLC -SR 90/SR 137

MSWL Y Y MSWL Y

160,996.15 192,847.39 702,134 3/5/02 693,066.50 478,342.74 33,681,806 6/28/42 854,062.65 671,190.13 34,383,940 10/33

Landfill types Defined The vast majority of landfilled waste in Georgia goes into two types of facilities. However, in 1991 Georgia adopted the stricter guidelines of the Subtitle D rules issued by the federal Environmental Protection Agency. The new rules called for liners beneath landfills accepting what's commonly called household waste (Municipal Solid Waste, or MSW), along with methods of monitoring groundwater and the surrounding air for pollution escaping from the landfill. The rule change resulted in four classifications for the two types of landfills. Landfill permits issued before September 1991 were SL (Sanitary Landfill) for "wet waste" or L (Landfill) for "dry waste." After September 1991, landfills were permitted as MSWL (Municipal Solid Waste Landfill) or C&D (Construction and Demolition waste landfill.) Old SL facilities had to either upgrade to meet MSW requirements, or limit their waste intake to C&D. Older SL facilities continue to accept waste, but they cannot expand beyond their original, permitted "footprint," and they must close in accordance with Subtitle D requirements, including methane and groundwater monitoring.

SWMR 1999-2000

DCA Georgia Department of Community Affairs

County Site Name Private Facility Type Liner Total FY 99 Tons Total FY 00 Tons Remaining Capacity (Cy) Estimated Fill Date

Middle Georgia

Baldwin Baldwin Bibb Bibb Bibb Houston Houston Monroe Putnam Twiggs Total

Central State Hospital-Freeman Bldg (L) Baldwin Co-Union Hill Ch Rd, Ph 3 (MSWL) Macon-Walker Rd Ph 2 (SL) Swift Creek Landfill Swift Creek MSW Landfill Houston Co-SR 247 Klondike Houston Co-SR247 Klondike C/D Landfill Monroe Co-Strickland Loop Rd Putnam Co-CR 29 (L) & (SL) Twiggs Co-US 80 (SL)

L MSWL Y SL YL Y MSWL Y MSWL Y C&D MSWL Y SL MSWL Y

375.00 34,688.29 94,544.51 46,771.22 162,723.56 108,464.90
10,005.90 41,698.40 11,023.85 510,295.63

375.00 35,148.67 91,342.05 69,162.49 164,735.78 101,215.41
13,037.77 44,228.77 11,605.37 530,851.31

53,856 2,988,509 2,933,963
574,210 3,645,330 5,713,831 4,483,248 2,381,632
78,651 4,870,060 27,723,290

7/1/81 7/1/42 8/1/15 6/18/00 9/2/14 8/1/43 2/25/76 11/1/93 4/26/00 6/30/10 11/33

North Georgia

Murray Whitfield Whitfield Total

Murray Co-US 411 Westside Site 2 Dalton-Old Dixie Hwy Ph 2 (SL) Whitfield Co-Dalton, Old Dixie Hwy.

MSWL Y SL MSWL Y

34,095.66 178,073.98
212,169.64

39,001.25 1,795,525 25,897.00 160,260 168,461.00 10,265,808 231,409.05 12,221,593

7/31/23 2/1/02 3/1/23
9/24

Northeast Georgia

Barrow

Republic Waste-Oak Grove MSWLF SR 324

Y MSWL Y 473,441.02 606,280.33 3,939,503 7/1/05

45

Clarke

Clarke Co-Athens Dunlap Rd (SL) Ph 2

MSWL Y 61,884.04 67,941.38 1,994,948 1/1/15

Elbert

Elbert Co-Hull Chapel Rd Ph 1 (SL)

SL

10,017.59

3/13/00

Jasper

Jasper Co-SR 212 Monticello (SL)

SL

5,657.16 3,408.80 29,903 12/30/01

Newton

Newton Co-Forest Tower/Lwr Rvr Rds (SL)

C&D

13,659.72 22,860.29 156,142 11/30/07

Newton

Newton Co-Lower River Rd Site#2

MSWL Y 37,372.17 36,762.28 1,809,773 4/30/24

Oglethorpe Olgethorpe Co-US 78 C/D Landfill

C&D

30,449.20 35,572.37 135,405 12/1/04

Total

638,571.00 782,843.04 8,065,674 3/09

South Georgia

Ben Hill Cook Cook Lowndes Tift Total

Fitzgerald, Kiochee Church Rd,Ph.2 Cook Co-Taylor Rd Adel (L) Cook Co-Taylor Rd., Site 2 (MSWL) Pecan Row Municipal Solid Waste Landfill Tifton-Omega/Eldorado Rd Ph 3 (SL)

MSWL Y L MSWL Y Y MSWL Y MSWL Y

18,559.50 24,896.16 738,515 3/17/27

24,611.48 313,403.47 30,021.05 386,595.50

20,535.32 247,046.67 36,588.85 329,067.00

750,675 3,878,703
554,693 5,922,586

7/1/15 8/28/10 10/16/07
6/13

Southeast Georgia

Atkinson Charlton Coffee Coffee Total

Atkinson Co-SR 50 MSWL Chesser Island Road Landfill, Inc. MSWL Transwaste Services, Inc. C.R. 129/17 Coffee Co-CR 129/17 Mile River (SL)

MSWL Y Y MSWL Y Y C&D
C&D

38,829.24 149,310.15
51,114.03 239,253.42

39,022.49 134,941 150,010.02 10,334,342 24,038.08 105,499 13,924.62 226,995.21 10,574,782

8/31/05 9/30/38 3/1/02
2/33

Southwest Georgia

Decatur Dougherty Dougherty Grady Thomas Total

Decatur Co-SR 309 Bnbrdg Ph 2 (SL) Dougherty Co-Fleming/Gaissert Rd (SL) Maple Hill Landfill, Inc. Cairo-6th Ave (SL) Thomasville/Sunset Dr Phase 4 MSWL

SL MSWL Y L SL MSWL Y

25,384.92 145,334.86 45,365.13 20,534.36 121,760.14 358,379.41

30,977.25 149,620.30 40,202.06 19,558.56 130,399.60 370,757.77

322,623 5,457,119
209,613 3,631,338 9,620,693

10/30/05 6/30/25 12/31/99 8/1/05 7/1/18
11/21

Notes: All information pertaining to annual tonnage, remaining landfill capacity and estimated closure dates was supplied by EPD. Both (C&D) and (L) designations indicate construction and demolition landfills, while (MSWL) and (SL) designations indicate municipal solid waste landfills. Estimated fill dates by region are cumulative, using average daily fill rates and remaining capacity as reported to EPD, and 260 working days per year.

Appendix C

Community Indicators for Solid Waste Management 0 points Jurisdiction is not complying with State law or offering solid waste management services to itscommunity. 3-5 points Jurisdiction is making minimal efforts to manage solid waste 6-8 points Jurisdiction is making adequate efforts to manage solid waste 9-15 points Jurisdiction is making extra efforts to manage solid waste wisely

Minimum Effort Criteria 3 points Local government has complied with State solid waste planning requirements by adopting and updating as required an
approved solid waste management plan, which outlines current and future solid waste collection and disposal practices, waste reduction strategies, and solid waste education activities

1 point 1 point

Local government provides or arranges for solid waste collection services for citizens and/or businesses, either directly, through franchise agreements, or by contract with other local governments, authorities, or private vendors
Local government requires yard trimmings to be separated from solid waste prior to collection

Adequate Effort Criteria 1 point Yard trimming collection options available to citizens
1 point Government has a program in place for educating local residents about solid waste management
1 point Recycling services are available to residents and/or businesses

Extra Effort Criteria 1 point Local government charges residents for solid waste collection based on the amount of waste they throw away

2 points
46 1 point

Residents have access to curbside recycling service Residents have access to a staffed drop-off recycling facility

1 point Local government's solid waste education program is part of the Keep America Beautiful system

1 point Yard trimmings collected are composted

1 point Local government has a written policy requiring the purchase of recycled products when available

Community Indicators Ranking, FY 1998

Extra Effort Counties: 9 - 15 points

Athens-Clarke Augusta/Richmond Baldwin Bibb Bryan Bulloch Butts Camden Catoosa Clayton

Clinch Columbia Columbus/Muscogee Coweta Dade DeKalb Dougherty Elbert Emanuel Fayette

Floyd Forsyth Fulton Gilmer Glynn Gordon Greene Gwinnett Habersham Hall

Adequate Effort Counties: 6 8 points

Appling Atkinson Bacon Banks Barrow Bartow Ben Hill Bleckley Brantley Brooks Burke Calhoun Candler

Carroll Charlton Chatham Chattahoochee Chattooga Clay Coffee Colquitt Crawford Crisp Decatur Dodge Dooly

Douglas Early Effingham Evans Glascock Grady Hancock Haralson Heard Irwin Jackson Johnson Lanier

Harris Hart Henry Houston Jones Lamar Laurens Liberty Lowndes McDuffie
Lee Lincoln Madison Marion Meriwether Miller Mitchell Montgomery Morgan Oglethorpe Paulding Pierce Pike

McIntosh Monroe Newton Oconee Peach Polk Pulaski Schley Screven Spalding
Putnam Quitman Rabun Randolph Rockdale Taylor Thomas Toombs Towns Treutlen Twiggs Union Upson

Stephens Sumter Tift Troup Ware Wayne White Worth
Walton Warren Washington Webster Wheeler Whitfield Wilcox Wilkes Wilkinson

SWMR 1999-2000

DCA Georgia Department of Community Affairs

Minimal Effort Counties: 3 5 points

Baker Berrien Cook Echols

Jefferson Jenkins Macon Seminole

Stewart Talbot Tattnall

Telfair Turner Walker

Cherokee Jeff Davis Long

Counties not in compliance with state laws for Solid Waste Management: 0 points

Lumpkin Terrell Fannin

Cobb Dawson

Franklin

Extra Effort Cities: 9 15 points

Jasper

Murray

Pickens

Taliaferro

Acworth

Clarkesville

Folkston

Lincolnton

Port Wentworth

Thomson

Adairsville

Clarkston

Gainesville

Loganville

Powder Springs

Tifton

Albany

Climax

Garfield

Macon

Richmond Hill

Toccoa

Aldora

College Park

Good Hope

Madison

Riverdale

Twin City

Alpharetta

Comer

Grantville

Marietta

Roberta

Tyrone

Americus

Commerce

Gray

McCaysville

Rochelle

Union City

Aragon

Conyers

Grayson

McDonough

Rome

Uvalda

Atlanta

Cordele

Griffin

McRae

Rossville

Valdosta

Austell

Cornelia

Hampton

Metter

Roswell

Vidalia

Bainbridge

Covington

Harlem

Millen

Savannah

Villa Rica

Barnesville

Dacula

Hartwell

Monroe

Screven

Warner Robins

Baxley

Dahlonega

Hawkinsville

Montezuma

Senoia

Washington

Bishop

Dallas

Hinesville

Morrow

Smyrna

Watkinsville

Blackshear

Dalton

Homer

Moultrie

Snellville

Waycross

Bloomingdale

Decatur

Homerville

Mount Vernon

Social Circle

West Point

Brooklet

Donalsonville

Ila

Mountain City

Soperton

Williamson

Brooks

Douglasville

Jackson

Mountain Park

Statesboro

Winder

Byron

Dublin

Jesup

Norcross

Stone Mountain

Woodland

Cairo

Duluth

Jonesboro

Ocilla

Sugar Hill

Zebulon

Camilla

Elberton

LaGrange

Peachtree City

Sylvania

Canton

Ellaville

Lake City

Pembroke

Tallapoosa

Carrollton Chamblee

Emerson Fitzgerald

Lawrenceville Lilburn

Perry Plains

Thomaston Thomasville

47

Adequate Effort Cities: 6 - 8 points

Abbeville Adel Adrian Alamo Alapaha Allenhurst Alma Argyle Arlington Ashburn Attapulgus Auburn Avera Baldwin Bartow Barwick Berkeley Lake Berlin Bethlehem Bibb City Blakely Bogart Boston Bowdon Bowman Bremen Brinson Brunswick Buchanan Buford Butler Byromville Cadwell Calhoun Carl Carlton Cartersville Cave Spring Cecil

Cedartown Centerville Chickamauga Claxton Clayton Clermont Cleveland Cochran Cohutta Colbert Collins Colquitt Concord Crawfordville Cusseta Cuthbert Darien Davisboro Dawson Dearing Dexter Doerun Doraville Douglas Dudley East Dublin East Ellijay Eastman Eatonton Ellijay Enigma Fayetteville Flemington Forsyth Fort Gaines Fort Oglethorpe Fort Valley Franklin Garden City

Georgetown Gibson Gillsville Glennville Glenwood Gordon Greensboro Greenville Grovetown Gum Branch Guyton Hagan Hapeville Haralson Hazlehurst Helen Helena Hiram Hogansville Homeland Hoschton Ideal Iron City Irwinton Ivey Jakin Jenkinsburg Kennesaw Keysville Kingsland Kingston LaFayette Lake Park Lakeland Leary Leesburg Lenox Lexington Lithonia

Locust Grove Lookout Mountain Louisville Ludowici Lula Lumber City Lumpkin Lyons Manchester Mansfield Marshallville McIntyre Meansville Meigs Midville Midway Milledgeville Milner Molena Monticello Morgan Morven Mount Airy Mount Zion Nahunta Nashville Newnan Nicholls Nicholson Norman Park North High Shoals Oakwood Ochlocknee Odum Oglethorpe Omega Oxford Palmetto Parrott

Patterson Pelham Pine Mountain Pinehurst Plainville Pooler Portal Porterdale Poulan Preston Quitman Ray City Rayle Rebecca Reidsville Remerton Rest Haven Reynolds Riceboro Richland Rincon Ringgold Rockmart Roopville Rutledge Sandersville Sardis Sasser Scotland Shellman Shiloh Siloam Sky Valley Smithville Sparks Sparta St. Marys Stapleton Statham

Stockbridge Summerville Sumner Swainsboro Sycamore Sylvester Talbotton Tallulah Falls Tennille Thunderbolt Trenton Trion Turin Ty Ty Tybee Island Unadilla Union Point Varnell Vienna Wadley Walthourville Warm Springs Warrenton Waynesboro Whigham White White Plains Winterville Woodbine Woodbury Woodstock Woodville Wrens Wrightsville Yatesville Young Harris

Appendix C continued

Minimal Effort Cities: 3 5 points

Ailey Allentown Alston Alto Ambrose Arabi Arcade Arnoldsville Baconton Bellville Between Blairsville Blue Ridge Bluffton Blythe Bostwick Braselton Braswell Bronwood Buckhead Camak

Centralhatchee Chester Cobbtown Coleman Crawford Culloden Daisy Danielsville Danville Dasher Deepstep Denton DeSoto Dillard Dooling DuPont Edgehill Edison Ellenton Ephesus Euharlee

Fairmount Fargo Flovilla Funston Gay Geneva Girard Graham Hahira Hamilton Harrison Hephzibah Hiawassee Higgston Hiltonia Hoboken Holly Springs Hull Jacksonville Jeffersonville Junction City

Kite Leslie Lilly Lone Oak Lovejoy Lyerly Manassas Martin Maxeys Maysville Menlo Milan Mitchell Moreland Morganton Newborn Newington Newton Norwood Nunez Oak Park

Offerman Oliver Orchard Hill Pavo Pearson Pendergrass Pineview Pitts Pulaski Ranger Register Rentz Rhine Riddleville Riverside Rocky Ford Sale City Santa Claus Springfield Stillmore Summertown

Cities not in compliance with state laws for Solid Waste Management: 0 points

Andersonville

Carnesville

Demorest

Jefferson

Oconee

Avalon

Chatsworth

East Point

Jersey

Payne City

48

Avondale Estates

Chauncey

Eton

Lavonia

Pine Lake

Ball Ground

Coolidge

Fairburn

Lithia Springs

Resaca

Bowersville

Corinth

Flowery Branch

Luthersville

Royston

Broxton

Cumming

Forest Park

Mineral Bluff

Shady Dale

Buena Vista

Damascus

Franklin Springs

Montrose

Sharon

Canon

Dawsonville

Jasper

Nelson

Sharpsburg

Sunny Side Surrency Suwanee Tarrytown Taylorsville Temple Tignall Toomsboro Tunnell Hill Vernonburg Vidette Waco Walnut Grove Warwick Waverly Hall Weston Whitesburg Willacoochee Woolsey
Talking Rock Talmo Tiger Waleska

Community Indicators Ranking, FY 1999

Extra Effort Counties: 9 15 points

Athens-Clarke Atkinson Augusta/Richmond Baldwin Bartow Bibb Brooks Bryan Bulloch Camden Catoosa Charlton

Chatham Chattahoochee Clayton Clinch Colquitt Columbia Columbus/Muscogee Coweta Crisp Dade DeKalb Dougherty

Douglas Effingham Fayette Floyd Forsyth Fulton Gilmer Glynn Grady Greene Gwinnett Hall

Adequate Effort Counties: 6 8 points

Appling Bacon Banks Barrow Ben Hill Bleckley Brantley Burke Butts Candler

Carroll Chattooga Cherokee Clay Coffee Cook Crawford Decatur Dodge Dooly Early

Echols Evans Fannin Glascock Gordon Habersham Haralson Hart Heard Lee

Harris Henry Houston Jackson Johnson Jones Lamar Laurens Liberty Lowndes McDuffie McIntosh
Lumpkin Madison Marion Meriwether Miller Mitchell Oglethorpe Pierce Pike Pulaski

SWMR 1999-2000

Monroe Montgomery Morgan Newton Oconee Paulding Peach Polk Putnam Rockdale Schley Screven
Quitman Rabun Randolph Stewart Tattnall Toombs Towns Union Washington Webster

Spalding Stephens Sumter Taylor Tift Treutlen Troup Walton Wayne Wheeler Wilcox
White Whitfield Worth Wilkes Wilkinson

DCA Georgia Department of Community Affairs
Community Indicators Ranking, FY 1999

Minimal Effort Counties: 3 5 points

Baker Berrien Calhoun Emanuel

Hancock Irwin Jeff Davis

Jefferson Lanier Lincoln

Long Macon Seminole

Talbot Telfair Terrell

Turner Upson Warren

Counties not in compliance with state laws for Solid Waste Management: 0 points

Cobb

Elbert

Dawson *

Franklin *

Extra Effort Cities: 9 15 points

Jasper * Jenkins

Murray Pickens

Taliaferro Twiggs *

Walker *

Acworth

Carl

Fitzgerald

Kennesaw

Oakwood

St. Marys

Adairsville

Carrollton

Flowery Branch

LaGrange

Ocilla

Statesboro

Albany

Cartersville

Folkston

Lake City

Omega

Stockbridge

Aldora

Cedartown

Forsyth

Lawrenceville

Oxford

Stone Mountain

Alpharetta

Centerville

Fort Oglethorpe

Lexington

Palmetto

Swainsboro

Alston

Chamblee

Gainesville

Lilburn

Pavo

Sycamore

Americus

Clarkesville

Garfield

Lincolnton

Peachtree City

Sylvania

Aragon

Clarkston

Good Hope

Lithonia

Pelham

Tallapoosa

Ashburn

Claxton

Grantville

Locust Grove

Perry

Thomaston

Atlanta

Clayton

Gray

Lula

Plains

Thomasville

Austell

Cleveland

Grayson

Lumber City

Port Wentworth

Thomson

Avondale Estates

Cobbtown

Greensboro

Lyons

Porterdale

Tifton

Bainbridge

College Park

Griffin

Madison

Powder Springs

Toccoa

Baldwin

Colquitt

Grovetown

Marietta

Quitman

Trenton

Barnesville

Comer

Guyton

Maxeys

Register

Trion

Barwick Baxley

Conyers Cornelia

Hahira Hampton

McCaysville McDonough

Reidsville Reynolds

Twin City Tyrone

49

Berkeley Lake

Covington

Hapeville

McRae

Richmond Hill

Union City

Berlin

Dacula

Harlem

Meansville

Riverdale

Union Point

Bibb City

Dahlonega

Hartwell

Metter

Roberta

Valdosta

Blackshear

Dalton

Hawkinsville

Midville

Rochelle

Vidalia

Blakely

Decatur

Hazlehurst

Millen

Rome

Villa Rica

Bloomingdale

Donalsonville

Helen

Monroe

Roswell

Warner Robins

Bogart

Douglas

Helena

Montezuma

Savannah

Washington

Brunswick

Douglasville

Hinesville

Morrow

Screven

Watkinsville

Buena Vista

Dublin

Hogansville

Morven

Senoia

Waycross

Buford

Dudley

Homerville

Moultrie

Siloam

West Point

Byron

Duluth

Hoschton

Mount Vernon

Smyrna

Williamson

Cairo

Eatonton

Ila

Mountain Park

Snellville

Winder

Calhoun

Elberton

Jackson

Newnan

Social Circle

Woodbine

Camilla

Ellaville

Jesup

Nicholson

Soperton

Zebulon

Canton

Ellijay

Jonesboro

Norcross

Sparks

Appendix C continued
Adequate Effort Cities: 6 8 points

Abbeville

Collins

Garden City

Adel

Commerce

Gay

Adrian

Concord

Georgetown

Ailey

Coolidge

Gibson

Alamo

Cordele

Gillsville

Alapaha

Crawfordville

Glennville

Allenhurst

Culloden

Glenwood

Alma

Cusseta

Gordon

Arlington

Cuthbert

Greenville

Attapulgus

Dallas

Gum Branch

Bartow

Darien

Hagan

Bethlehem

Dasher

Hamilton

Boston

Davisboro

Haralson

Bostwick

Dawson

Hiltonia

Bowdon

Dearing

Hoboken

Bremen

Dexter

Homeland

Brinson

Doerun

Homer

Brooklet

East Dublin

Ideal

Brooks

East Ellijay

Iron City

Buchanan

Eastman

Ivey

Butler

Ellenton

Jakin

Carlton

Emerson

Jenkinsburg

Cave Spring

Enigma

Kingsland

Cecil

Fairmount

Kingston

Chester

Fargo

Lake Park

Clermont

Fayetteville

Lakeland

Climax

Flemington

Leesburg

Cochran

Fort Gaines

Leslie

50

Colbert Coleman

Fort Valley Franklin

Louisville Ludowici

Lumpkin Manchester Mansfield Marshallville Martin McIntyre Meigs Midway Milledgeville Milner Molena Morganton Mount Airy Mount Zion Nahunta Nashville Newborn Newington Norman Park Ochlocknee Odum Oglethorpe Parrott Patterson Pine Mountain Pinehurst Plainville Pooler Portal Poulan

Preston Ranger Ray City Rayle Rebecca Remerton Resaca Rest Haven Riceboro Richland Rincon Ringgold Rockmart Rocky Ford Roopville Rutledge Sale City Sandersville Sardis Sasser Scotland Sky Valley Springfield Stapleton Statham Stillmore Summerville Suwanee Sylvester Talbotton

Temple Tennille Thunderbolt Tignall Tunnel Hill Turin Ty Ty Tybee Island Unadilla Uvalda Varnell Vienna Wadley Walnut Grove Warm Springs Warrenton Waverly Hall Waynesboro Weston Whigham White White Plains Whitesburg Winterville Woodbury Woodstock Woodville Wrens Wrightsville Yatesville

Minimal Effort Cities: 3 5 points

Alto Ambrose Arabi Arcade Auburn Avalon Avera Baconton Bellville Between Blairsville Blue Ridge Bluffton Blythe Braselton Braswell Bronwood Byromville

Cadwell Camak Centralhatchee Chauncey Crawford Daisy Danville Deepstep Denton DeSoto Dillard Dooling DuPont Edgehill Edison Ephesus Euharlee Flovilla

Funston Geneva Girard Graham Harrison Hephzibah Hiawassee Higgston Hiram Holly Springs Hull Jacksonville Jeffersonville Junction City Keysville Kite Leary Lenox

Lilly Lone Oak Lovejoy Lyerly Manassas Maysville Menlo Milan Mitchell Montrose Moreland Morgan Mountain City Newton North High Shoals Norwood Nunez Oak Park

Oconee Offerman Oliver Orchard Hill Pearson Pendergrass Pineview Pitts Pulaski Rentz Rhine Riddleville Riverside Santa Claus Shellman Shiloh Smithville Sugar Hill

Summertown Sumner Sunny Side Surrency Tallulah Falls Tarrytown Taylorsville Toomsboro Vernonburg Vidette Waco Walthourville Warwick Willacoochee Woodland Woolsey Young Harris

Cities not in compliance with state laws for Solid Waste Management: 0 points

Allentown * Andersonville Argyle Arnoldsville * Ball Ground * Bishop * Bowersville Bowman * Broxton * Buckhead *

Canon * Carnesville * Chatsworth Chickamauga * Cohutta Corinth Cumming Damascus Danielsville * Dawsonville *

Demorest Doraville East Point Eton Fairburn Forest Park * Franklin Springs* Irwinton * Jasper Jefferson *

Jersey LaFayette * Lavonia * Lithia Springs Loganville * Lookout Mountain * Luthersville Macon * Mineral Bluff Monticello *

Nelson Nicholls * Payne City * Pembroke * Pine Lake * Rossville * Royston * Shady Dale * Sharon Sharpsburg

Sparta Talking Rock Talmo * Tiger * Waleska *

* Local governments marked with an asterisk were not in compliance with the State's Minimum Planning Standards and procedures for Solid Waste Management at the end of FY99 (June 30, 1999). However, they have subsequently met State solid waste planning requirements.

SWMR 1999-2000

Jurisdiction
Atlanta Regional Commission Cherokee County Clayton County Cobb County DeKalb County Douglas County Fayette County Fulton County Gwinnett County Henry County Rockdale County Acworth Alpharetta Atlanta Austell Avondale Estates Ball Ground Berkeley Lake Brooks Buford Canton Chamblee Clarkston College Park Conyers Dacula Decatur

Does government offer recycling services? Tires Auto batteries Aluminum Newspaper Magazines Corrugated cardboard Other paper Glass #1 & #2 plastic Other plastic White goods Christmas trees Construction/demolition materials Steel cans Aerosol cans Paper board Scrap metal Motor oil Phone books Agricultural chemical containers Antifreeze Oil filters Paint Other

Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes --- Yes --- Yes --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- Yes Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- --Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- --Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- --Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- Yes --- Yes --- Yes --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes --- Yes --- --- --- Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- --- Yes --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- Yes --NA --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- Yes --- Yes --- Yes --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- Yes Yes --Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- --- --- Yes --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- ---

DCGeorgia ADepartment of Community Affairs
Appendix D: Recycling Jurisdictions by RDC
51

Does government offer recycling services? Tires Auto batteries Aluminum Newspaper Magazines Corrugated cardboard Other paper Glass #1 & #2 plastic Other plastic White goods Christmas trees Construction/demolition materials Steel cans Aerosol cans Paper board Scrap metal Motor oil Phone books Agricultural chemical containers Antifreeze Oil filters Paint Other

Appendix D: Recycling Jurisdictions by RDC continued
52
SWMR 1999-2000

Jurisdiction
Doraville Douglasville Duluth East Point Fairburn Fayetteville Forest Park Grayson Hampton Hapeville Holly Springs Jonesboro Kennesaw Lake City Lawrenceville Lilburn Lithia Springs Lithonia Locust Grove Lovejoy Marietta McDonough Morrow Mountain Park Norcross Palmetto Peachtree City Pine Lake Powder Springs

Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes --- --- Yes --- Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- Yes Yes Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- Yes Yes Yes --- --- Yes Yes --Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes --- Yes Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- --- Yes Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes --- --- Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- Yes --- --- Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --NA --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes --- Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- ---

Does government offer recycling services? Tires Auto batteries Aluminum Newspaper Magazines Corrugated cardboard Other paper Glass #1 & #2 plastic Other plastic White goods Christmas trees Construction/demolition materials Steel cans Aerosol cans Paper board Scrap metal Motor oil Phone books Agricultural chemical containers Antifreeze Oil filters Paint Other

DCGeorgia ADepartment of Community Affairs
53

Jurisdiction

Rest Haven

Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- ---

Riverdale Roswell Smyrna Snellville

Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes --Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- ---

--- ----- ----- ----- Yes

Stockbridge Stone Mountain

Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- ---

Sugar Hill Suwanee Tyrone Union City

NA --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- ---

Waleska Woodstock

NA --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- ---

Woolsey

NA --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- ---

Central Savannah River Area

Augusta-Richmond County

Yes Yes --- --- --- --- Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- ---

Burke County

Yes --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- ---

Columbia County Glascock County

Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- Yes --Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- ---

Hancock County Jefferson County

No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- ---

Jenkins County

NA --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- ---

Lincoln County

Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- Yes --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- ---

McDuffie County Screven County

Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- ---

Taliaferro County Warren County

No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- ---

Washington County

Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- ---

Wilkes County

Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- Yes --- --- Yes --- --- Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- Yes

Does government offer recycling services? Tires Auto batteries Aluminum Newspaper Magazines Corrugated cardboard Other paper Glass #1 & #2 plastic Other plastic White goods Christmas trees Construction/demolition materials Steel cans Aerosol cans Paper board Scrap metal Motor oil Phone books Agricultural chemical containers Antifreeze Oil filters Paint Other

Appendix D: Recycling Jurisdictions by RDC continued
54
SWMR 1999-2000

Jurisdiction
Avera Bartow Blythe Camak Crawfordville Davisboro Dearing Deepstep Edgehill Gibson Girard Grovetown Harlem Harrison Hephzibah Hiltonia Keysville Lincolnton Louisville Midville Millen Mitchell Newington Norwood Oconee Oliver Rayle Riddleville Rocky Ford

Yes --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- --NA --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- --NA --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- Yes Yes --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- Yes --- Yes --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --NA --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --NA --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- --- Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --NA --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- --- Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- ---

Jurisdiction
Sandersville Sardis Sharon Sparta Stapleton Sylvania Tennille Thomson Tignall Vidette Wadley Warrenton Washington Waynesboro Wrens Chattahoochee Flint Carroll County Coweta County Heard County Meriwether County Troup County Bowdon Carrollton Centralhatchee Corinth Ephesus Franklin Gay Grantville

Does government offer recycling services? Tires Auto batteries Aluminum Newspaper Magazines Corrugated cardboard Other paper Glass #1 & #2 plastic Other plastic White goods Christmas trees Construction/demolition materials Steel cans Aerosol cans Paper board Scrap metal Motor oil Phone books Agricultural chemical containers Antifreeze Oil filters Paint Other

Yes --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --NA --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --NA --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- --- --- Yes --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- Yes --- --- Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- Yes --- --- Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- Yes No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- ---
Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- Yes --- Yes --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes --- Yes --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --NA --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- Yes --Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- ---

DCGeorgia ADepartment of Community Affairs
55

Does government offer recycling services? Tires Auto batteries Aluminum Newspaper Magazines Corrugated cardboard Other paper Glass #1 & #2 plastic Other plastic White goods Christmas trees Construction/demolition materials Steel cans Aerosol cans Paper board Scrap metal Motor oil Phone books Agricultural chemical containers Antifreeze Oil filters Paint Other

Appendix D: Recycling Jurisdictions by RDC continued
56
SWMR 1999-2000

Jurisdiction
Greenville Haralson Hogansville LaGrange Lone Oak Luthersville Manchester Moreland Mount Zion Newnan Roopville Senoia Sharpsburg Temple Turin Villa Rica Warm Springs West Point Whitesburg Woodbury Coastal Georgia Bryan County Bulloch County Camden County Chatham County Effingham County Glynn County Liberty County Long County

No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- --- Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --NA --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- Yes --- Yes --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- Yes Yes --- --- Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --NA --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- --- Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- --- Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- --- Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- ---
Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes --- --Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- ---

Jurisdiction
McIntosh County Allenhurst Bloomingdale Brooklet Brunswick Darien Flemington Garden City Gum Branch Guyton Hinesville Kingsland Ludowici Midway Pembroke Pooler Port Wentworth Portal Register Riceboro Richmond Hill Rincon Savannah Springfield St. Marys Statesboro Thunderbolt Tybee Island Vernonburg

Does government offer recycling services? Tires Auto batteries Aluminum Newspaper Magazines Corrugated cardboard Other paper Glass #1 & #2 plastic Other plastic White goods Christmas trees Construction/demolition materials Steel cans Aerosol cans Paper board Scrap metal Motor oil Phone books Agricultural chemical containers Antifreeze Oil filters Paint Other

Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes --- Yes --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes --- Yes --- Yes --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- --- Yes --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- Yes --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes --- --- Yes --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes --- Yes --- Yes --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes --- Yes Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- ---

DCGeorgia ADepartment of Community Affairs
57

Does government offer recycling services? Tires Auto batteries Aluminum Newspaper Magazines Corrugated cardboard Other paper Glass #1 & #2 plastic Other plastic White goods Christmas trees Construction/demolition materials Steel cans Aerosol cans Paper board Scrap metal Motor oil Phone books Agricultural chemical containers Antifreeze Oil filters Paint Other

Appendix D: Recycling Jurisdictions by RDC continued
58
SWMR 1999-2000

Jurisdiction
Walthourville Woodbine South Georgia Ben Hill County Berrien County Brooks County Cook County Echols County Irwin County Lanier County Lowndes County Tift County Turner County Adel Alapaha Ashburn Cecil Dasher Enigma Fitzgerald Hahira Lake Park Lakeland Lenox Morven Nashville Ocilla Omega Quitman

Yes --- --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- Yes --- --- --- Yes --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- ---
Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- --- Yes --- Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- Yes --- Yes --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- Yes Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- Yes --- Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --NA --- --- Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- --- Yes --- Yes --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- Yes --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes --- Yes --- Yes --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- ---

Jurisdiction
Ray City Rebecca Remerton Sparks Sycamore Tifton Ty Ty Valdosta Coosa Valley Bartow County Catoosa County Chattooga County Dade County Floyd County Gordon County Haralson County Paulding County Polk County Walker County Adairsville Aragon Braswell Bremen Buchanan Calhoun Cartersville Cave Spring Cedartown Chickamauga

Does government offer recycling services? Tires Auto batteries Aluminum Newspaper Magazines Corrugated cardboard Other paper Glass #1 & #2 plastic Other plastic White goods Christmas trees Construction/demolition materials Steel cans Aerosol cans Paper board Scrap metal Motor oil Phone books Agricultural chemical containers Antifreeze Oil filters Paint Other

No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- --- Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- ---
Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- Yes --Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- Yes Yes Yes --- Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- Yes --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- Yes --- Yes --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- ---

DCGeorgia ADepartment of Community Affairs
59

Does government offer recycling services? Tires Auto batteries Aluminum Newspaper Magazines Corrugated cardboard Other paper Glass #1 & #2 plastic Other plastic White goods Christmas trees Construction/demolition materials Steel cans Aerosol cans Paper board Scrap metal Motor oil Phone books Agricultural chemical containers Antifreeze Oil filters Paint Other

Appendix D: Recycling Jurisdictions by RDC continued
60
SWMR 1999-2000

Jurisdiction
Dallas Emerson Euharlee Fairmount Fort Oglethorpe Hiram Kingston LaFayette Lookout Mountain Lyerly Menlo Plainville Ranger Resaca Ringgold Rockmart Rome Rossville Summerville Tallapoosa Taylorsville Trenton Trion Walter County White Georgia Mountains Banks County Dawson County Forsyth County

Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- Yes --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes --- --- --- --- Yes --- Yes --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --NA --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- Yes --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- --- --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes --- --- Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes --- Yes --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- --- Yes --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --NA --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- ---
Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- Yes Yes Yes --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- ---

Jurisdiction
Franklin County Habersham County Hall County Hart County Lumpkin County Rabun County Stephens County Towns County Union County White County Alto Avalon Baldwin Blairsville Bowersville Canon Carnesville Clarkesville Clayton Clermont Cleveland Cornelia Cumming Dahlonega Dawsonville Demorest Dillard Flowery Branch Franklin Springs

Does government offer recycling services? Tires Auto batteries Aluminum Newspaper Magazines Corrugated cardboard Other paper Glass #1 & #2 plastic Other plastic White goods Christmas trees Construction/demolition materials Steel cans Aerosol cans Paper board Scrap metal Motor oil Phone books Agricultural chemical containers Antifreeze Oil filters Paint Other

Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes --- Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- Yes Yes Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --NA --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --NA --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --NA --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- Yes --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- Yes Yes Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes --- Yes --- Yes --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --NA --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- Yes --- Yes --- --- --Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- Yes

DCGeorgia ADepartment of Community Affairs
61

Does government offer recycling services? Tires Auto batteries Aluminum Newspaper Magazines Corrugated cardboard Other paper Glass #1 & #2 plastic Other plastic White goods Christmas trees Construction/demolition materials Steel cans Aerosol cans Paper board Scrap metal Motor oil Phone books Agricultural chemical containers Antifreeze Oil filters Paint Other

Appendix D: Recycling Jurisdictions by RDC continued
62
SWMR 1999-2000

Jurisdiction
Gainesville Gillsville Hartwell Helen Hiawassee Homer Lavonia Lula Martin Maysville Mount Airy Mountain City Oakwood Royston Sky Valley Tallulah Falls Tiger Toccoa Young Harris Heart of Georgia-Altamaha Appling County Bleckley County Candler County Dodge County Emanuel County Evans County Jeff Davis County Johnson County Laurens County

Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- Yes Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- --- Yes Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --NA --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --NA --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --NA --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- ---
Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- --- --- Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes --- --- Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- --- --- Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes ---

Jurisdiction
Montgomery County Tattnall County Telfair County Toombs County Treutlen County Wayne County Wheeler County Wilcox County Abbeville Adrian Ailey Alamo Alston Baxley Bellville Cadwell Chauncey Chester Claxton Cobbtown Cochran Collins Daisy Denton Dexter Dublin Dudley East Dublin Eastman

Does government offer recycling services? Tires Auto batteries Aluminum Newspaper Magazines Corrugated cardboard Other paper Glass #1 & #2 plastic Other plastic White goods Christmas trees Construction/demolition materials Steel cans Aerosol cans Paper board Scrap metal Motor oil Phone books Agricultural chemical containers Antifreeze Oil filters Paint Other

Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- Yes --- Yes --- --- Yes --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- Yes --- --- --- --Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- --- Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- Yes --- --- Yes --- --- Yes --- --- --- --Yes --- --- --- Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- Yes --- --- Yes --- Yes --- --- Yes --- --Yes --- --- --- Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --NA --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- ---

DCGeorgia ADepartment of Community Affairs
63

Does government offer recycling services? Tires Auto batteries Aluminum Newspaper Magazines Corrugated cardboard Other paper Glass #1 & #2 plastic Other plastic White goods Christmas trees Construction/demolition materials Steel cans Aerosol cans Paper board Scrap metal Motor oil Phone books Agricultural chemical containers Antifreeze Oil filters Paint Other

Appendix D: Recycling Jurisdictions by RDC continued
64
SWMR 1999-2000

Jurisdiction
Garfield Glennville Glenwood Graham Hagan Hazlehurst Helena Higgston Jacksonville Jesup Kite Lumber City Lyons Manassas McRae Metter Milan Montrose Mount Vernon Nunez Oak Park Odum Pineview Pitts Pulaski Reidsville Rentz Rhine Rochelle

Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --NA --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --NA --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- Yes --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --NA --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- --NA --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --NA --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- Yes No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- --- Yes ---

Does government offer recycling services? Tires Auto batteries Aluminum Newspaper Magazines Corrugated cardboard Other paper Glass #1 & #2 plastic Other plastic White goods Christmas trees Construction/demolition materials Steel cans Aerosol cans Paper board Scrap metal Motor oil Phone books Agricultural chemical containers Antifreeze Oil filters Paint Other

DCGeorgia ADepartment of Community Affairs
65

Jurisdiction

Santa Claus

NA --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- ---

Scotland Screven

No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- --- Yes --- Yes --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- ---

Soperton

Yes --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- ---

Stillmore

No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- ---

Summertown Surrency

No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- ---

Swainsboro Tarrytown

Yes --- --- --- Yes Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --NA --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- ---

Twin City Uvalda Vidalia Wrightsville

Yes --- --- --- Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- ---

Lower Chattahoochee Chattahoochee County

Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes --- --- Yes --- ---

Clay County

Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- Yes --- --- --- ---

Columbus/Muscogee County Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- ---

Harris County

Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes --- Yes Yes --- --- Yes --- Yes --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- ---

Quitman County

Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- ---

Randolph County Stewart County

Yes --- --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- ---

Talbot County Bibb City

No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- --- Yes Yes --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- ---

Bluffton

NA --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- ---

Coleman

Yes --- --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- ---

Cusseta Cuthbert

Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes --- Yes --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- ---

Fort Gaines Geneva

Yes --- --- --- Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- ---

Does government offer recycling services? Tires Auto batteries Aluminum Newspaper Magazines Corrugated cardboard Other paper Glass #1 & #2 plastic Other plastic White goods Christmas trees Construction/demolition materials Steel cans Aerosol cans Paper board Scrap metal Motor oil Phone books Agricultural chemical containers Antifreeze Oil filters Paint Other

Appendix D: Recycling Jurisdictions by RDC continued
66
SWMR 1999-2000

Jurisdiction
Georgetown Hamilton Junction City Lumpkin Pine Mountain Richland Shellman Shiloh Talbotton Waverly Hall Woodland McIntosh Trail Butts County Lamar County Pike County Spalding County Upson County Aldora Barnesville Concord Flovilla Griffin Jackson Jenkinsburg Meansville Milner Molena Orchard Hill Sunny Side

Yes --- --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --NA --- --- Yes --- Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- ---
Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes --- Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- Yes Yes Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- Yes --- Yes --- Yes --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- Yes --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --NA --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --NA --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- ---

Jurisdiction
Thomaston Williamson Yatesville Zebulon Middle Flint Crisp County Dooly County Macon County Marion County Schley County Sumter County Taylor County Webster County Americus Andersonville Arabi Buena Vista Butler Byromville Cordele DeSoto Dooling Ellaville Ideal Leslie Lilly Marshallville Montezuma Oglethorpe

Does government offer recycling services? Tires Auto batteries Aluminum Newspaper Magazines Corrugated cardboard Other paper Glass #1 & #2 plastic Other plastic White goods Christmas trees Construction/demolition materials Steel cans Aerosol cans Paper board Scrap metal Motor oil Phone books Agricultural chemical containers Antifreeze Oil filters Paint Other

Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- Yes --- Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- ---
Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- Yes --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- --- Yes --Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- --- Yes --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes --- --- Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- --NA --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --NA --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --NA --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --NA --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --NA --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- ---

DCGeorgia ADepartment of Community Affairs
67

Does government offer recycling services? Tires Auto batteries Aluminum Newspaper Magazines Corrugated cardboard Other paper Glass #1 & #2 plastic Other plastic White goods Christmas trees Construction/demolition materials Steel cans Aerosol cans Paper board Scrap metal Motor oil Phone books Agricultural chemical containers Antifreeze Oil filters Paint Other

Appendix D: Recycling Jurisdictions by RDC continued
68
SWMR 1999-2000

Jurisdiction
Pinehurst Plains Preston Reynolds Unadilla Vienna Weston Middle Georgia Baldwin County Bibb County Crawford County Houston County Jones County Monroe County Peach County Pulaski County Putnam County Twiggs County Wilkinson County Allentown Byron Centerville Culloden Danville Eatonton Forsyth Fort Valley Gordon Gray

No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- ---
Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- Yes --- Yes --- Yes --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- Yes --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- --Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- Yes --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- --NA --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- Yes Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- Yes --- Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- Yes --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- ---

Jurisdiction
Hawkinsville Irwinton Ivey Jeffersonville Macon McIntyre Milledgeville Payne City Perry Roberta Toomsboro Warner Robins North Georgia Fannin County Gilmer County Murray County Pickens County Whitfield County Blue Ridge Chatsworth Cohutta Dalton East Ellijay Ellijay Eton Jasper McCaysville Mineral Bluff Morganton Nelson Talking Rock

Does government offer recycling services? Tires Auto batteries Aluminum Newspaper Magazines Corrugated cardboard Other paper Glass #1 & #2 plastic Other plastic White goods Christmas trees Construction/demolition materials Steel cans Aerosol cans Paper board Scrap metal Motor oil Phone books Agricultural chemical containers Antifreeze Oil filters Paint Other

Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- ---
Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- Yes --- --Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes --- Yes --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- Yes --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --NA --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- --- Yes --- Yes --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --NA --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- ---

DCGeorgia ADepartment of Community Affairs
69

Does government offer recycling services? Tires Auto batteries Aluminum Newspaper Magazines Corrugated cardboard Other paper Glass #1 & #2 plastic Other plastic White goods Christmas trees Construction/demolition materials Steel cans Aerosol cans Paper board Scrap metal Motor oil Phone books Agricultural chemical containers Antifreeze Oil filters Paint Other

Appendix D: Recycling Jurisdictions by RDC continued
70
SWMR 1999-2000

Jurisdiction
Tunnel Hill Varnell Northeast Georgia Athens-Clarke County Barrow County Elbert County Greene County Jackson County Jasper County Madison County Morgan County Newton County Oconee County Oglethorpe County Walton County Arcade Arnoldsville Auburn Bethlehem Between Bishop Bogart Bostwick Bowman Braselton Buckhead Carl Carlton Colbert Comer Commerce

Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- Yes ---
Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- Yes NA --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- --- --- Yes --- Yes --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- Yes --- --Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes --Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --NA --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --NA --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --NA --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- --- Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- Yes Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- Yes --- Yes --- Yes --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- ---

Jurisdiction
Covington Crawford Danielsville Elberton Good Hope Greensboro Hoschton Hull Ila Jefferson Jersey Lexington Loganville Madison Mansfield Maxeys Monroe Monticello Newborn Nicholson North High Shoals Oxford Pendergrass Porterdale Rutledge Shady Dale Siloam Social Circle Statham Talmo Union Point

Does government offer recycling services? Tires Auto batteries Aluminum Newspaper Magazines Corrugated cardboard Other paper Glass #1 & #2 plastic Other plastic White goods Christmas trees Construction/demolition materials Steel cans Aerosol cans Paper board Scrap metal Motor oil Phone books Agricultural chemical containers Antifreeze Oil filters Paint Other

Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- Yes --- Yes --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- Yes Yes Yes --Yes --- --- Yes --- --- Yes --- Yes --- Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- Yes --NA --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- Yes --Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes --Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- Yes Yes --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- Yes Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- Yes --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- Yes Yes Yes --- --- Yes --Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- Yes Yes --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- Yes --NA --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- --- --- Yes Yes --- Yes --NA --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- Yes --NA --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- Yes --- Yes --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --Yes --- --- --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --NA --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- Yes Yes Yes ---

--- --- --- ----- --- --- ----- --- --- ----- --- --- ----- --- --- ----- --- --- ----- --- --- ----- --- --- ----- --- --- ----- --- --- ----- --- --- ----- --- --- ----- --- --- ----- --- --- ----- --- --- ----- --- --- ----- Yes --- ----- --- --- ----- --- --- ----- --- --- ----- --- --- ----- --- --- ----- --- --- ----- --- --- ----- --- --- ----- --- --- ----- --- Yes ----- --- --- ----- --- --- ----- --- --- ----- --- --- ---

DCGeorgia ADepartment of Community Affairs
71

Does government offer recycling services? Tires Auto batteries Aluminum Newspaper Magazines Corrugated cardboard Other paper Glass #1 & #2 plastic Other plastic White goods Christmas trees Construction/demolition materials Steel cans Aerosol cans Paper board Scrap metal Motor oil Phone books Agricultural chemical containers Antifreeze Oil filters Paint Other

Appendix D: Recycling Jurisdictions by RDC continued
72
SWMR 1999-2000

Jurisdiction
Walnut Grove Watkinsville White Plains Winder Winterville Woodville Southeast Georgia Atkinson County Bacon County Brantley County Charlton County Clinch County Coffee County Pierce County Ware County Alma Ambrose Argyle Blackshear Broxton Douglas DuPont Fargo Folkston Hoboken Homeland Homerville Nahunta Nicholls Offerman Patterson

Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes --- Yes --- Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- Yes --Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- Yes Yes --- --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- ---
Yes --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --NA --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --NA --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- Yes --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- Yes Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --NA --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- --- Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- ---

Jurisdiction
Pearson Waycross Willacoochee Southwest Georgia Baker County Calhoun County Colquitt County Decatur County Dougherty County Early County Grady County Lee County Miller County Mitchell County Seminole County Terrell County Thomas County Worth County Albany Arlington Attapulgus Baconton Bainbridge Barwick Berlin Blakely Boston Brinson Bronwood Cairo Camilla

Does government offer recycling services? Tires Auto batteries Aluminum Newspaper Magazines Corrugated cardboard Other paper Glass #1 & #2 plastic Other plastic White goods Christmas trees Construction/demolition materials Steel cans Aerosol cans Paper board Scrap metal Motor oil Phone books Agricultural chemical containers Antifreeze Oil filters Paint Other

No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- Yes --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- ---
No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- Yes Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- --- --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --Yes Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- --- Yes --- --- --- Yes Yes --- --- Yes --- --- --- --Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- Yes --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- Yes --- --- --- --Yes Yes --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- --- --- Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --Yes --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- Yes Yes Yes --- Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- ---

DCGeorgia ADepartment of Community Affairs
73

Does government offer recycling services? Tires Auto batteries Aluminum Newspaper Magazines Corrugated cardboard Other paper Glass #1 & #2 plastic Other plastic White goods Christmas trees Construction/demolition materials Steel cans Aerosol cans Paper board Scrap metal Motor oil Phone books Agricultural chemical containers Antifreeze Oil filters Paint Other

Appendix D: Recycling Jurisdictions by RDC continued
74
SWMR 1999-2000

Jurisdiction
Climax Colquitt Coolidge Damascus Dawson Doerun Donalsonville Edison Ellenton Funston Iron City Jakin Leary Leesburg Meigs Morgan Moultrie Newton Norman Park Ochlocknee Parrott Pavo Pelham Poulan Riverside Sale City Sasser Smithville Sumner Sylvester Thomasville

Yes --- --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --NA --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- --- Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- --- Yes Yes Yes Yes --- --- --- Yes Yes --- --- --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes Yes --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- --- --- Yes Yes --- Yes Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes Yes --- Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes --- Yes --- Yes Yes --- Yes --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- ---

Does government offer recycling services? Tires Auto batteries Aluminum Newspaper Magazines Corrugated cardboard Other paper Glass #1 & #2 plastic Other plastic White goods Christmas trees Construction/demolition materials Steel cans Aerosol cans Paper board Scrap metal Motor oil Phone books Agricultural chemical containers Antifreeze Oil filters Paint Other

DCGeorgia ADepartment of Community Affairs
75

Jurisdiction
Warwick Whigham

No --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --Yes --- --- --- Yes --- Yes --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- Yes --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- ---

The following jurisdictions offer recycling for cleaning products: Bainbridge, Cohutta, Crisp County, Dawson County, Ellaville, Flowery Branch, Forest Park, Lumpkin, Rochelle, Schley, Siloam, Sumter , Uvalda, and Whitfield County. The following jurisdictions offer recycling for pesticides: Bainbridge, Cohutta, Crisp County, Forest Park, Newton County, Rochelle, Schley, Sumter, and Whitfield. The following jurisdictions offer recycling for other household hazardous waste: Alpharetta, Crisp County, Floyd County, Forest Park, Leslie, Lumpkin, Tunnel Hill and Whitfield County.

Appendix E: Grants and Loans

FY 1999 Scrap Tire Enforcement and Education Grants: Prevention Programs

Regional Development Center Recipient

Amount

Atlanta Regional Commission Fulton County

$84,000.00

Gwinnett County

$17,500.00

Rockdale County

$39,660.00

City of Roswell

$18,000.00

Subtotal

$159,160.00

Central Savannah River Area Jefferson County

$71,539.00

McDuffie County

$31,900.00

Screven County

$10,418.00

Subtotal

$113,857.00

Coosa Valley

Bartow County

$33,500.00

Dade County

$11,750.00

Gordon County

$55,125.00

City of Rome

$66,000.00

Subtotal

$166,375.00

Georgia Mountains

Banks County

$56,869.00

76

Forsyth County

$60,562.00

Rabun County

$40,458.00

Stephens County

$37,950.00

Union County

$68,710.00

Subtotal

$264,549.00

Heart of Georgia-Altamaha

Candler County

$53,028.00

City of Dublin

$12,000.00

Emanuel County

$12,500.00

Evans County

$43,100.00

Montgomery County

$16,010.00

Tattnall County

$56,200.00

Subtotal

$192,838.00

Lower Chattahoochee

City of Columbus

$29,325.00

Subtotal

$29,325.00

McIntosh Trail

City of Griffin

$33,496.00

Upson County

$30,432.00

Subtotal

$63,928.00

Middle Flint

Crisp County

$19,767.00

City of Americus

$85,900.00

Subtotal

$105,667.00

Middle Georgia

Baldwin County

$66,530.00

Jones County

$56,430.00

Monroe County

$26,806.00

Subtotal

$149,766.00

North Georgia

City of Dalton

$25,000.00

Subtotal

$25,000.00

SWMR 1999-2000

DCA Georgia Department of Community Affairs

FY 1999 Scrap Tire Enforcement and Education Grants: Prevention Programs continued

Regional Development Center Recipient

Northeast Georgia

Barrow County

Athens-Clarke County

Greene County

Madison County

Morgan County

Newton County

Oglethorpe County

Walton County

Subtotal

South Georgia

City of Valdosta

Subtotal

Total

Amount $50,700.00 $15,375.00 $37,350.75 $51,361.00 $34,274.00 $59,444.00 $29,449.50 $20,025.00 $297,979.25 $29,762.00 $29,762.00
$1,598,206.25

77

Appendix E: Grants and Loans continued

FY 1999 Scrap Tire Grants: Cleanup Events

Regional Development Center Recipient

Grant type

Amount

Atlanta Regional Commission

City of Atlanta

Recyling Event $12,000.00

Subtotal

$12,000.00

Central Savannah River Area

City of Augusta

Pile Cleanup

$9,990.00

McDuffie County

Recyling Event $26,000.00

Warren County

Recyling Event $15,285.00

Subtotal

$51,275.00

Coastal Georgia

Bulloch County

Recyling Event $28,750.00

Liberty County

Pile Cleanup $1,218,280.50

City of Jesup

Recyling Event $30,500.00

Subtotal

$1,277,530.50

Coosa Valley

Bartow County

Recyling Event $26,027.50

Dade County

Pile Cleanup

$56,100.00

Haralson County

Pile Cleanup

$2,525.00

Subtotal

$84,652.50

Georgia Mountains

Forsyth County

Recyling Event

$9,191.00

Hart County

Recyling Event

$9,375.00

78

Subtotal

$18,566.00

Heart of Georgia-Altamaha

Appling County

Recyling Event $24,800.00

Bleckley County

Recyling Event $12,592.00

Candler County

Recyling Event $91,303.00

Dodge County

Recyling Event $12,100.00

Evans County

Recyling Event $12,500.00

Jeff Davis County Pile Cleanup

$37,260.00

Johnson County

Recyling Event $12,500.00

Laurens County

Recyling Event $24,506.50

Telfair County

Recyling Event $20,401.00

Wayne County

Pile Cleanup

$10,350.00

Wheeler County

Recyling Event $29,164.00

Wilcox County

Recyling Event

$6,250.00

Subtotal

$293,726.50

Lower Chattahoochee

Chattahoochee County Recyling Event

$6,000.00

Harris County

Recyling Event

$5,750.00

Randolph County Pile Cleanup

$7,520.00

Stewart County

Recyling Event

$6,250.00

Subtotal

$25,520.00

McIntosh Trail

Pike County

Recyling Event $11,000.00

Upson County

Recyling Event $25,000.00

Subtotal

$36,000.00

Middle Flint

Crisp County

Recyling Event $11,180.00

Dooly County

Recyling Event $13,915.00

Marion County

Recyling Event

$4,760.00

Taylor County

Recyling Event

$4,165.00

Subtotal

$34,020.00

SWMR 1999-2000

DCA Georgia Department of Community Affairs

FY 1999 Scrap Tire Grants: Cleanup Events continued

Regional Development Center Middle Georgia

Recipient Crawford County

Grant type Pile Cleanup

Amount $708,529.53

Peach County

Recyling Event $22,959.00

Pulaski County

Recyling Event $11,637.00

Sumter County

Recyling Event $28,192.00

Subtotal

$771,317.53

North Georgia

Whitfield County

Recyling Event

$2,504.64

Subtotal

$2,504.64

Northeast Georgia

Barrow County

Recyling Event

$6,300.00

Athens

Recyling Event

$5,940.00

Elbert County

Recyling Event $12,000.00

Greene County

Recyling Event $11,000.00

Jackson County

Recyling Event $11,000.00

Madison County

Recyling Event

$5,500.00

Morgan County

Recyling Event $10,600.00

Oconee County

Recyling Event

$1,100.00

Oglethorpe County Recyling Event

$9,040.00

Walton County

Recyling Event $10,600.00

Subtotal

City of Loganville

Pile Cleanup

$11,250.00

79

$94,330.00

South Georgia

Berrien County

Recyling Event $13,300.00

Berrien County

Pile Cleanup

$2,375.00

Brooks County

Recyling Event

$1,520.00

Cook County

Recyling Event

$7,600.00

Irwin County

Recyling Event

$4,750.00

Lanier County

Recyling Event

$2,850.00

Turner County

Recyling Event

$7,600.00

Subtotal

$39,995.00

Southeast Georgia

Atkinson County

Recyling Event $12,500.00

Bacon County

Recyling Event $18,750.00

Pierce County

Recyling Event $26,875.00

Subtotal

$58,125.00

Southwest Georgia

Baker County

Recyling Event

$7,600.00

Calhoun County

Recyling Event $11,811.35

Colquitt County

Recyling Event $28,500.00

Decatur County

Recyling Event

$8,950.00

Dougherty County Recyling Event $31,250.00

Early County

Recyling Event $17,800.00

Grady County

Recyling Event

$9,500.00

Miller County

Recyling Event

$5,700.00

Mitchell County

Recyling Event $12,500.00

Seminole County

Recyling Event $17,800.00

Worth County

Recyling Event $14,250.00

Subtotal

$165,661.35

Total

$2,965,224.02

$

Appendix E: Grants and Loans continued

FY 1999 GEFA Waste Reduction and Recycling Grants

Regional Development Recipient

Grant Project Description

Center

Amount

Atlanta Regional

Fulton County

$20,000 Develop backyard composting program

Commission

Subtotal

$20,000

Central Savannah River City of Thomson

$12,000 Purchase a baler to continue to recycle without leasing

Area

equipment

Subtotal

$12,000

Chattahoochee Flint

City of LaGrange

$20,000 Expand center, purchase baler and Bobcat loader

Troup County

$20,000 Develop a manned convenience center.

Subtotal

$40,000

Coastal Georgia

Chatham County

$20,000 Purchase five recyclable material collection containers.

City of Pooler

$20,000 Install recycled materials recovery station (tires, oil, occ,

newspaper and yard waste)

Subtotal

$40,000

Georgia Mountains

City of Dahlonega

$14,700 Plan a fully integrated recycling program

Hall County

$19,386 Investigate and develop a cooperative recycling network for

businesses

Subtotal

$34,086

Heart of Georgia-Altamaha City of Dudley

$20,000 Purchase a brush chipper

City of Glennville

$19,554 Develop more efficient and cost-effective yard trimmings

management system

City of Jesup

$30,000 Construct ramp and purchase 4 trailers for collection of

80

recyclable material

Laurens County

$17,475 Purchase five 30 yard open top rolloff containers to collect

cardboard

City of Screven

$19,650 Purchase chipper to use for yard trimmings, trailer for

cardboard

Toombs County

$30,000 Extend loading dock area and install bale storage area

Subtotal

$136,679

McIntosh Trail

Butts County

$20,000 Purchase a chipper and leaf machine

Upson County

$20,000 Develop a recycling drop-off center

Subtotal

$40,000

Middle Georgia

City of Eatonton

$20,000 Establish a recycling center (storage building and cardboard

baler)

Putnam County

$20,000 Assist with construction of a recycling facility

City of Roberta

$20,000 Complete interior new recycling building and develop collection

process

Subtotal

$60,000

Northeast Georgia

Athens-Clarke

$20,000 Subsidize cost of compost bins, recycling drop-off site,

County

newspaper

Newton County

$25,000 Purchase a baler for recycling center

Oconee County

$10,000 Purchase commercial style home composting bins and make

available to the public

Oglethorpe County

$15,000 Construct three recycling satellite sites

Subtotal

$70,000

South Georgia

City of Valdosta

$16,710 Enclose current recycling facility

Subtotal

$16,710

Southeast Georgia

City of Alma

$8,000 Purchase 18 trailers to be used in cardboard recycling

operation

Coffee County

$30,000 Purchase three balers and six trailers for expansion of

recycling program.

City of Nahunta

$10,000 Install fiberglass containers for cardboard and paper for

recycling program

Subtotal

$48,000

Total

$517,475

SWMR 1999-2000

DCA Georgia Department of Community Affairs

FY GEFA 1999 Solid Waste Loan Program

Regional Development Center Coosa Valley
Georgia Mountains Heart of Georgia-Altamaha Lower Chattahoochee Middle Flint Middle Georgia Total

Recipient

Loan

Project Description

Amount

Bartow County $1,000,000 Expansion to the existing SR294 Emerson Phase 3

(increase)

Subtitle D Landfill

City of Rome

$1,500,000 Construct two new cells in existing Subtitle D Landfill

Rabun County

$406,875 Monitoring for groundwater contamination in existing

ground water monitoring wells

Candler County

$120,159 Closure to landfill that has reached its permitted

capacity

Quitman County $179,553 Purchase two collection trucks and containers for a

municipal solid waste collection system

Crisp County

$1,479,414 Closure to landfill that has reached its permitted

capacity

Baldwin County

$350,000 Construct four additional recycling convenience centers

and one mini convenience center

$5,036,001

$

81

FY 99 DCA Local Development Fund grants

Regional Development Center Recipient No Grants Awarded for Solid Waste

Amount

Project Description

Appendix E: Grants and Loans continued

FY 2000 Scrap Tire Enforcement and Education Grants:

Prevention Programs

Regional Development Center Recipient

Amount

Atlanta Regional Commission City of Atlanta

$126,361.00

City of College Park

$21,730.00

City of East Point

$76,465.00

Fulton County

$35,850.00

Rockdale County

$59,260.00

City of Roswell

$95,581.00

Subtotal

$415,247.00

Central Savannah River Area Columbia County

$46,117.00

Jefferson County

$43,500.00

Richmond County (Augusta) $53,960.00

Subtotal

$143,577.00

Coastal Georgia

Bulloch County

$46,970.00

Effingham County

$25,050.00

Glynn County

$66,972.00

Subtotal

$138,992.00

Coosa Valley

Floyd County

$35,130.00

Subtotal

$35,130.00

Georgia Mountains

Banks County

$40,292.00

Forysth County

$55,804.63

Hall County

$63,500.00

Hart County

$37,200.00

Rabun County

$45,880.80

82

Stephens County

$29,720.00

Union County

$34,400.00

White County

$35,312.00

Subtotal

$342,109.43

Heart of Georgia-Altamaha

Candler County

$41,201.96

Evans County

$23,400.00

Tattnall County

$21,500.00

Treutlen County

$45,934.00

Subtotal

$132,035.96

McIntosh Trail

City of Griffin

$48,000.00

Pike County

$76,150.00

Upson County

$38,072.00

Subtotal

$162,222.00

Middle Georgia

Baldwin County

$19,790.00

Jones County

$37,551.00

Subtotal

$57,341.00

North Georgia

Whitfield County

$55,600.00

Subtotal

$55,600.00

Northeast Georgia

Barrow County

$48,000.00

Greene County

$21,444.70

Jasper County

$76,894.00

Madison County

$40,007.21

Morgan County

$36,478.40

Newton County

$69,085.00

Oglethorpe County

$31,560.00

Subtotal

$323,469.31

Southeast Georgia

City of Waycross

$28,265.00

City of Albany

$51,752.05

Decatur County

$90,000.00

Lee County

$17,330.00

Subtotal

$187,347.05

Total

$1,993,070.75

SWMR 1999-2000

DCA Georgia Department of Community Affairs

FY 2000 GEFA Grants and Loans

Regional Development Center Recipient

Grant Amount Project Description

Atlanta Regional Commission Cherokee County

$30,000 Replace aging & overworked equipment & expand drop off capabilities.

Subtotal Central Savannah River Area Lincoln County

$30,000 $35,100 Construction of a recycling center & purchase related equipment.

Thomson

$19,019 Purchase a forklift for recycling center.

Subtotal

$54,119

Coosa Valley

Bartow County

$40,000 Purchase multi-compartment recycling containers for school recycling program.

Chattooga County

$30,000 Purchase bin trailers for schools.

Floyd County

$33,000 Costs involved in accomplishing a master plan for recycling component.

Subtotal

$103,000

Heart of Georgia-Altamaha Claxton

$10,000 Purchase a vertical baler.

Dudley

$20,000 Purchase a leaf vacuum.

East Dublin

$20,000 Purchase a knuckleboom loader to pick up limbs, trees & appliances.

Emanuel County

$50,000 Establish a recycling/waste reduction program - recycling collection containers.

Hazlehurst

$25,000 Purchase & install horizontal baler.

Helena

$13,125 Purchase three recycling trailers.

Jesup

$25,000 Enhance recycling center by constructing concrete pad.

Johnson County

$20,000 Expand recycling program by constructing drop off center.

Montgomery County

$16,300 Construction of a recyclables "Unloading Station."

Tattnal County*

$90,000 Monitoring well installation

Subtotal

$289,425

McIntosh Trail Subtotal

Pike County

$20,000 Improvements to the existing recycling center (Purchase lift truck and bins).

83

$20,000

Middle Flint

Dooly County Sumter County

$34,981 Purchase a horizontal baler and skid steer loader. $30,000 Construct phase II of environmental learning center.

Subtotal

$64,981

Middle Georgia

Baldwin County

$25,000 Purchase camera equipment to reduce labor costs.

Centerville

$25,000 Construct a recycling convenience center.

Eatonton Jones County

$18,816 Purchase additional equipment & containers. $25,000 Construct a recycling convenience center.

Putnam County

$20,000 Construct a convenience/recycling center for solid waste & recyclables.

Roberta

$15,000 Oil recycling center & finish recycling center.

Wilkinson County

$20,000 Eliminate Dumpsters, construct two additional convenience center for recyclables.

Subtotal

$148,816

Northeast Georgia

Athens-Clarke Co.

$2,500 Refurbish compost demonstration site at Sandy Creek Environmental Ed Center.

Elberton

$50,000 Renovate space at the city's existing center.

Morgan County

$25,000 Construct two new recycling centers equipped with roll-on roll-off containers.

Subtotal

Walton County

$1,400 Construct used oil collection centers. $78,900

Southeast Georgia

Douglas

$13,139 Mesh netting over composting/mulching site for odor control.

Subtotal

$13,139

Southwest Georgia

Camilla

$42,620 Purchase a horizontal baler and paper shredder.

Decatur County

$45,000 Construct drop-off recycling center, purchase storage sheds for school recycling.

Subtotal

$87,620

Total

$890,000

$
*GEFA Solid Waste Loan Program

FY 00 DCA Local Development Fund grants

Regional Development Center Recipient

Amount

Coastal Georgia

Effingham County $10,000

Project Description Purchase materials for a paper recycling program

Glossary of Terms

Definitions derived from the Georgia Comprehensive Solid Waste Management Act, O.C.G.A. 12-8-20 et seq.

Closure

a procedure approved by EPD which provides for the cessation of waste receipt at a solid waste disposal site and for the securing of the site in preparation of postclosure

Commercial solid waste

all types of solid waste generated by stores, offices, restaurants, warehouses, and other non-manufacturing activities, excluding residential and industrial wastes

Composting

the controlled biological decomposition of organic matter into a stable, odor-free humus

Disposal facility

any facility or location where the final deposition of solid waste occurs and includes, but is not limited to, landfilling and solid waste thermal treatment facilities

Drop-off centers

staffed or unstaffed facilities with collection bins for household solid waste and, usually, recyclables

Generator

any person in Georgia or in any other state who creates solid waste

Green boxes

common name for large, unmanned solid waste collection bins

Industrial solid waste
84

solid waste generated by manufacturing or industrial processes or operations that is not hazardous waste regulated under the Georgia Hazardous Waste Management Act. Such waste includes, but is not limited to, waste resulting from the following manufacturing processes: electric power generation, fertilizer and agricultural chemicals, food and related products and by-products; inorganic chemicals; iron and steel products; leather and leather products; non-ferrous metal and foundry products; organic chemicals; plastics and resins; pulp and paper; rubber and miscellaneous plastic products; stone, glass, clay and concrete products; textiles; transportation equipment and water treatment. The term does not include mining waste or oil and gas waste.

Landfill

an area of land on which or an excavation in which solid waste is placed for permanent disposal and which is not a land application unit, surface impoundment, injection well or compost pile

Leachate collection system

a system at a landfill for collection of the leachate which may percolate through the waste and into the soils surrounding the landfill

Materials recovery facility

a solid waste handling facility that provides for the extraction from solid waste of recoverable materials, materials suitable for use as a fuel or soil amendment, or any combination of such materials

Municipal Solid Waste (MSW)

any solid waste derived from households, including garbage, trash, and sanitary waste in septic tanks and solid waste from single-family and multifamily residences, hotels and motels, bunkhouses, campgrounds, picnic grounds, and day use recreation areas. The term includes yard trimmings and commercial solid waste but does not include solid waste from mining, agricultural or silviculture operations, or industrial processes or operations

Municipal solid waste disposal facility

any facility or location where the final deposition of any amount of municipal solid waste occurs, whether or not mixed with or including commercial or industrial solid waste, and includes, but is not limited to, municipal solid waste landfills and municipal solid waste thermal treatment technology facilities

SWMR 1999-2000

DCA Georgia Department of Community Affairs

Municipal Solid Waste Landfill (MSWL) Operator
Permit-by-rule facility
Postclosure
Recovered materials
Recovered materials processing facility
Recycling
Solid waste handling

a disposal facility where any amount of municipal solid waste, whether or not mixed with or including commercial waste, industrial waste, non-hazardous sludges, or small quantity generator hazardous waste, is disposed of by placing an approved cover thereon

the person stationed on the site who is in charge of and has direct supervision of daily field operations of a municipal solid waste facility to ensure that the facility operates in compliance with the permit

a solid waste operation that requires notification of EPD within 30 days of commencing activities and compliance with criteria established in DNR rules for that category of operation

a procedure approved by EPD to provide for long-term financial assurance, monitoring, and maintenance of a solid waste disposal site to protect human health and the environment

those materials which have known use, reuse, or recycling potential; can be feasibly used, reused, or recycled; and have been diverted or removed from the solid waste stream for sale, use, reuse, or recycling, whether or not requiring subsequent separation and processing

a facility engaged solely in the storage, processing, and resale or reuse of recovered

materials. Such term shall not include a solid waste handling facility; provided, however,

any solid waste generated by such a facility shall be subject to all applicable laws and

85

regulations relating to such solid waste.

any process by which materials which would otherwise become solid waste are collected, separated, or processed and reused or returned to use in the form of raw materials or products

the storage, collection, transportation, treatment, utilization, processing or disposal of solid waste or any combination of such activities

Solid waste handling facility
Waste-to-energy facility
Yard trimmings

any facility, the primary purpose of which is the storage, collection, transportation, treatment, utilization, processing, or disposal, or any combination thereof, of solid waste
a solid waste handling facility that provides for the extraction and utilization of energy from municipal solid waste through a process of combustion
leaves, brush, grass clippings, shrub and tree prunings, discarded Christmas trees, nursery and greenhouse vegetative residuals, and vegetative matter resulting from landscaping, development and maintenance other then mining, agricultural and silvicultural operations

Acronyms
C&D Construction and Demolition Waste
DCA Georgia Department of Community Affairs
DNR Georgia Department of Natural Resources
EPA Federal Environmental Protection Agency
EPD Georgia Environmental Protection Division, DNR
GEFA Georgia Environmental Facilities Authority
KAB Keep America Beautiful
MRF Materials Recovery Facility
MSW Municipal Solid Waste
86
MSWL Municipal Solid Waste Landfill
P2AD Georgia Pollution Prevention Assistance Division, DNR
RDC Regional Development Center
RMPF Recycled Materials Processing Facility
SWM Solid Waste Management

For more information
Georgia Department of Community Affairs Office of Environmental Management 60 Executive Park South, NE Atlanta, Ga. 30329 Phone: 404-679-4940 Fax: 404-679-0646 www.dca.state.ga.us
Georgia Environmental Facilities Authority 100 Peachtree Street 20th Floor Atlanta, Ga. 30303 Phone: 404-656-0938 Fax: 404-656-6416 www.gefa.org
Georgia Department of Natural Resources Environmental Protection Division Land Protection Branch 4244 International Parkway, Suite 104 Atlanta, Ga. 30354 Phone: 404-362-2537 Fax: 404-362-2654 (Scrap Tire Program) Fax: 404-362-2693 (Solid Waste, Asbestos) www.dnr.state.ga.us/dnr/environ
Pollution Prevention Assistance Division 7 Martin Luther King Jr. Drive, Suite 450 Atlanta, Ga. 30334 Phone: 404-651-5120 Fax: 404-651-5130 www.p2ad.org

SWMR 1999-2000

GEORGIA DEPARTMENT OF
COMMUNITY AFFAIRS
60 Executive Park South, NE Atlanta, Georgia 30329-2231
Document Number: 0292
Printed on Recycled Paper