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BCC Minutes 10/19/1994 W (Golden Gate - Waste Management Planning) 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 Golden Gate -- Waste Management Planning Workshop ORIGINAL Golden Gate Community Center 4701 Golden Gate Parkway Golden Gate, Florida October 19, 1994 7:00 p.m. Reported by: Terri L. Schultz Deputy Official Court Reporter OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 MEMBERS PRESENT Tim Constantine, Chairman Bettye Matthews, Vice Chairman John Norris Burt Saunders Mike Volpe Neil Dorrill, County Manager OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 2O 21 22 23 MR. CONSTANTINE: I think we'll go ahead and get started. If everybody can find their way to chairs. For us, it's pretty close to on time. We'll start this evening, Mr. Dorrill, if you will lead us in the invocation and a pledge to the flag. (Invocation given by Neil Dorrill, followed by the pledge of allegiance.) MR. CONSTANTINE: Thank you all for coming out tonight. This is an issue which is very important, not only to Collier County, but specifically to the Golden Gate Community. It's last year when we dealt with the issue. We had several hundred people out; that's encouraging to see a big crowd again this year. What I want to do is just give about a 60-second background on where we've been and where we're at on this issue. You may recall last year, prior to last year, there was a plan by the county to expand the existing landfill some 300 acres to the north of where it currently sits. Last year we decided not to do that, and we've made a commitment not to do that. What we did, however, was ask -- because we were told there was only 7 to 10 years life left in that landfill if we did not use the additional 300 acres, we OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 4 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 asked our staff to go out and find a way to maximize the land that was there, and to see what the cheapest way of doing that is and also to come back to us with any alternatives. As you know, it came back beyond our wildest imagination as far as how far we could go with the use there. And now, instead of 7 to 10 years, we may have somewhere from 15 to 20 years we're told. There has been, either on the radio or in the news or phone calls or letters that I've received, I'm sure the other commissioners have received in the past couple of weeks on this issue, some feeling, apparently, that this is a "done deal", and I can assure you nothing is done at this point, which is the purpose for this workshop tonight. I think not only do we need to inform the community, but the Commission itself needs to be better informed as well before we make any final decisions, and hopefully tonight we can help move along in that process. What we have be doing to this point, our staff sent out requests for proposals. We got answers back to those requests, and we ranked -- I might say our own staff also responded to that proposal. So, we have our own staff, the people who are currently doing the job, also compared OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 in this. Of the private firms, we ranked those firms in order and Waste Management was the top ranked private firm. So, at this point we have narrowed the scope to the question of, will we privatize or will we stay with our own crew doing that sort of thing? And there are advantages and disadvantages to both. If we choose to privatize, Waste Management has been ranked as the number one firm. So, on behalf of the Board, I assure you, no final decision has been made, and that's where we're at tonight. What I'm going to ask is our own staff, Bill Lorenz, in particular, will do a brief presentation on the requested proposal itself, what it entails, what we had asked him to do, his staff to do. At that point we'll hear from Waste Management; they have a proposal or a presentation on their proposal so that everyone will have an understanding of what it is they are offering. At that point I think the Board will have questions. We'll take maybe 10 or 15 minutes of questions from the Board. After that, I want to open it up so everybody can ask any question they have, and I suspect it will be several. OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 If you have not seen -- there is a list floating around if you'd like to sign up to speak. There are also little slips floating around. I don't know where they are. If you have not already filled one out -- MR. DORRILL: We passed them out, Mr. Chairman. Mr. Oliff is at the rear of the room. If you've already filled one out, if you'd pass it to the center aisle, it will be collected. If you would like to have a slip in order to speak, just raise your hand; someone is in the rear of the room coming forward, and they will pass those out. MR. CONSTANTINE: Hopefully we can put the presentation and initial question portion of this together in the next 20 or 25 minutes, and from there on, open it up to whatever comments, questions, suggestions the public has. I might compliment the Board. A year ago we were very open. The entire Board was very open to the suggestions that the community made as far as the expansion issue, and I suspect they will be again tonight. So, any issues that you want to share with us, you're certainly welcome to that. Mr. Lorenz, you want to bring us up to date on the OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 7 RFP? MR. LORENZ: For the record -- good evening, commissioners. For the record, Bill Lorenz, Environmental Services Administrator. As the chairman has noted, we've gone through the process of receiving requests for proposals from three firms that were qualified by the Board as a result of six firms submitting requests for qualifications. The request for proposals were received on August 26th, and basically, the staff tried to structure the proposal so that we could determine what the optimization or best utilization of the site could be to try to extend the life of the site. Basically, the staff provided or requested a, what we call, a base proposal, which was dependent upon the landfill's current permitted height, which is 108 feet in elevation. We also requested the proposals -- proposers who submit to us a proposal that would take the capacity or elevation to a height that the proposer felt that they could support and provide the best price for the county. As the chairman noted, Waste Management was ranked number one in process and on the base proposal, which OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 again, is the current permitted elevation of the site. The site life was estimated as being 21 years from, basically, 1996, with a tipping fee of $14.92. Now, that compares to the county's base proposal of site life, estimating around 17.7 years at a tipping fee of $23.55. So you can -- you can see there, in terms of the comparison, that the Waste Management's tipping fee was much less than the county's proposal, and they received several more years of capacity. The alternate proposal, in other words, presented by Waste Management, which I'm sure Waste Management will present a more fuller explanation on what is at a height of 155 feet, which provides a tipping fee of $13.89 per ton. That provided a site life of 23.4 years, for an additional 2.4 years greater than the base proposal. At the Board's -- this elevation, also of 155 feet, staffing for those -- you're looking at a height of around 178 feet, and we also even provided -- put a balloon test up to see what height the landfill would be and found that at 175 feet, you couldn't see the balloon at the -- above the tree line from Route 75 and Route 951. I think that's a little bit of a key of an aspect of trying to have some sense of how high that 155 feet OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 9 is. At the Board's meeting two weeks ago, the Board provided directions for staff to begin negotiations with Waste Management for the alternative proposal at 155 feet and also directed staff to hold and conduct this workshop so that the public had an opportunity to understand what the proposal by Waste Management is, and also provide input to the Board. With that as just a very brief overview of a little bit of processing, I'll turn it over to the Chairman. MR. CONSTANTINE: Just a quick comment on -- the final thing Mr. Lorenz said was that we direct staff to negotiate with Waste Management. I think that is, perhaps, where some of the confusion came in that, "Gosh, the contract's already been awarded," and that's not the case. As we said, they were the number one ranked private firm. There are a number of things in their proposal that are negotiable. And in order for us to best judge whether privatizing or staying with our own system is best, we need to nail down a little bit of what those things are. If they're negotiable, we need to know what we're working with, instead of looking at a moving OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 10 target. So that's where negotiating is headed, I think in the Board's mind, anyway, at this point. If Waste Management wants to go ahead and do their presentation. Mr. Dudley Goodlette, I believe, is going to lead the presentation. I'm not quite sure. Thank you. MR. GOODLETTE: Thank you, Mr. Chairman. We're pleased to have the opportunity to be here. I'm Dudley Goodlette with the Law Firm of Cummings and Lockwood here in Naples, and we represent Waste Management Inc., of Florida. Our presentation, Mr. Chairman, will not exceed about 15 minutes. Just to -- by way of introduction, I would like to indicate to you that we're pleased to have the opportunity to comment and present the highlights, if you will, of our proposal. We're going to touch on the things, this evening, that we think are of particular concern regarding issues relating to noise; environmental issues relating to some of those other issues. We'll have a video that will touch on some of those as well. There are several representatives from Waste Management who are here who will be available to answer any questions you may have. The team of people who are presenting Waist Management include, Hole-Montez and OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 11 Associates, local engineering firm; Rust Environmental and Infrastructures, doing the environmental work; as well as several representatives from Waste Management. In that regard, Mr. Warren Smith, who is the manager of Business Development with the company, is going to lead the presentation and will be assisted by one or more others. Upon the conclusion of that, we'll be happy to address any of your questions, and thereafter, of course, as you indicated, Mr. Chairman, we'll be happy to respond to other inquiries as the Chair may direct us or would like us to. Warren Smith. MR. SMITH: Thank you, Dudley. And we're pleased to be here tonight to share some information with you about our proposal to the county, which gives our thoughts on managing the landfill for the county and optimizing the site. Waste Management is very active in the State of Florida. We have, by far, the most number of landfills of any company in the state, with eight landfills across the state, indicated by the stars. We also operate in 41 locations from the Keys up to the Pan Handle, so that includes Waste Management of Collier County, right here where we do the collection and OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 12 recycling collections for all the counties. We're proud of our operational experience here in Florida. The things we'll be emphasizing tonight and talking about in a little more detail as we get a little further into the presentation would be, of course, we're going to be providing the most experience and professional management of the a landfill. We've provided a -- what we believe is the best solution to optimize the site life, which gives the county the flexibility then to do other things like get alternative disposal methods, find another landfill site for the future, but this gives the option of counties some flexibility with the time that's available to explore these other alternatives. Odor control is an issue, and we'll spend a good deal of time telling you about what we do best, and that's operate landfill. The community is very important to us, and I think we can show it to you. We hope to show you today during this presentation, and our questions and answers, that we provide the most environmentally sound proposal to the county and also the most economical. Just to orient you, this is a recent picture of the landfill as it exists today, and if we can get so it's OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 13 facing north. This is 1-75 or Alligator Alley, here's the gate house to the landfill, and here's the active portion of the landfill up here, which is known as Cell 6; and then up here about a mile away is the Golden Gate Community. Our plan to optimize the landfill includes a phase approach that would fully utilize the existing available land, but not go off of the existing area that the county already was using. That phasing includes -- continues filling of Cell 6, and again, north is this way this time. Again, and then your Golden Gate Community, we're down here. So we would fill this area, complete the filling here, then phase over to Phase 2 here in a few years; and then continue the rest of the landfill, by then filling the existing hall road and this Phase 3 area. One of the effects of the phasing plan would be to have all the construction finished here closest to the Golden Gate Community; and then that would provide an effective barrier to further landfill operations for noise and just a day-to-day operation. So you're going to be screening from future operations for the vast OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 14 majority of the time that the landfill will remain there. Odor control. We've had a lot of experience with this, immediately, operational -- some operational things that can be done. We've provided a -- one of the pieces of equipment that we use is a compactor that packs the waste into the ground. And we've proposed, in our response to the county a new heavy-duty compactor that will do, we think, a better job than, perhaps, is being done now; an effective cover. Day-to-day operations are important to helping control the odor to keep the fill phase narrow, keep the landfill covered daily, and we think that's the first thing that can be done. Secondly, and we've included in our proposal, immediate -- almost immediate inclusion of an active gas extraction system, flare system, an active gas landfill gas control system. Now, landfills naturally produce gas. As the garbage decomposes, methane gas and other gases are released from that natural composition process. But with the proper system, they can be collected, transported, and handled properly so that you do not have an odor. Some other minor things, removal of the Leachath (phonetic) Pond, which is being planned now, and improve OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 15 sludge management at the landfill, we think, in total, will all act to eliminate the odor situation. Some detail -- and we have some engineers here with us. They'll speak in more detail, if you're interested, later. But the typical gas extraction well, you can see that the header pipe goes down into the garbage, actively collects the gas, and it's pulled into the gas collection pipe system, and then is directed to a flare system where, initially, the gas would be burned at the flare, destroying the odors. Later on, perhaps -- and we can do the studies on that, and as we've done in several other landfills here in Florida and many across the country, is to then actually collect that gas and either clean it up, sell it as natural gas, or turn it into electricity. We have the largest gas -- landfill gas to electricity project in our company, and perhaps in the United States, at our landfill in Pompano Beach. I think at this point, why don't we show the video? We have a little video that we showed to the Board during our presentation several months ago, and this will just help recap the phasing program and the different things that we've proposed to optimize the site. Kind of -- there's no words to this; I'll kind of OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 LJ[, _ Jl_ __1 JJ .... -- 16 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 narrate as we go along. (Video being played.) This is the landfill entry road, the 1-75 or Alligator Alley. North Golden Gate would be up here. the animation video gets closer, you come up on the existing scale house, the maintenance facility that exists, and the entry back to the active portion of the landfill. Cell 6 would be back here. So our phasing plan would be to begin here, fill the phase one or the Cell 6 area immediately, or initially, then move to, after completion, move to Phase 2. There's some landfill mining going on there, and we would continue that and complete that. Then complete Phase 2, and then finally, Phase 3 area. As Again, you can see the -- I'm trying to show here that the landfill is coming up, and then we showed you the gas extraction cell that looks dramatic, and this is what it would look like, there being many of these on the landfill. They come out of the landfill about four feet, and then this collects, actively collects the gas, so it doesn't get out of the landfill cover, and transports it to, initially, a flare facility, that would then burn the gas and take care of the odors. OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 17 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 This is a depiction of the -- this is a scale depiction of what the landfill would like look at the 1-75 at 155 feet. I think vegetation, the trees out there, I think, are even denser than that. You can see in the background that the landfill would not be visible from 1-75 or those other locations. A little further into our project, we would plan to replace the existing administration building and scale house with a new facility. And that brings us pretty much to the end of the video. We thank our friends at Rust for the good animation. Just to finish up, and then I wanted to turn it over to Linda Long, our Director of Corporate and Public Affairs, to talk about our Community Relations Programs. Mr. Lorenz indicated the comparison that the staff did, and we've indicated this on the chart for you. The base proposal was at the existing permitted height of 108 feet. Again, restating our price was $14.92 a ton compared to the county's, which is the nearest competitive price, at $23.55. The county then had an alternative of 178 feet and ours at 155 feet at 13.9 a ton. The bottom line is that OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 18 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 the cost savings for the county over the life of the project for privatizing the landfill amounts to somewhere in the neighborhood of $60 million. So it's a very sizable amount money over time, plus you have the flexibility, then, to investigate other alternatives. Another important aspect of the Waste Management proposal is that we were the only ones to propose that. The county has over $7 million in their reserve account set aside for closure of the landfill and also other capital projections. And under our proposal, and only other proposal, the county would keep that $7 million to use for whatever other purposes they might decide for the landfill or other things. Also with the Waste Management proposal, we have avoided spending, compared to the county's anticipated expenditure, about $15 million over the life of the projects by immediately delaying or canceling, if you will, the expenditure, $3 and a half million at the Immokalee landfill, replacing as a less expensive transfer station. It would transfer about 60 tons a day in about four or five years, about 60 tons a year to the Naples landfill, which amounts to about two or three truck loads a day, and then avoid another $12 or $13 OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 19 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 million in capitol expenditures into the future. Linda, I'm going to turn it over to you for a few comments on our public relations. MS. LONG: Thank you, Warren. As Warren said, I'm Linda Long; I'm the Director of Corporate Public Affairs to the company in the State of Florida. First of all I'd like to thank you for this opportunity as we ask you to let us serve you in operating the landfill near your homes. An important part of our environmental service to you would be to establish a communications and an education plan, not a fluffy RFP plan, but a real one, one that's very serious. That means a great deal to you and to us as a company. One of the most important groups in that communications plan is our immediate neighbors, the people who work and live closest to us. We would want to set up communication venues, dialogues with you, both informal and formal. For example, if we are allowed to operate the landfill for you, we'd want to open, perhaps, in a couple of weeks, a community report day where you come out, say, on a Saturday morning. I'd make them serve you coffee and muffins. But you would come out, meet the people who are in charge of the landfill, meet OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 20 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 2O 21 22 23 the person in charge, the division president, get his card, hopefully. We would want you to see how we operate, why we're doing what we're doing, and ask us questions one-on-one. Then perhaps, we'd like to set up a formal council with you, if you'd like to serve on a formal council with us. We call them neighborhood councils where we set up quarterly meetings, perhaps, monthly meetings. However often you'd like to meet, that's when wetd meet. So you can ask us what we're doing and how we're doing it on the regular basis, and we can also report to you what's happening at the landfill and what our plans are. The next thing on your communications plan would be to offer ourselves as resources to local community groups and civic groups. And also, those groups, community tourists, come see how the landfill operates. Beyond that, we want to work with the school system, speak with the school administration and to see how best our facility, your facility, could provide educational resources to the students. And then beyond that, serving the community as a whole, we'd like to take part in your community activities, or the activities, arts and craft festivals, OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 21 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 or whatever. We'd like to be an important part of your community. All the while, we want to be as accessible to the media as possible, provide answers to any of their questions, but also be proactive from time to time, offer them information. Now that I've gone from the specifics to the general, I'd like to bring you back to the front door of the landfill where our company has an open-door policy. If at any time you have a question, we want you to come to us and ask us those questions and feel free to come to that front door at any time and ask us what's going on, clarify any rumors or questions that you might have. We've been serving you for 15 years now with Waste Management of Collier where we introduce curbside recycling to you. We'd like the opportunity to serve as your land operator as well. Thank you. MR. SMITH: Thanks, Linda. Linda's a great communicator. And Commissioners and Commissioner Chairman, we're ready to communicate. So that's the end of our presentation. We'll be happy to answer questions, and we have plenty of technical staff, if we get to that level. So, thank you very much. MR. CONSTANTINE: Thank you. Why don't we take OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 22 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 about 10 or 15 minutes to ask whatever questions we may have and then open it up to the floor. off, if I might. MR. LORENZ: Warren. And I'll start it Mr. Smith, perhaps, why don't you come over here to this mike. microphone back there. questions. MR. SMITH: Mr. Volpe needs his It might be helpful to answer his Excuse me, Mr. Chairman. MR. CONSTANTINE: I've got about four or five questions to start. Probably first and foremost on people's minds, other than the length of time of this, is the odor problem. You mentioned a gas management system. What kind of track record does that have? What other communities are you using it in? I need kind of a list here so we know where we can verify it's performance in other communities before we assume that it's going to work here. MR. SMITH: I'll take an initial shot at your question, and then maybe we can turn it over to some of our technical people. I believe that we designed immediately into all of our landfills -- we designed active gas collection systems. And we also evaluate the gas generated from OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 23 those landfills for, the future, beneficial use to the community through, as I mentioned, generation of electricity or cleaning it up and selling it, where it's available, into a natural gas pipe line. So that's a requirement of all our landfills. It's a requirement of state law, it's a requirement of federal law. And other than, perhaps, C and D cites where you do not have a lot of, what we call, pertrusable (Sic) or municipal solid wastes, we have those at our landfills, and the track record is very good. MR. CONSTANTINE: I guess gas management and odor management do not necessarily have to mean the same thing. My question is more specific toward -- I realize the two are connected, but you can meet the federal requirements and still have a pretty healthy odor there. So my question is: Where, specifically, have you addressed, specifically addressed, the odor problem and successfully addressed the odor problem that may have any similarities to ours? MR. SMITH: I believe if you effectively address the gas collection control issue, you effectively address the odor issue. They go hand in hand. You have to do the one to control the other. We've OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 included in our proposal, right up front, almost immediately, to expend a quarter of a million dollars to put in this active system at the Naples landfill. And I believe that within probably six months of taking over the operation of that site, that we'll have that system in place and the odor problem would be effectively controlled. MR. CONSTANTINE: Let me try one more time. Where are you currently doing it? MR. SMITH: At all of our landfills. MR. CONSTANTINE: landfills? MR. SMITH: There's no odor at any of those Landfills produce gas, and you have to control the gas that's produced, and that will control the odor. I'm not going to say that every minute of every day, every day of every year -- MR. CONSTANTINE: What I'm fishing for here is kind of, perhaps, references, if you will. Like if someone applying for a job, gives references, and they may not have been great on their performance on a job 365 days a year, but if they are 320 days a year, I'm happy enough to hire them. MR. SMITH: We'd be happy to take you to any of the OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 25 sites, the Medley Landfill in Dade County, our landfill in Pompano, Central Landfill and Disposal Facility, the Delfure (Sic) County Landfill, Southeast Landfill, our Jackson County Landfill, Spring Hill Regional Landfill. Linda? MS. LONG: Let me just say the majority of the days there are never odors at their landfill. There may be a blip from time to time with some problem that we resolve immediately, but I recently had lunch on the top of a landfill, Central Sanitary Landfill in Pompano. We've elected officials like yourself, and they were amazed they didn't smell anything. When it's done properly every day and done well by a good team like Waste Management, you will not have an odor problem. MR. CONSTANTINE: Just as far as performance guarantees, I assume -- and I know you've written some reference to performan.ce guarantees in the RFP response, but what can we expect in the way of performance guarantees that actually have a bite to them, so that if we get two years into a contract with a private firm such as yourself, and there is a consistent odor problem, what remedies would we have to correct that? MR. SMITH: We've already discussed with staff -- OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 26 we've proposed, and this is part of our ongoing discussion, that the county will continue on the plan, and we do that at other facilities where we have municipal contracts, and we will take total responsibility and put the operational permit in our name, but the county is the beneficiary. By doing that, we take total environmental responsibility for the proper day-to-day operation of the landfill. In addition to that, if you're looking for bite, we're negotiating what I think will be a substantial performance and payment bond, and we have a pretty good bite when we provide a minimum of $10 million of environmental insurance to the county as part of the proposal. So, I think the performance guarantees are there. Beyond that, as a company, we have very stringent internal procedures; and as a matter of fact, they are even more stringent than the Florida DEP or EPA. We want to do a good job for ourselves. If we do a good job for ourselves, it's going to be a good job for Collier County. MR. CONSTANTINE: that. One more -- and I appreciate Bottom line Just being, if we choose to privatize, OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 27 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 we want to make sure -- there are a number of promises now. We have no reason to believe that they will not happen, but if they do not happen, we want to make sure we have some recourse. MR. SMITH: Absolutely. We'll negotiate that with the staff, and we believe to your satisfaction. MR. CONSTANTINE: Let me try a little different issue here. The proposal talks to tipping fees and does have very good prices. What is not included, specifically, is horticultural wastes or on construction of demolition materials, tires, that sort of thing. That makes up merely 50 percent of the waste stream when you include all that in. What do we have for guarantees as far as prices on those? Because that was not specifically referenced in the response. MR. SMITH: The RFP required that we, as a respondent, maintain the same level of service and also maintain the various subcontracts -- subcontractors that you had working at the landfill now, and that includes the horticultural biomass processing, C and D processing, the tires, the amnesty days, the Hazardous Waste Amnesty Days Program, and we will maintain those until the contracts expire. We are negotiating now a procedure to OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 28 8 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 either renew those contracts or to provide the county with our own operations that would be -- and through some procedure, to give you the assurance that you're getting the same level service at the very best price. MR. CONSTANTINE: Can we assume that price would remain in the neighborhood it is now and not have some surprise on that as well? MR. SMITH: I don't think there'll be any surprises. We can go out for -- we'll go out for quotes or bids just like the county goes out for bids. It's a little easier for us to do it as a private company than the county, but we will get what we believe, and we can assure the county and the staff the very best prices. MR. CONSTANTINE: Under that same section, your response asks that the county would, if we entered into an agreement with you, try to direct the maximum amount of material possible toward the facility you'd be operating. Does this conflict in any way? Right now we do work with Naples Recycling, Naples Culverts, other folks who, in our recycling efforts, who did a great job to support us. How does that conflict with what we're currently doing with the small operators? MR. SMITH: There's absolutely no conflict in our OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 29 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 minds. And again, we're discussing this with staff, and we will continue to work with the local recyclers, and we know you have a contract with a local recycler, and we're certainly willing and able and want to talk to those people and maintain, again, the same kind of relationships that you, the county, have had. MR. CONSTANTINE: Let me touch on two other areas, and then I'll let the other commissioners ask their questions. Safety record has come up. I've talked with a number of people in our community who are concerned. They have either seen newspaper clippings, or what have you, about Waste Management being in litigation in other parts of the country for different safety or environmental issues. Can you address that? Can you address the Waste Management track record and what assurances we have locally? MR. SMITH: Yes, I can. in the United States or North America. Some of them are in Canada. We have operations in over 700 counties across the country. As I mentioned, 41 here. We have over 70,000 employees worldwide. to time, there has been a newspaper article. We have over 134 landfills From time And all I OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 30 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 can tell you is that I've been with the company nearly 10 years. I came to Waste Management in 1985 after about 12 years of public service for both the state government and a local county government, one of your sister counties here in Florida. And all I can tell you is that my experience with this company, or I wouldn't have been here 10 years, or nearly 10 years, it's a fine company. It's a fine -- one of the finest groups of professionals that I've worked with. We try very hard not to have problems. Yes, occasionally, we've had a problem. Many of those problems have come about, as few as there are. A lot of them have come back because we made acquisitions of other companies and other landfills, and we've corrected other peoples' problems. But yes, while time to time there's a newspaper article, and we've had violations, we work very hard to correct them. It's our responsibility to make sure that our track record stays as good as we can keep it. We're in a lot of places, but we're doing a good job. MS. LONG: As Warren said, I guess I should say, as Paul Harvey would say, let me tell you the rest of the story. Generally, when we do acquire those companies along the way, we did get coverage, very early on in the OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 31 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 problems, that happen to be at certain sites and different places. right. company. like the first set of headlines do. all of the projects that we operate. What we did do was clean up the mess. We made it We've never walked away from a problem as a And that generally doesn't make the headlines We do stand behind MR. CONSTANTINE: Just one final question. The price we have been quoted is extremely cheap, and we certainly appreciate that; however, it is cheaper than many neighboring counties. Can we assure in any way that we're not going to have our neighbors hauling our trash -- hauling their trash or garbage to this landfill, which does two things, perhaps, takes the burden off those neighbors and neighboring counties and puts it on us, but also uses up our land -- or local user expense, uses up that landfill, and the costs incurred therein, in essence, are paid by our locals. MR. SMITH: I think you've asked maybe two implied questions, if I may. If you haven't, let me answer in two ways. One, the price is -- maybe you think it's cheap, but we gave you what we believe is a good price and a OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 9 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 32 fair price and it's comparable to other landfills that we operate for other municipalities under the same kind of circumstances; for example, the Southeast Landfill in Hillsborough County, if you wanted to check with those folks, or the Trail Ridge Landfill in the City of Jacksonville, which we cited permitted designs and now operate for the life of the site, very comparable prices or very similar types of projects. And in answer to the second part of the question, and that is, how can we assure you that garbage won't be flowing in outside the county? You're going to own the landfill, at least that's where we are now in the negotiations. It will be your landfill. You can control what comes into the landfill. Our responsibility will be to operate the landfill, environmentally sound, and to the best of our ability, to meet your needs and your requirements. So you can control that under the discussions that we're having now with your staff. MR. DORRILL: Mr. Chairman, I can elaborate on that in terms of what the current policy is. A number of years ago when I became the County Manager, we determined, as part of the operating practices at the Naples Landfill, that unregistered loads of trash were OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 33 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 being diverted into Collier County Landfills from the Broward County/Fort Lauderdale area. As a result of that, with our -- at that time, Director Mr. Fahey, we established a policy that you had to have a proven commercial account, and you had to preregister as a Collier County business in order to be allowed access into the county landfill. I will tell you that as part of that, from time to time, there will be contractors who are doing business in South Lee County. And as a consequence of Collier County's landfill tipping fees being almost a third of what Lee County's tipping fees are, it is difficult to monitor, in particular, Collier County commercial accounts who may be doing business, for example, in Bonita Springs, of a construction nature. We do not allow residential garbage to come from South Lee County, but we have monitored traffic on 1-75 and U.S. 41 to determine if any loads were coming from South Lee County. The nature of that is very, very limited, and limited to construction and demolition type debris, but we are aware of that possibility. We monitor that situation, but compared to about eight years ago, we now require people to register as a OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 34 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 business in advance and have a commercial account at the Collier County landfill or they are not allowed admission when they run their trucks over the computerized scale. MR. CONSTANTINE: Commissioner Matthews. MS. MATTHEWS: Yeah, I have a couple questions. Last year in the workshop that they were listening to with the citizens, they had -- one of their complaints dealt with water contamination because of the location of the aquifers under the existing landfill, and the fact that one or more of the current cells is not lined. Another one is lined with a single liner. And we had constructed test wells and so forth to be monitored more frequently. And I guess that's what I'm looking for from you, also, that there's test wells equally into the future that would be monitored, not just as often as EPA requires, but as often as we need to have them done in order to satisfy ourselves that the aquifers are adequately protected. MR. SMITH: I might split the question with staff if they care to. I can say that we provide a very aggressive and active monitoring program of our facilities that certainly meets all of the regulatory requirements and, in many cases, exceeds those OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 35 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 requirements. Very frankly, we're more interested in meeting the ground water standard and are harder on our managers than the regulatory people are. So, internally, we do a tougher job than the regulatory people do to us. But we will take over the monitoring of the existing wells, provide the installation of the additional wells that are needed through the permitting process if the landfill goes forward; and it's my understanding that the county has agreed or has existing off-site monitoring wells that they will -- that you will monitor and keep that data yourselves. And we can split samples. It's a common happening, if you will, with the regulatory agencies and local government to actually split samples so that we have a cross check, if you will, of the monitoring data. So we can assure you that that ground water monitoring will go on and will be done properly. MS. MATTHEWS: last year, and having been out to the landfill a couple times myself, is the noise generated by birds. And I know landfills and birds habitually co-exist, but is Another question that was brought up OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 36 there anything that can be done to negate the presence of birds and the noise that they make? MR. SMITH: Birds are naturally attracted to landfills because it's a food source. MS. MATTHEWS: We know. MR. SMITH: If you manage the landfill properly, you're going to minimize that problem. And that management includes keeping the fill phase as small as possible in the active fill area, making sure that there is adequate cover on the waste at the end of every day. And if the bird population -- as it tends to get when the true snow birds come down from up north in the winter time, they do migrate south. We can do other things like string the monofilament lines, control programs to keep the birds, again, away from the food source, and that's been very effective. We do not consider that we have a bird problem at any of our landfills in the state. MS. MATTHEWS: It would be economically feasible to put monofilament lines across the area of the current phase. I mean, they use that for pools and so forth to keep birds out. MR. SMITH: Yes. I'll turn over to maybe ask Ron DeBattista if he wants to address that in a little more OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 ._! 37 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 detail, but I think we have effective programs that we can put in place here that are economical. MR. DeBATTISTA: My name's Ron DeBattista. I'm the Vice President for Environmental Management, which is a fancy term for compliance and engineering in the State of Florida. Our bird program, as Warren's alluded to, has many alternatives, some of which are stringing monofilament line to control bird population. There's other programs associated with bird control as it might relate to recordings (Sic), birds placed in positions of certain functioning so that they will scare away birds that are actually looking for food. We have people that specialize in that type of area that we contract with on a regular basis. But generally, some of the things that Warren's alluded to, operationally, we generally clear up a bird problem at a site, and those are the things that we look at initially. MS. MATTHEWS: I guess my last question is more for the county manager and that is: Mr. Dorrill, I've sent a list of questions to you a couple days after the presentation we had from our presenters here, which had, I don't know, 12 or 15 items that I wanted to include in OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 38 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 the negotiation, and those items are things like employee attrition (Sic), equipment ownership, land ownership, some fairly simple things that we have talked about. And I wanted to clarify, are they being included in the negotiation and -- just to verify that. MR. DORRILL: We've had one meeting thus far with Waste Management. It was an introductory meeting. We reviewed what I would call a list of contractual points. Commissioner Matthews' list was provided directly to them as part of an expanded list, contractual points that we're interested in. That is a matter of public record, and if you're interested in seeing the major points of the agreement that we are seeking, we'd be happy to provide that through the media, through the community, or through either one of your two commissioners' offices so that you know in advance what the major contractual points are intended to be and then be able to monitor the final draft and propose contracts for those lists that you've provided. MS. MATTHEWS: Thank you. MR. CONSTANTINE: Commissioner Saunders. MR. SAUNDERS: Thank you, Chairman. Quite frankly, most of the questions have been answered, have been asked OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 39 by the other commissioners. There are three areas that I'd like to kind of focus on for just a moment. In reference to the Leachath discharge and the existing tipping fee, I presume that the cost for collecting Leachath, transporting it, treating it, disposing of it, is included in that existing tipping fee? MR. SMITH: Yes, sir, it is. MR. SAUNDERS: We had asked you -- we were told by our staff that this landfill would last for another six to ten years, and that was part of the reason that we started conducting public hearings and determining what we were going to do with this landfill. Once we determined that we weren't going to expand the existing landfill, that we were going to move the landfill out of the Golden Gate area, we asked bidders, proposers, to tell us how to maximize the life of the landfill, and that's how we got to where we are with the 21 years that you're recommending. Would it be possible, under the parameters that you've put together with your proposal, that the county at some point in time less than 20 years, less than 21 years, for example, at the expiration of 10 years or the OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 40 expiration of 12 years, would it be possible for the county to say to Waste Management, "We want to terminate the contract because we have secured another site elsewhere in the county. We've gotten that permitted. We're ready to start landfilling the new location"? Would there be an opportunity to terminate the contract at a specified period of time, say 10 years? MR. SMITH: I believe the answer to that is yes. We're in negotiations. We can talk about termination clauses that would terminate for convenience. MR. SAUNDERS: Would these necessarily be expensive actions for the county to take? MR. SMITH: The 21 years is the -- under the lower height proposal, is the optimum use of that land. It does give you the flexibility, then, that if you need more than 10 years to site a new landfill, or if other technologies come along, that you do have that flexibility. MR. SAUNDERS: I guess another way of just making sure I understand what you're saying is, if we put a 10-year termination provision in the contract, termination for convenience, would that necessitate there be something, some lump-sum payment to Waste Management OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 41 in order make that happen, or can we have that in there with the existing financial arrangements that you've talked about? MR. SMITH: I can't answer that for you here. My guess would be that there would probably be some -- have to be some buy-out provision. We have capitals that we'll be expending immediately. For example, the quarter of a million dollars that the very first few months of the gas control system, and then over $100,000 annually budgeted thereafter for gas control. Closure costs are budgeted annually, so depending on where we were at the termination, we might want to -- we'd probably have to devise some language that would provide for an equitable financial. MR. SAUNDERS: During the negotiations, you can develop some formula so that if we terminate for convenience at 10 years it means one thing. If we terminate for convenience at 12 years, it means another 13 years, so on? MR. SMITH: I'm certain we can do that. MR. SAUNDERS: I think that most of the residents in Golden Gate are terribly concerned about the prospect of a landfill being there for 21 years. And if we have a OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 42 way to move that, close that out in a shorter period of time because we have gone through an alternative technology, or we've located another landfill elsewhere, perhaps in Charlotte County or wherever we can locate a landfill without creating any problem in Collier County, I think that would give a great deal of comfort to the residents in the Golden Gate area. Thirdly, your tipping fee. I would presume that we would be able to tack on to your tipping fee an additional charge so that the county could build up reserves for acquisition of land for the movement of the landfill. So, for example, you're going to charge $14 and some odd cents for the tipping fees. If we determine that we need to charge $2 a ton or $3 a ton for purposes of creating reserves to effectuate and move the landfill, I presume that that would not create any difficulties. MR. SMITH: Absolutely. I mean, you'll be the owner of the landfill. We'll hold the permit. Our agreement for $14.92 or $13.89, depending on the proposal ultimately accepted, is an agreement, contractual agreement between us, Waste Management, and you, Collier County, and you would set rates for the OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 43 landfill, for the landfill users. So, absolutely, that's entirely your discretion. MR. SAUNDERS: And finally, in reference to the closure of the landfill and the operating of the monitoring system for 30 years once the landfill is closed, I presume that your contract will provide full compliance with all DEP regulations, and the cost of those regulations is included in the existing tipping fee? MR. SMITH: That's also correct. The RFP required, and we responded, to provide the full cost of closure and of 30 years of post-closure care. MR. SAUNDERS: Thank you. MR. CONSTANTINE: Commissioner Norris. MR. NORRIS: Thank you, Mr. Chairman. My questions have all been answered. The last two questions that Commissioner Saunders asked were two that I wanted to make sure that got answered clearly, and I think they have by now. MR. CONSTANTINE: Commissioner Volpe. MR. VOLPE: Thank you, Mr. Chairman, a couple of questions. You've indicated that you're operating currently approximately 47 other landfills in the State OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 44 of Florida? F~R. SMITH: Florida. Florida. Eight other landfills in the State of We have 41 operating divisions in the State of We have 134, or more than 134 landfills across the United States. MR. VOLPE: Of the eight landfills that you currently are operating in the State of Florida, what's the average length of time that you have been operating those landfills? MR. SMITH: MR. VOLPE: It varies widely. I'm just asking for an average whether over time it's been a -- MR. SMITH: Our landfill in Pompano's been there over 20 years. We've had the Hillsborough contract for about 10 years. We've renewed that recently under a bidding process for life of site, which is estimated to be in excess of 30 to 40 years. The Trail Ridge Landfill we started operating two years ago after we went to a lengthy three year site selection and permitting process. You know, 10 years or so. MR. VOLPE: So it's fair to say you have had some significant experience in operating landfills within the State of Florida? OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 45 MR. SMITH: MR. VOLPE: MR. SMITH: MR. VOLPE: Yes, sir. That's a fair statement to make? Yes, sir. You mentioned that there have been certain communities that, at least one in particular you mentioned, had renewed a contract recently? Yes, we've had several that have MR. SMITH: renewed, yes. MR. VOLPE: Correct me if I'm wrong. I understand that we do not currently have a gas management system at our existing landfill? Do we have a gas management system there now? We do not have a gas management system currently? MR. DORRILL: You have a series of wells that have been drilled into a number of the cells for purposes of venting. I would not, in any stretch of the imagination, say that that is a management system. MR. CONSTANTINE: Take it from those of us who woke up here this week, there's no gas management. MR. VOLPE: That's the point I wanted to make, that, obviously, I think we're all aware of it. I just wanted to underscore the fact that the problems that we have been experiencing in the past in the landfill comes OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 46 about as a direct result of the fact that there is no current gas management system in place. And the proposal, whether it's being operated in the private sector or the public sector, that's an immediate concern that we have and that you as the residents have that needs to be corrected. Just a couple of other very quick questions. We have an existing landfill. It's been there -- Mr. Lorenz, how long has the landfill been at that location? MR. LORENZ: '76. MR. VOLPE: Since 1976. So that's, Commissioner Matthews, 18 years? In your experience, where you have an existing landfill and you have taken over the operation of the landfill, have you seen property values in the area decline, or increase, or stay about the same? MR. SMITH: A properly operated landfill should not have, and usually does not have, any effect on property values. We have landfills -- the one in Pompano is in a very, very heavily populated area within just feet of neighboring businesses and condominiums and residences. And there are -- they're continuing to build new homes and businesses near the landfill. So it need not be a OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 47 depressing factor, land values adjacent to landfills. MR. VOLPE: I was really just looking for a situation where we're not citing a new landfill. an existing landfill. And I was curious as to where a landfill is properly operated, whether over a period of time it will have any type of an effect on land values, and I'm not sure whether you can answer that other than the way that you have. MR. SMITH: answer is, "No." our purpose and intent if we're awarded this contract , to do the things necessary at the Naples Landfill and the Immokalee Landfill to virtually make the landfills not noticeable by sight, by sound, and by smell to any of the residents, and to be a good neighbor and to exist in the community and provide our very vital services. MR. VOLPE: Just one other question, and this is: In your opinion what would be the advantages to this community to privatize the operation of our existing county-operated landfill? MR. SMITH: The number one advantage, I think, environmentally, is that you're going to have the most experienced company in the world add landfills, provide We have Well, I think I have. I think the Properly operated, it's "No." And it's OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 48 environmentally sound construction, permitting operation, and that's number one. Number two, we're a part of this community and we want to stay a part of the community for a long time. We want to be good corporate citizens of the community, and we will do everything we can, as Linda mentioned earlier, to get the word out, to share information, to make this community a part of what we're doing and be very active in that. And thirdly, there's a very substantial cost savings, and that is a direct result of privatization, and I think we showed that on one of our boards, up to $60 million in total cost savings over the life of the project. So those are the three main things that I see. MR. VOLPE: Just one other question that occurs to me, and that is: When the Chair was discussing some of the concerns, one of the ones that was identified was the issue of noise, and there is a certain amount of noise that emanates from the landfill operations. In your presentation, you mentioned about the establishment of some type of a berm over a period of time. Is the intent of that berm to help to mitigate the noise that may be coming from the landfill? OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 49 MR. SMITH: Well, sir, we would phase construction certainly to build the portions of the landfill that are closest to the neighboring community first so that it would provide a barrier between landfill operations and the community. But secondly, it's -- you know, hours of operation are important. It's our understanding that not the county, but some of the subcontractors out there are working until later at night after the landfill closes, and we would try working with the subcontractors to streamline their operations and make them more efficient so we all get our work done at closing timing without having to work until late in the night. MR. VOLPE: That could be hours of operation that could be another term of the agreement. I'm not sure whether that's one of the terms that's being discussed by the staff is the hours of operation. MR. LORENZ: Yes. MR. VOLPE: That's all we have. MR. CONSTANTINE: I think we have 15 or more names of people who would like to speak. We'll ask three simple rules: Because there are a number of people who would like to speak or ask questions, just as a courtesy OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 50 to the other speakers, if you can keep your comments to a maximum of five minutes. Also, we need you to come up to the microphone so that we can capture it forever on our records, because this is a public hearing. And finally, just when you begin, if you would identify yourself for the record. MR. LORENZ: Mr. Chairman, if I may. If there are questions that you would like for us to respond to, we'll follow your directions as to whether you'd like for us to do it then or whether you'd like to save those questions and we can conclude those at the end. MR. CONSTANTINE: If there are specific questions people have, either our staff -- of either our staff or Waste Management, hopefully we can answer them at that time. MR. LORENZ: As they arrive. MR. CONSTANTINE: Mr. Dorrill, you want to read? What we'll do is have the speaker who's there and he'll name one other, so that whoever is next in line can be prepared behind the podium as well. MR. DORRILL: registered speakers. Mr. Dorrill? Yes, Chairman. We actually have 29 And I was asked whether during the course of the evening if you want to take a break at some OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 51 point or whether you want to try and hear all those. or two people asked me what the intent was. MR. CONSTANTINE: We'll see how we move along. MR. DORRILL: The first speaker is going to be Max Phillips. And if I could, please, Mr. Phillips. have -- MR. CONSTANTINE: orle That's Ms. Max Phillips. MRo DORRILL: Sorry. Max Phillips. Then if I could have Mr. Jenkins, Wayne Jenkins. If you will stand by and near the podium, please. Ms. Phillips, if you'll Mr. Jenkins, if you'll stand by. I'm the other Max from Golden Gate, I guess. At the risk of sounding ignorant, I have no idea how it is that we've gone from a seven years' depletion of that landfill to 20 something years. So I guess I need some education about that. The other thing is, I was getting very excited to hear about student education and arts and crafts fairs, but then I hear about trucking waste from Immokalee over to our landfill, talks about heights of 158 feet. I don't know. Wasn't that something like 17 or 18 stories high? I'm trying to get a picture of that in my come forward. Max Phillips. MS. PHILLIPS: OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 52 mind. So we have a lot of concerns. We're aiming for quality of life here. I can't even get into this cost issue at the risk of worrying what it's going to be like day in and day out having this expanded landfill. What I'm suggesting, in addition to some of the good things that I heard from the commissioners, is perhaps these other landfills that are being operated -- we've heard about open-door policies and community groups meeting with Waste Management on a regular basis. I'm wondering, if it's really being done right now at these other places, and could we have a group of people, whether some elected and some from our community, because I think we'd feel better about that, getting in touch with the neighbors of these landfills and hearing what concerns they've had, what are ongoing, what have been resolved. And I think that at that point, we would have some idea of what we're dealing with and what kind of ongoing history Waste Management actually has in these dealings. Thank you very much. MR. DORRILL: Following Mr. Jenkins, we'll have John Delate. If I could, let me answer the lady's first OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 53 question about what happened to the seven year life. Landfill, as it exists and it is permitted, is what is known as a Florida modified highrise landfill. And there is intended to be in the current permit for the landfill, three pyramid-shaped type cells of about 40 acres and approximately 100 to 110 feet. As part of the revised requests for proposal, not to go off site, because originally the reason we began acquiring additional property to the north was to expand in the same concept, which was a series of small 40 acre insurface area type permits of 100 to 110 feet high. In order not to expand to the north, what is now being contemplated is to maximize the existing site. What will result then is a combined or consolidated L-shaped type pyramid cell that will be at least 50 percent higher or 150 feet as a minimum. That is why we've gone from seven years of estimated life at the current site to remaining on that site for a longer period. But obviously, by combining the pyramids, if you will, and increasing the design height in order to stay within the 300 acre site that is there now and not move to the north on the additional 300 acres. OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 54 MR. CONSTANTINE: Let me just add one thing. When we decided not to expand to the north, we still have an obligation, according to federal environmental laws, to have at least a seven years' inventory, if you will, of land for future landfill use. So we asked our staff to find ways -- what the alternatives were. Just because the answer has come back "There may be a way to do 21 years worth of work there," does not mean this Board has to agree to do 21 years worth of work there. So at least we know it's available to us now, but I'm not sure that's necessarily what we'll end up doing. So all we asked our staff to do was come back, tell us what was possible, and we, as a board, need to decide how to utilize that. I think Commissioner Saunders' comment earlier was a good one. We may want the opt-out policy at the end of 10 years, which I think all of us, a year ago, thought was probably the maximum amount it would be there. So that if, in the meantime, we permit another site, we can move there at that time. But that information, I compliment our staff for getting those answers back. At least we know what's available, but that doesn't mean we OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 55 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 have to use that plan. MR. DORRILL: Mr. Jenkins, then Mr. Delate, if you'd stand by, please. Mr. Jenkins. MR. JENKINS: Thank you, Commissioners, County Manager. My name is Wayne Jenkins, a resident of Golden Gate Estates. I know you've all had the pleasure of hearing me several times previously, and I won't go into a mass discussion. MR. CONSTANTINE: The beard looks good. MR. JENKINS: Thank you. That's my disguise. I hoped you wouldn't know me. You do know that I have been very adamantly opposed to the expansion of the present site, and I've got three basic concerns that I'd like to address tonight. And I guess number one, when I first started discussing and became involved in this issue and started discussing it with you, we had some commissioners, Ann Goodline and Max Hasse, who were on the Commission at that time. And right now, we're looking at a change of two more commissioners. It's concerns me, as this drags on longer and longer, and different people are looking at this, is what is the final result going to be? And I'd just like to urge that we finish this OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 56 business and let me know whether I have to board up my front door and leave my house, which you can give me some relief at the present time, and I thank you very much for that. But we do need to commit with a firm decision and move on with this process. And number two, even with the extended life of the landfill, I heard it mentioned a couple times tonight, but I'd like to urge that we can continue to actively look for another site for in the future, because 20 years from now it's going to be more difficult, if not impossible, to find another possible site. So just because we extend that landfill, and I know that you're smarter than I am, but let's keep on the ball as we look for an alternative in the future. A couple things that come to mind in the discussions I've heard tonight, we've talked about some wells for monitoring both the ground water, both within the site, and as I understand, the county maintains some wells outside the sites. And my question is: If we have county staff to maintain these, to monitor these wells off-site, why not have the county monitor all these wells? If Waste Management should receive the contract , they certainly OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 57 would have the right to monitor the wells in addition, but why not have our people monitor both sides of the line on this thing? And the last issue that concerns me, is that I like the assurances of no more odors, but let's say these odors develop and we continue to have to live with it. We need something in place, a method of a fine or a penalty if this cannot be corrected. And I'm not saying that once in a while I'm not going to get a whiff of it, but if it continues for days and they have a problem they can't correct, we need something in place to say, "Let's have something straightened out on this." My last comment to you -- and if I may, just for about 30 seconds. It's not on the landfill, but I addressed to you at the last meeting, I attended the last County Commission Meeting. In addition to the landfill, we're talking about problems with Jane Scenic Drive and the airport, and I would like to compliment Commissioner Constantine for taking the lead in the negotiations. And let me tell you, Tim, that I appreciate you not bucking under to pressure from the state agency and giving up Collier County's right-of-way on Jane Scenic OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 58 Drive. And not only Tim, I know you were all involved in it. But thank you for looking out for the interests of the residents of Collier County. Thank you very much. MR. DORRILL: Mr. Delate or Delate, and then we'll have Ms. Able. My apologies to Ms. Phillips. MR. DELATE: Thank you very much. First I would like to thank you, the Commission and Mr. Dorrill, for holding the workshop tonight. I think it's very vital to get input of this community, not only Golden Gate, Golden Gate Estates, but also the county at large. I have a great concern with this expansion, horizontally, vertically, or any which way of the landfill. While I'm not an expert nor engineer, I do know enough about landfills to know that, from personal experience, a loud additional hydraulic head can produce greater pressure on the cell liners. This could, indeed, at some point, produce a greater leakage through the liners, more than currently is allowed. I understand there will be checks on this. Nonetheless, the ground water in the area could be contaminated. And for one moment, I would like to tell the people in the audience just exactly what heavy metal OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 59 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 contamination and other toxics, which -- toxics which can leach from the landfill. As you know, many items, other than just paper products, are buried out there. Arsenic, cadmium, lead and other toxics here, Just to name a few, can leach into the ground water, migrate to all of our drinking waters. This a real concern to me. And when you do expand the landfill, you increase the chance for this to occur. The devastating effects of heavy metal contamination on drinking water is known to many of us, but for me, it's firsthand. When I went to graduate school in another state, lead accidentally did leach into the ground water, and I, along with several others, were poisoned. For three years I have been experiencing numerous neurological and immunological damage from this heavy metal. There was a two-year old girl in the area who suffered severe mental retardation, who will be effected for life. I'm not here to give a scare out. I'm just saying that when we look at tipping fees, well, they're certainly important, and we look at taxes and so forth. I'm a taxpayer too. These are vital issues, but quality OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 6 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 60 of life far exceeds all of them. I think when we look at expanding a landfill for another 22 years when our own county staff said that seven to ten years would be more appropriate, I think we have to look at this one very, very clearly and look through it before we make that decision. I have no qualms whatsoever with Waste Management's presentation. They obviously know their business very well. I think it's up to the county though, not Waste Management, to set a seven-year limit on when this landfill should be here, how long, and at that point in time we should move it. To me, who operates it for those seven years is not as critical as the fact that we're going to determine, as a county commission, that indeed, it should be moved. And just in closing, again, I thank you for allowing us to give our input, and I encourage you to please think this through. The decision does not have to be made in a week, nor in a month. It's too vital a decision, and I hope that it will be linked with the other issue, such as alternatives, including the recycling. I think the two are inseparable and to determine each one separately is a great mistake. OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 61 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 Thank you very much. MR. DORRILL: be Mr. Perkins. MS. ABLE: Yes. Ms. Able, and then following her will My name is Diane Able. First of all, I would like to also commend you, Commissioners. Thank you for having this meeting once again on this workshop. Naples' landfill problem, and it is Naples' problem. Golden Gate is Naples. And I feel that Naples is being polluted. I feel pollution is a very big problem. We all wonder about the smell. The smell has been brought up several times, and Waste Management has talked about how they will solve the problem; however, I wonder how effective that's going to be. We're very concerned. We're in a very, very growing area and that's no kidding. You come off 1-75 and you can smell the landfill. You come to the Welcome Center and you can smell the landfill. You go to the toll booth, you go to Golden Gate City. It's not just in Golden Gate Estates. It's a terrible smell. In the summer when it rains, you can't even stand it out there. I live very close to it. I live on 29th OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 62 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 Avenue, and it is very offensive. I think, perhaps, a landfill should not have been allowed to be there in the beginning, but now that it is, I think something has to be done. And the commissioners have the power not to put a Band-Aid on that issue. They have the foresight to avoid bigger and future problems. And we know that time is of essence. And so I think a lot of us here feel the expansion is still no longer appropriate. As it seems the delays make your task a lot more difficult. I have two questions. Why are we going into negotiations on a contract to privatize the landfill with an optimizing criteria before we have really all the alternatives in on the drawing board and to see how they may compare and work with other landfill options? One question I would very much like to see answered. We do want what's best for a sensitive environment and community, not a decision based solely on the bottom line, not because we're under the gun. And I also want to know if there is an incinerator in the future. MR. CONSTANTINE: No. At the very beginning of this process we said we were open to all technologies OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 63 except an incinerator. We ruled that out from the very beginning. As far as the alternative technologies, Mr. Dorrill, you can help me, I think October 28th? MR. DORRILL: Proposals for alternative technologies are due to the county October 28th and will be evaluated. And the current site has specifically left a 10-acre tract for a -- some type of processing facility, be it compost or material processing facility, or some type of anaerobic digestor. We don't have any idea what type of alternative technology proposals. I think it is inevitable, though, that you're going to have some remaining fraction of municipal garbage that will need to be processed and buried as part of that. There are very few facilities in the country that have alternative processes that can handle the 700-tons per day municipal household garbage that we're currently receiving. Those are due, though, in two weeks. MS. ABLE: Are there ever explosions at landfills because of fumes and gases? have been. MR. DORRILL: I think I've read that there My information is that, honestly, there are incidences where there are explosions and fires OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL ...... ."'~'l,,"'"~ .... -" - ~ -- 33962 64 L7 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 attributed to that. We have a series of monitoring wells for gas collection and density that are monitored and reported as part of our DEP operating permits, and there are separate wells that collect and measure the specific density and gravity of the gas concentrations. MS. ABLE: For venting purposes? Are they in use now at the landfills? MR. DORRILL: There are both vents and then a series of wet wells that are part of the Leachath collection system that give us the ability to measure concentrations of gas at low lying levels. The vents are near and up the side slopes that are intended to vent off the gas. But we measure both subterranean gas levels within the Leachath collection system. I doubt that we are measuring ambient air type levels associated with the vents, but staff has said that we take hand-held measurements there as well. MS. ABLE: I thank you. And in conclusion, we voted for you commissioners, at least most of us did, or you wouldn't be here. We really voted for you to look out for our best interests, and please don't let us down. MR. DORRILL: Mr. Perkins, and then we'll have, I believe, it's Mr. Lievense, L-I-E-V-E-N-S-E, if you OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 65 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 would, please, stand by. MR. CONSTANTINE: A1, keep it clean. MR. PERKINS: Ladies and gentlemen, my name's A1 Perkins, and obviously I'm no stranger to the Board, nor am I a stranger to Golden Gate. I am going to open with a couple of questions directed at Waste Management. On the 30 year post-closure, would the gas that it generates out there still be present? Now, the reason why I ask that, ladies and gentlemen, is on account of, at the last meeting, a gentleman said that he would buy all of the gas to take and turn right around and use it to generate energy in a different form. He also said at that time that he would take and have and try to work out a way to pipe some of that gas down to the water treatment plant and burn off the smell down there that you're paying $180,000 for chemicals. How about that? By the way, last year if you weren't at the meeting, they paid $268,000 on a survey to find out whether the dump should be there or not be there, okay. You know what you got for your money? Bingo. OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 66 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 The last time it said seven to ten years; different contractors said 27 years. Now, I'm an advocate of spending money, but in the right places. Now, we have a problem and it's not going to go away. And one of the things that I wished that this was being televised tonight, because the people sitting home watching "doofus" and what's his name and the rest of them, should be paying attention because they're the first ones to bitch about paying the money, okay? Waste recovery. We need to put in an area, a complete waste recovery system that takes and re-uses everything out of that dump. And what can't be used, such as composting, can be turned right around and be put back into the dirt as composts to put things in. There is nothing out there. I don't know how you people do it, but I think the good Lord provides us the stuff to make a mess and the ability to unmake the mess. Everything's right there in front of you, okay. Let me go through the stupid list I got here. Recycling, okay, recycling. We also have a problem with sewage. Sewage can be converted to diesel fuel, diesel fuel to electricity, electricity to run this place right here and the new one next door, run the county OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 67 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 commission, run the daggon plant out there. Let's put this on a paying basis. We have the ability to do it, but you're going to have to put the pressure on these people right here to get it done. Now, for two now, or at least a year, I've been yapping at these -- our commissioners here to find the information. I charged one of them to go to Sidney if they have to and find out. That happens to be Betty Matthews over here. Sidney's going to put in state of the art recycling so that they don't have any problem with anybody in the world, okay. If we can spend $268,000 on a survey, I'm sure we can find the money out of the tax money from the Belle Meade area, which is about $3 million, to send you over there with the people to get the information to come back so that we can put this thing on a paying basis. By the way, nobody said it. Your dump out there is making money. It's making money, because that $7 million is to take and go looking for property to buy. These gentleman here, all lined up over here, they're not here because they are nice people and they want to do you a favor, they're here for bucks. OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 68 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 Now, every one of those people over there has not -- this is not the first time they've heard me, because I go head to head with them right on down the line. Now, let's go to Pompano Beach. You ever been to Pompano Beach? My home -- I have a home in Pompano Beach. My home was there before the dump was there. Then they start the dump, then that was no good, then they went to an incinerator; that was no good. Now the Pompano Beach -- at the corner of Sample Road and -- well, the turnpike's on one side, but it's a university or -- no, Powerline Road. Powerline and Sample Road, right? Right now they're taking garbage and making electricity out of it. The electricity runs snow machines and puts the snow on it so you can ski down because that's how high that stinking thing is. Do you know how big a dump truck is or the garbage trucks? They look about this big. And the reason why there's no birds out there and no smell, the altitude's too high. MR. CONSTANTINE: MR. PERKINS: Okay. A1, be good. I'm on a roll, Tim. Let's get serious now. I got the crowd. Nobody's talked -- OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 69 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 everybody's talked about odor and noise, okay. Nobody said a thing about bacteria to counteract the smell. The technology is available right now, was available last year to kill the smell through the use of bacteria. It's there. I charged it to someone down the line. I even told Tim, "Go up to Disney World. Find out how it's done, because they're making bucks with our trash and garbage." You drink a soda, you throw the can away, the trash away, they're making good use of it. Now, we can fall into one or two categories. We can take and tramp behind our staff here and just do what was supposed to be done and sound like a bunch of donkeys, or we can take it by the back end and get nasty about this thing and demand, demand to put this thing on a paying basis and a safe basis. Noise, right? Over in Pompano Beach, you can't hear; it's too loud. Over here, we have a problem,, we tell us how to make diesel fuel out of sewage. have access. Look at how they have to get in off of 951. That's it. Bad news. Now, I'm going to take and go for Mr. John Norris now. He always wants to hear from me at least once. MR. DORRILL: Before you end, though, I want you to I'm still OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 70 stuck on that one. MR. PERKINS: The information is readily available through the Energy Department for the United States government in Washington, DC. Now, if you want me to do your job. MR. DORRILL: No, sir, I've got 20 million gallons of sewage that I'm thinking of. MR. CONSTANTINE: We'll schedule a meeting between you two. If you'd finish up your comments. MR. PERKINS: Sewage is a very important thing if you use it correctly. If you don't, believe me, the Europeans and the Asians have been using it for years, but only in a very primitive way. It's there. Let me get to John here, because he wants to hear from me, okay. I represent the Belle Meade groups, 3,000 people strong. Sabal Palm people, the Southern Estates people, the people who are down along Jane Scenic Drive. These people all show up in the meetings. Now, I have told the commissioners that the Belle Meade people want, not a dump and not a landfill, we want a complete waste recovery unit put out at the intersections of Sabal Palm Road and Miller Boulevard. Sabal Palm, all of the traffic from intown goes out OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 71 that road to take and service it. All the traffic from Marco Island comes up Miller Boulevard, and now all the stuff from Immokalee can come down Everglades. And not only that, it's out in the middle of nowhere. We have a clean start. There is sufficient amount of room. There is willing sellers out there for the right price. Now, you'll hear $8,000 from the -- $800 by the environmentalist. MR. CONSTANTINE: A1, we have 22 more speakers, so I do need to get you to sum it up. MR. PERKINS: This is important, too. Try $18,000 in acres, that's where it's really at. The point is, we have the ability to do it now. If you don't do it now, 20 years from now the same group of people, only except it's going to be your kids and grandchildren, is going to be sitting in here doing the same thing as we're doing tonight. So you better take and talk to your neighbors. We need to get this thing televisedo We need to get everybody in this community, that includes Marco Island, Pelican Bay, Port Royal, Immokalee, because they're all involved. They're all going to pay for this thing. So we need to take up and get up off your duffs. OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 72 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 The media. I like to pick on the media. Start telling the truth and tell all of it. Thank you. MR. DORRILL: Mr. Lievense, and then following him, I have Mr. Gene Cox. Mr. or Ms. Cox. Mr. Lievense, go ahead. MR. LIEVENSE: My name is Karl Lievense. I've just -- we've been accumulating some data. That's just information that's off the shelf that's available for people to see. One item I left with Mr. Constantine. In 1988, I believe, the county did a study on alternative sites. There were 14 approved; 8 still look good out of that group. There are probably two or three that could be reviewed, to take care of Mr. Jenkins' comments and Al's comments. The county has paid for the study. It's on the shelf down at Solid Waste. It's available to at least review it, address it, because of the comments you have. Also, I've just dropped off with each of the commissioners some other general information. This was a final report on Waste Management that was put together. I'll read, basically, In 1990, Waste Management filed a OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 73 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 permit, to use the permit, seeking privately owned and operational landfill site to be located in -- near San Diego. They were asked on November 22nd, the Board passed a resolution asking the District Attorney to conduct an investigation. Basically, it was asked to check into allegations of price-fixing and other anti-trust violations, allegations of criminal conduct, allegations of environmental contamination and illegal dumping of toxic and hazardous material, allegations of inadequate liability insurance held by Waste Management on their municipal and hazardous wastes operations, allegations of organized crime connections. I do not have time to read this whole thing. Each one of you have this before you, yellow lined. It hits a lot of the different areas of environmental problems. Greenpeace as estimated since 1980, the company has paid over $43 million in out-of-court settlements violations of environmet environmental problem. 632. There's a lot of OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COL] 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 74 information to help make decisions. I'm not saying a lot of these, since they've been passed, they've been possibly corrected. But the general direction is for your own information to help you make better decisions for Collier County, for the voters, our present and future people. There's interesting areas with the significant environmental cases going through the different states. Several of the states, Wisconsin, the largest fine ever addressed was to Waste Management. It gets into a lot of the chemical waste problems. As you go through here, again; I do not have time for every one. This is public knowledge. It was a report put together talking about all the different connections with -- not with necessarily the company, but all the people who are associated with the company. In conclusion, Waste Management methods of doing business, the history of civil and criminal violations, established a predictable pattern, which has been fairly consistent over a significant number of years. "The history of the company presents a combination of environmental and anti-trust violations and pubic corruption cases which OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 75 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 must be viewed with considerable concern. Waste Management has been capable of absorbing enormous fines and other sanctions levied against it while still maintaining a high earnings ratio. We do not know whether these sanctions had any punitive effect on the company, or have merely been considered as additional operating expenses. We have reviewed recent practices and problems and our concerns have not diminished. The company's recent business practices and violations do not appear to be different than the past. We have been unable to determine whether Waste Management's history, as reflected by this report, has been due to a failure of property management, or has been the result in deliberate corporate policy. Whatever the case, the company's history requires extreme caution by the San Diego County Board of Supervisors or any other governmental entity contemplating any contractual or business relation with Waste Management." OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 76 20 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 Our examination of the activities of Waste Management causes us additional concern, and so on. I'm just saying, it's information. It's data based compliance, due diligence, to make correct decisions for the next 50 years. MR. VOLPE: I appreciate that information. Could I ask who you represent? MR. LIEVENSE: I'm a concerned citizen, and I'm also with a firm called Bare Have (phonetic) out of Atlanta, Georgia, and we do landfill reclamation, so, yes I'm concerned. MR. VOLPE: Are you a resident of Collier County. MR. LIEVENSE: I am. I'm a voting resident of Collier County for the last 18 years. One comment. Collier County has an internationally accepted and recognized award winning landfill. There are people coming here from China, Mexico, all over the world because you've done things here. They've gotten awards through Harvard called the Ford Foundation. You're doing wonderful things here that are being looked at by the rest of the world as a test. And you've learned. This is an incubator. It's some great stuff. This stuff is happening and moving, and the rest of OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 77 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 the world is looking at you because you're doing it right. And you know, I'm just saying, this is all food for thought. Thank you for keeping this open so at least we all have a chance to share thoughts and ideas for the best long-term value of the county. Thank you. MR. DORRILL: Following Mr. Cox, we'll have Mr. Fahey. MR. CONSTANTINE: Just one comment before Mr. Cox, because Mr. Jenkins had mentioned earlier, and it was mentioned then, of the alternative sites we have in our report. So whether it's 10 years from now or 12 years from now or 7 years from now, whenever we decide to go elsewhere, one of things I think the Board discussed informally last time we talked about this, and I will suggest when the time comes, is we have -- whether we privatize or we do not privatize, we have $7 million set aside right now for future needs of our landfill. And I'm going to suggest that we use that money now to determine a location, buy it, and start the prepping, so we don't end up with the next Commission changing their mind again and so on. We can put it in concrete now. Mr. Cox. OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 78 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 MR. COX: My name is Gene Cox, a taxpayer of Naples, Collier County. Most of my questions have been answered by previous speakers; however, I have one, and I don't think it's been addressed yet. I'm concerned about the inspection of the liners in the cells over at the peer, and I didn't hear anything addressed on that. The other thing that concerns me is that we have all this money out there in the landfill, we have all these unused cells and everything, and it must amount to millions of dollars. And if we give this landfill to a proposed or prospective bidder, we're going to give him millions of dollars, and the taxpayers have already paid for it. No wonder he can afford to have such a low tipping fee. The other thing that I'm concerned with, since I'm a taxpayer, is the fact that we have this landfill. Why don't we use it properly? Why doesn't the county put these gas monitoring devices in there, and why don't we recycle it. We can use this landfill indefinitely without orders (Sic). Thank you. MR. DORRILL: Following Mr. Fahey will be Mr. Turner, Bernard Turner. OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 79 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 MR. FAHEY: Thank you, Commissioners. My name is Bob Fahey. And as a newly retired citizen of Collier County, I would like to raise a couple of points. There has been some discussion this evening about what kind of resources you must maintain. The county must maintain on a continuous basis -- and this is directly by the state -- a 10-year resource for the solid waste management capability. In addition, there must be two years of advance-lined cell. So if you have made the decision or if you're contemplating a change or a different location, I would urge you to do that as soon as you can, simply because it takes a considerable time to prepare a site. And we can never currently disregard the potential of a hurricane here. If you look at the history of what happened at Homestead and up the coast and the year prior to that, their existing landfill capacity was immediately wiped out. So if you can define and acquire the next site and we have the money to do that, there would be a great advantage at that point to begin using that as soon as you can. And if there is surplus excess capacity at the present site, then I would suggest you preserve that in OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 80 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 the event we do have a hurricane. Thank you. MR. DORRILL: Following Mr. Turner we'll have Mr. McLean, Gerald McLean. MR. FAHEY: My name is Bernard Turner. I'd like to thank the Commission and staff for enabling me to be here this evening. Let me briefly go back in time so that I can explain why I'm here tonight. A number of months ago I attended a session that the county held at which one of the concerned citizens got up and said, "Well, I hope the Commission will not exclude new people, new interests, innovation, and what have you, with regard to exposure to the landfill problem solution." I'm not familiar with that technical kind of an arena, but I was very much concerned. I don't live in the area where the landfill is, but I was really concerned about the problems that became evident. And I got in touch with a couple of experts here, and we formed a corporation called Environmental Reclamation Services, and we were one of the six who filed the proposals, and were one of the three, I guess, who were excluded from it. And I don't have any, you know, complaints about that. We tried, what have you. OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 81 And the reason I'm stating this is because that's where my awareness was developed, and I'd like to make just a few comments, and these would apply to, generally to Waste Management, but to any corporation that the Commission is going to consider in terms of contractual negotiations. It seems to me that the Commission and all of us are faced with a number of dilemmas. And you have the quandary of optimizing the landfill, or you could swiftly close it. This is a quandary. You can keep it going for 20 years, or you can close in five or six or seven or ten years. And there are techniques that are available that can enable you to endlessly have an existing landfill without closure, almost an unlimited amount of time. I think the point that was made earlier is really a worry of significant consideration, and that is the importance of the human element here as distinct from economics. Another point I would like to make -- and I reviewed a number of these submissions -- is the danger of vagueness that occurs in the actual writing of the proposal. What happens is that in the normal progress of the OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 82 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 procedures, there is a time element that you come up, for example, to the point and time when you want to sit down and negotiate, and you find yourself with a document that may have 40 or 50 paragraphs that are truly vague, generally. And you've got a time crunch. And the staff and the Commission are then put under that kind of a form of pressure. And I would like you to just listen to that bit, because I think it's a reality, and you'll have to contend with that. In general, what I'm asking is: Are we truly getting the specifics of the objectives that were outlined to us months ago, or are we going to deal with generalities, which in time will haunt us, or with omissions of that in the future will only escalate the cost that we're all expected to pay? I thank you very much for listening to me. MR. DORRILL: Mr. Maclean and then Mrs. Stamatinos. Mr. McLean, go ahead. MR. MCLEAN: My name is Gerald McLean. Landfills are something that, I guess, nobody wants in their backyard. live with. is in our recycling. I guess it's something that we all have to But I think where we're missing a lot of it Recycling is something that we all OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 83 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 have to do. I looked up and down the streets of Golden Gate today about -- it has to be less than 10 percent of the people that are recycling, and I think part of this is because they're not being educated as far as recycling. We can extend that landfill for many years by recycling. We've got to hit 30 percent, according to the state, next year. We can do 50 percent, and it will work, because I've made it work. I've taken a resort down in the Keys that was paying $18,00 a year -- a month, trash fee. Their bill was cut to $8,000 a month. We can do it right here in this community, too, but we've got to recycle. Cardboard. There is -- I don't know of any place to take cardboard other than that one there in Naples. Cardboard is like in your biggest thing that goes into that dump, and none of the commercial places have any place to put it. We've got to get more of those places, and we've got to get more education to those people. We've got to get more of 'these containers to these people, and we've got to get Waste Management to pick it up. Today all the boxes in Golden Gate were not picked OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 2 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 84 up by Waste Management. People are creatures of habit. If they can't be picked up every day, then they're in for changes. You're going to stop recycling, and recycling has to happen, folks. We've got to leave something behind for these kids that are coming behind us. And that's where it counts, that we've got to start turning and make it absolutely work. Thank you, folks; thank you, Commissioners. MR. DORRILL: Following Ms. Stamatinos we'll have Mr. Donald Dunmire, if you would, please. UNIDENTIFIED SPEAKER: He~s gone home. MR. DORRILL: Then we'll have Mr. Wilt. Mr. Wilt, if you'll come forward. Ms. Stamatinos, go ahead, please. MS. STAMATINOS: My name is Mary Stamatinos at 2859 50th Terrace Southwest in Golden Gate. At the risk of repeating some things that have been said, a landfill is a landfill is a landfill. I'm against privatizing and also keeping the operation in it's present location. Golden Gate and Golden Gate Estates are, in particular, are part of a growing community, and the present site to not a proper site for this type of place. And it is much -- this area is not in the boondocks OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 85 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 anymore. I have been here five years, and it is much more populated now than it was then, and the population is growing every day. I do not think this is in the interest or benefit to the residents of Collier County at its present location. This is a closed-in area, and it is the gateway to Naples on 1-75 from the east coast. We do not need to have a landfill in our front door. Do you keep the trash at your front door? As mentioned by other speakers, I do not appreciate the idea of perpetuating the landfill operation, and in addition to that, bringing the garbage of Immokalee here. And referring again to the closeness of the location to populated areas, this landfill, by its presence, is hampering the potential and development of land around it and lowering the boundaries. And in closing, Mr. Volpe, and with all due respect, you're asking the representative of Waste Management to tell you about the land values, was like -- that was not being very objective. Thank you. MR. DORRILL: you will stand by. Following Mr. Wilt, Mr. Keller, if Mr. Wilt. OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 86 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 MR. WILT: Good evening, Commissioners. My name is Glenn Wilt; I'm a resident of Golden Gate. I've prepared a few comments for this evening. In September, 1993, as you mentioned before, the Board of Commissioners rang the bell for closures in 7 to 10 years, this landfill. They determined that time the horizontal expansion of the landfill at the county road 951, 1-75, was no longer appropriate due to residential development in the area. That's what my memory serves me from last year. Residential development has not stopped, but has, in fact, increased in the area. The southwestern part of Florida is one of the fastest growing areas in the country. Now, you're considering a move to privatize and expand vertically? One of the major objections of the present landfill location is continuous foul odors spreading across the area. To that regard, within the past two months, citizens of Golden Gate have formed a resident homeowners committee to clean up and beautify the Gate. Before I proceed, let me interject here. up is progressing very nicely. The clean We're making a lot of OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 87 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 progress. One major factor affecting our success is a complete and energetic support of the Code Enforcement Office of Collier County. In particular, Chuck Tomasino, our sole local Code Enforcement, he hates all of them by now, I think. Now back to the odor. I do not believe the residents should be forced to live with foul and offensive odor. That is also an area that needs to be cleaned up in Golden Gate. I have read the Executive Summary prepared by staff that points out privatizing the landfill will make the contractor responsible for odor control. The summary states that the private contractor can control the odor and do all these things at a very low, low rate. In fact, it's almost too good to be true. If it's so easy to do, why hasn't the county done it? However, it is my understanding that there is $800,000 targeted in the 1994/95 budget for a gas management system at the landfill. If that's correct, at least that's a start. The next item of concern to me is the increased elevation for a waste barrier. The staff's proposal is to raise the allowable elevation from the current OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 88 permitted 108.5 feet to 155 feet. I'll be the first to admit I'm not a surveyor, but I question a balloon at 175 feet cannot be seen from 1-75. Thus, if the increased elevation is permitted, whether the landfill's privatized or not, there will rise on the southeast corner of Golden Gate, Mount Christmore (phonetic). Privatization versus county operation. The summary points out that privatization and loss of land ownership will relieve the county of any environmental impact. Any contracting firm is going to ensure the county it is environmentally responsible for all existing conditions at the time of the contract . This could be a real nightmare if you put an additional 50 feet -- 50 plus feet of waste on top of what is there now. The summary does point out that environmental impact insurance is available. I would think that this would be a priority action for the county to investigate whether the landfill is privatized or not. Completion of the contract and privatizing the landfill would allow the demobilization for the current personnel equipment. This is first blood to show us a significant savings; however, what happens at the end of OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL .__ _l~ww' ................. .""'~"'."'."j-~" .... '~ ....... 33962 89 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 five years or before when the contractor wants out for cause, or he is losing money and wants to double the tipping rates? The county then must bite the bullet and invest a tremendous amount of capitol funds to re-establish personnel equipment and expertise or give way to commercial blackmail. Privatization will cause a loss of flexibility and control by county managers and our elected representatives. A recent action by a local citizen group resulted in a single lawyer facing the commercial contractor and his bevy of lawyers in the Commissioner's Hearing Room. Thus, privatization and a loss of flexibility is quite well known to the summary in Golden Gate. Physical impact. The summary points out that through privatization and using the Waste Management figures, the current annual assessment per household of $102.59, could be reduced to approximately $91.74 per year per household. Cheaper is not always better. Personally, I am not prepared to continue to live in an odorous atmosphere for a savings to me of 93 cents a month. I don't think anyone else in Golden Gate is OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 90 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 either. In summary, a year ago you rang the bell for closure when you decided the prudent thing to do was start the action of locating, securing and permitting another site. With a $7-million reserve fund available, it is still the prudent thing to do today. Locate, secure and obtain permits for a new site. You cannot unring the bell. I thank you for allowing me to address. MR. CONSTANTINE: Mr. Keller, before you start, we are going the take a brief break so we can change paper so we can continue to maintain a record. We'll just take a three or four minute break. (Brief recess was held.) MR. CONSTANTINE: Let's go ahead and start in again. I understand we still have 11. MR. DORRILL: Halfway, 15. MR. CONSTANTINE: We still have 15 more speakers. Mr. Keller, if you would like to go ahead. MR. DORRILL: Following Mr. Keller we'll have Mr. Pickworth. Mr. Pickworth, if you'd be prepared. Mr. Keller, go head. MR. KELLER: Okay, as long as it's quiet. I'm OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 91 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 George Keller, Civic Leader. I've been in the county 15 years representing the Civic Association; Marco Island right up to Bonita Shores, and I do it free. I'm very much involved in what happens in Collier County. I'm not going to stand here and say we shouldn't do this or we don't this or do that, but I will say this: That we've got plenty of time to sort of give this thing plenty of analysis and decide what we want to do, because we've got $7 million and we should be starting to look for someplace to put this dump, because it's going to have to be put someplace else sooner or later. So let's make that one of our priorities. Secondly, I understand we're going to have some input on other ways of handling wastes, and there are plenty of other ways, and that's going to come in near the end of October, so we're not in a big rush to go and sign any contracts right now. Thirdly, I would like to go and give you some of my experiences on these contracts. I was on the committee that -- with the resource recoveries some years ago. And you know, the people that presented the proposal did a tremendous job. We were going to be have waste there for $9 a ton OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 92 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 originally. It went up to $14 a ton. We spent half a million dollars, almost, for a contract , and after about six months, the County Commissioners decided they were not sure what was going to happen, so they appointed a committee of about 10 people, lawyers, accountants, bankers, to go and review the contract and review the process. And after about 12 sessions, we come up with the suggestion that we throw the whole thing out, and that's what they did. So anything that happens here tonight or what happens sometime in the next couple of months, shouldn't be taken lightly, and we shouldn't be jumping at anything, basically speaking. So that is my recommendation, and I think that the county should definitely decide to set up a committee, after they do all of the groundwork and get all of the facts together so we know what we're talking about, then set up a committee to review this thing and recommend to the county whether we should go ahead with this contract or what method we should use to handle our waste problems in the future. Thank you. MR. DORRILL: Mr. Pickworth and then Ms. Dunmire. OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 93 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 UNIDENTIFIED SPEAKER: Was that Ms. Dunmire? MR. DORRILL: I believe so, Viola? UNIDENTIFIED SPEAKER: Yes. She had to leave. MR. DORRILL: Thank you. Then we'll have Mr. Jenkins. Mr. Pickworth. MR. PICKWORTH: Mr. Chairman, Commissioners, I'm Don Pickworth. I'm a resident of Naples. I represent Addington Environmental, which was one of the proposers on the RFP. We were not the number one ranked proposers, and the county chose to go with Waste Management, and we certainly appreciate the opportunity to at least address We appreciate the fairness in doing you here tonight. that. I'm not here to talk about our proposal. Addington responded to the RFP, which was to maximize the landfill capacity, and in fact, found a way to get quite a bit more life out of the landfill than what you and the other proposers had, and obviously, that was not exactly the direction that many people favor. We came up with even more years. And the county's action is to, at least preliminary, negotiate with the company that, obviously, it's not the -- doesn't optimize the landfill capacity. OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 94 We don't even think it's the most efficient long term solution for handling the solid waste needs. We don't think the county necessarily ought to continue in this site for, I think it was 24.3 years. That's the number that was in the Executive Summary on that one proposal. And because the current site, for a number of reasons, is probably inadequate, it's certainly closer to growing in a residential area. It's located in a relatively low-lying area, causing increased construction environmental permitting, monitoring costs, has no on-site cover. There's a lot of cost to acquire covering material. We believe that the landfill should be operated for 10 years and then closed, and then during that period, the county ought to find an alternative site. And we would urge you to postpone negotiations further until you've examined this proposal. And having examined that, if the determination is to go with the shorter life, to provide opportunities to other qualified vendors in the field to also make you proposals on the cost implications of that. We think a proposal like that would have a number OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 95 of advantages. Certainly the county has been mentioned by a number of people here tonight as already having a fund of money to use for acquisition and permitting of the new site. Addington stands ready to make you a proposal if that is -- if your desire is to go with a shorter site life, and we think it will be a very substantially reduced tipping fee. Thank you. MR. DORRILL: Mr. Jenkins, and then Ms. Delate. MR. JENKINS: Good evening, Commissioners, Mr. Dorrill. Just a couple things that haven't been covered yet. As you were talking before about having the height from 108 to 155 feet, if do you that and you make one big flat mountain out of it, any time the equipment is up top, there's nothing to break -- there is no barrier. Whenever you get up so high, there is no barrier for the noise, so that even if you do start from one side and come up, every time the equipment gets up top, you're going to be hearing it again. You know, that's just -- it's not going to be a barrier and the sound will carry -- the higher you go, the further the sound is OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 96 going to carry. And one of the other problems I have is if we have problems with service and everything is privatized down, then we don't -- we can't go to the county because the county's out of it completely. All we have is whatever the privatized company is to go to. And as far as any monitoring problems, as far as the water, the sound, any of the problems that we have on the monitoring, I think that should be done by the county. I don't believe we should let the private -- if it goes to a privatized group, I don't think they should be able to monitor themselves. I fully agree that we need to select a site right now and purchase it at today's rate instead of tomorrow's rates, and we definitely need to put a limit on the site now. And when we build a new site, it needs to be large enough to extend -- needs to be a site that will -- that you can start with a reclamation facility and not just a landfill. And like I said, the county needs do to all of its monitoring, not let a privatized group monitor themselves. And basically that's all I have to say. I really want to thank you for the last two years OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 97 of putting up with us. MR. DORRILL: Mr. Zak. MS. DELATE: Hi. the Golden Gate Estates. Thank you. Following Ms. Delate we'll have I'm Ruth Delate, and I live in And I thank you for letting us speak here tonight. And I appreciate what Tim's doing for us. I think he's listening. I don't know about the rest of you, but we're all hoping you are. First of all, I want to ask you a question. Waste Management is on stock exchange. Why would they want to invest in a losing business for their stock holder? They obviously desire our landfill to make a large profit. Now, why can't the county make this same large profit? These are my objectives for you for the landfill. The county, to retain their ownership, enclosed a landfill in seven years or less -- I know a lot of you said this, and this is repetitive -- and find, buy and obtain the permit for the new site, and no expansion of the present site, vertically or horizontally, and immediate reduction of odors. Six, explore alternatives, including composting, recycling, et cetera, and link this with privatization proposals, and to ensure any landfill meets and is OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 98 operated within all federal, state, regional and county environmental laws and monitoring requirements to protect the human health and our environment, and no vote on this whole issue until all matters are thoroughly investigated. Thisis one question I do want answered, if you can. Waste Management has proposed spending $250,000 for a gas management system while our county proposed to spend $800,000. How can there be such a difference? Does anyone know an answer? Well, maybe it's a long answer, but couldn't we move into the 21st Century with all this? Thank you. MR. CONSTANTINE: Mr. Dorrill, if we don't have an answer, perhaps we can have one prepared for us in the next several days. MR. DORRILL: Following Mr. Zak, I believe, it's Mr. Marsein, M-A-R-S-E-I-N. I can answer that question for you, MS. DELATE: gentlemen. MS. MARCIS: MR. DORRILL: Marcis? Could be: 23rd Avenue Southwest. Mr. Zak, if you will please, sir, go ahead. OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 99 6 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 MR. ZAK: Thank you. Good evening, folks, I'm on your turf tonight, not theirs. I've spoke before in front of them, and I won't make it too long, I hope. I came here, to be blatantly honest, and it's not going to be Chicken Little, it's fat. I've done a lot of homework so I can do this presentation properly, and I'm going to answer a lot of questions. I wish I could have done Waste Management's proposal tonight because I could've answered sincerely and honestly their questions that sort of got pushed around. The county probably knows what I want to bring up. I have a report from Clear Plane (phonetic), that the county paid for, that absolutely, positively puts that landfill in such a position that it should be closed now, not even in seven years. The reason why is, it simply is the fact that they have a composition of methane, carbon dioxide, and unbelievable levels of hydrogen sulfide. Now to your nose, hydrogen sulfide is that rotten egg smell. I just got done with an engineering firm in Massachusetts that was talking about 500 parts per million in their landfill. We have a report here which, again, is a report paid for by the county, 13,000 parts OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 100 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 per million. Lethal is 1,000 part per million. This stuff will kill ya. Now, I can stand here all night and show you memos that came out of their files starting back in November 9th of 1993, where somebody had noticed that they had a high concentration of gas. December 9th of 1993, Mr. Lorenz and other people made a notes of it to make sure they post a "Danger. No smoking. Explosive Gas." On the December 10th memo, they told the sheriff's department, the Collier County Emergency Coordinators Office, the Golden Gate Fire Department, the FDEP, and they hired a fence contractor to start isolating zones because of high concentrations of hydrogen sulfide and other gases. On December 15th, they did go ahead and hire this firm that stated that they made this report. Now, the county's stated to come agree that they felt the company may have overembellished because it may have been self-serving. Let's accept that. Let's accept that. Let's say the company did exaggerate the numbers. Even though they have a Ph.D., do it. They used EPA study guides, and they used all sorts of study guides, and they over-exaggerated the facts. OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 101 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 What we have here on December 16th, 1993, it says, "Explosive Gas." And they repeated themselves by putting out this memo that stated that -- they notified all the departments about the potentials of explosion. Now mind you, you have visitors, you have employees and you have children and people that go into that place on the weekends when that place is closed. Now, that's a fact. The county even considered putting up a fence completely around it to keep the children out of there that pick through the rubbish over the weekends and get little things out of it. Everybody, I guess, plays in landfills. Now, they agreed to some mitigation measures -- measures in this memo. And the one thing that I find so fascinating are these different things, seven inch diameter well, and blah-blah-blah. It says, "The Solid Waste Department is currently evaluating the feasibility of landfill gas utilization." Now this is in 1993, December 16th. This landfill's been around since 1980 or prior, and there's a record of gas being there in the early 80's. Fifteen years of wasted gas. Fifteen years of wasted resources OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 102 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 and wasted revenue to this county. I look at you and I ask you, is this good management? On February 8th of '94 -- MR. CONSTANTINE: Mr. Zak, I'm not sure where you're headed, but we're going to keep you to the five-minute limit because we've still got 12 more speakers. MR. ZAK: Excuse me, sir. But if these people let me speak, I'm going to speak to them. MR. NORRIS: Excuse me, Mr. Zak, this is our meeting, not yours. MR. CONSTANTINE: Tell you what, Mr. Zak. After everyone else has had an opportunity to speak and is satisfied that they've had an opportunity to speak, if you want to come back to the podium, great. But there are 12 other people that would like an opportunity to speak tonight, too. MR. ZAK: I apologize. Anyway, I'll summarize quickly. The natural gas, Caterpillar, -- I don't work for Caterpillar. This is free, they will design this system, install the system, finance the system, and can start making electricity tomorrow for free. The reason why is OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 103 because the federal government states that the Florida Power and Light must buy the electricity. The idea is for the county to negotiate a price, and there you are. There's your odor and the money coming back to you. One more point since I have a cutoff. I want to bring up one thing I think is very important. In this report, gypsum particles -- or fiber board is mentioned as the generator of hydrogen sulfide. And in the directives here, they put that gypsum in an unlined pit. So when that gentleman spoke tonight about the compaction and he spoke about the possibility of leaching into the water table, what you're dealing with here is simply the fact that the hydrogen sulfide, water and sulfuric acid -- and if they compact as tight as they claim, if the gas can come out, it's going to go down -- it's going to go somewhere. It's in the report. The biggest contributor -- and I'll get done. The biggest contributor they said was the construction industry, residents paying a $25 tipping fee, construction people were paying $15 -- and they just got a reduction of $12 a ton. Why? Why are we subsidizing the construction industry in this community, and yet the product that they're putting out there is a generator of OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 104 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 danger. Thank you. MR. CONSTANTINE: We certainly don't want to spend too much time dwelling on it, but I rest assured, you're not subsidizing the construction industry. MR. DORRILL: Mr. Marsein or Marsein on 23rd Avenue Southwest. Is that you, sir? MR. MARCIS: No, 44th Terrace. MR. DORRILL: Mr. Krasowski, If you would, please, sir, and following him Mr. Capone, if you would stand by. MS. KRASOWSKI: Good evening, Commissioners. My name is Bob Krasowski. I live in North Naples, but I feel like I'm part of Golden Gate sometimes. People out here are really very nice. I don't want to repeat what so many people have a].ready said, although I agree with most of the things that were said. I'm very interested in what Mr. Zak has brought up over the past couple of meetings. I Just would like to say that I'm very -- I don't want to thank anybody because I really don't think the citizens should thank you, the politicians, you know. It's like a mutual symbiotic relationship, but I must say that we appreciate OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 105 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 the efforts Mr. Constantine has made in keeping it a community issue and the evolution process we've gone through. If it wasn't for him, this issue might have been decided on three or four weeks ago. But with him requiring that the issue be brought to another Commission Meeting, which then permitted the suggestion for it to be brought back for the people of Golden Gate, or the county as a whole. I hope the people do not forget that when it comes time for you to proceed on to other areas of interest. I think it can do us well, and this is coming from a Democrat. I'll probably get thrown out. But let's see, you owe me for that. Okay. What I've heard -- I've checked the RFP I looked through the proposals. I've been interested in this solid waste issue in Collier County for the past 10 years, you know, starting with the incinerator. Years ago I was interested in recycling. You know, many, many people were composting. I'm a gardener. This issue evolves over the years. more progress. We've been making more and I think if -- and the people tonight have contributed greatly to identifying the areas where we OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 106 must go to develop our understanding of the variables involved here and the options we have. So for my -- in my perception, privatization is not the way to go now as it's identified in regards to our landfill situation, because what we lose first with the privatization is flexibility and control. We lose the flexibility because every time, from the point -- from the period you signed that contract , regardless of the arrangement, another party will be brought in before we can accomplish anything from that point on. It will be the lawyers and the managers and everyone involved with Waste Management. Now, flexibility and control. It's the same thing; they're interchangeable. I could stand up here and beat up on Waste Management, and, you know, from some of the things I've read, if I were to believe it all, they deserve it, you know. But I know some of the stuff I read is information coming from one side of the environmental battle that we've been going through for years in this country. So some of it might be exaggerated. But like the -- this document I have here, it's a corporate profile of Waste Management. It shows a lot of the different political situations they've been involved OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 8 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 107 in, the fines that they've paid. It states that they've been involved in 16 of the original 30 superfund cleanup siteS. One of the gentleman in Waste Management explained to me that some of those sites they took over. It wasn't their doing at first, but some of them were. Waste Management does not have a good reputation in this community. Now, I don't know why exactly that is, but it probably has something to do with word-of-mouth. That's the greatest advertiser. So I don't think people feel comfortable having them -- being in a situation where they'll take over control of the landfill. I certainly don't feel very comfortable with it. I think it's a big marketing, business-type thing. It's not something we need -- really need now. What I'd like to suggest here, I know what I'm going to do. I'm going to get together with a bunch of these people in the audience that have spoken tonight and get together with some of the staff, county staff, and investigate the various aspects of the different, you know, landfill options. And I must say the staff's been very cooperative in providing me information. When I want to ask them something, they explain it to me. But I think, you know, like this is a $120, $150, OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 108 $180 million deal. We have to look into the finances of this a little more closely than we have in regards to our proposal or what our options are on the -- in response to the RFP And Commissioner Matthews, before she left, to take care of very important business, undoubtedly, explained to me that she would participate in a joint citizen/county evaluation of the economics regarding this so we can come to a better understanding with the community at large. Mr. Keller; I asked him if he'd be interested in doing the same. He said he'd be available. So this is the beginning, I think, of an economic review. I would like to hear from the commissioners that a decision has been made to not finalize anything as far as an arrangement to privatize or otherwise until at least the RFP's, requests for proposals, the proposals of an alternative technology have been received, and evaluate them as to how they influence the waste stream (Sic). There's a lot that might happen, and it's going to affect the tipping fee of what's going on in the landfill. So really, there is -- I don't see how we could make a decision and lock into a contract that would further complicate whatever we do until after we find out OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 109 what kind of alternative proposal technology we will or will not be going to. You know, the odor -- Waste Management, as I understand, runs the Lee County Landfill, and I'm told the odor's pretty strong up there. I don't think anybody mentioned that before. The question about the money spent on handling the odor of the gas problems, that's a really good one. I'd like to see the answer to that. As far as I see, also, being that I follow a lot of these issues over a period of time, many of these issues have been developed and positioned and a lot of research has been done by the county staff, and they're kind of on the brink of implementing many of these things like gas control. I mean, they're halfway to doing it. There's money in the budget next year, odor control through gas burn off, flare-up, you know. Why give it away now? Mr. Zak; you know, I moan, if ho'~ hale accurate, right, what we have is this resource, this access to a certain extent or something positive in regards to the value of a landfill site, and we want to -- I knew one of the proposers. I don't know if it's -- what people have talked about now, but it appeared to me that you guys OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 110 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 wanted to give away the landfill to Waste Management and the -- without evaluating what value the gas would have or the recyclables or the land. Some places when they finish with the landfill, they top it off, and they do recreational parks and slides. If we don't own it, then we don't benefit from that. MR. CONSTANTINE: Steve. MS. KRASOWSKI: Okay. So that pretty much makes up for me. I just -- I'm feeling now that they're not a purview in doing that if we are going to evaluate all of the options and not do anything too soon before everybody has an opportunity to evaluate. My name's Bob. MR. CONSTANTINE: Thank you, Bob. MR. DORRILL: Mr. Capone. MR. CAPONE: Mr. Marcis following Mr. Capone. My name is John Capone. I'm a resident of East Naples. MR. CONSTANTINE: too. And a tough guy to get a hold of MR. CAPONE: Excuse me? MR. CONSTANTINE: And a tough guy to track down on the telephone. MR. CAPONE: I'm pretty busy. I'm a public health OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 111 technologist, and I'd just like to make sure that the public's aware of some of the dangers of landfill gases, as Mr. Zak has stated. Now, there is a big difference between odor and air pollution. And what comes off of the landfill is definitely air pollution. It implies health risk in the form of H2S. One of the more dangerous things about H2S is that, once you inhale it, it destroys the linings in your respiratory system and inhibits you from smelling it to any greater concentration. In other words, once you start to inhale it, you can't really tell that you're breathing it and you can't tell how much more you're And that is a normal gas that comes out of the That's not something that's abnormal. That's inhaling. landfill. normal. And the other gas, methane. One of the dangers that no one has mentioned is the fact that, other than it's flammable, is that it is, in fact, odorless, and the only way to tell that it's there is through, you know, meter devices, whatever. I have a couple of questions I'd like to direct towards Waste Management very briefly. What is the current height, maximum height, of a currently operating OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 112 landfill in South Florida that you operate? MR. SMITH: Our Waste Management central disposal landfill and recycling facility in Pompano Beach is permitted at about 210 feet. There is -- MR. CAPONE: Okay. With the -- given the heat and the humidity in South Florida and the intense pressure of going from something like 100 feet to close to 200 feet, don't you feel that that is a risk -- you're at risk of spontaneous combustion occurring? MR. SMITH: These are not feelings. I don't have feelings about these things, they're permits, there is legal requirements, there is technical requirements. We're well within all those requirements. It's not a feeling, this is fact. MR. CAPONE: So what you're saying is that you have not had any spontaneous combustion in any of your landfills? MR. SMITH: I'm not aware of spontaneous combustion in any of our landfills. MR. CAPONE: Are you aware of the spontaneous combustions that is occurring in Statin Island at the present time in New York State? MR. SMITH: No, I'm not. OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 113 MR. CAPONE: It is a severe public health problem. And the smoke coming from that particular site is -- just happened out of nowhere and it just started recently. And you know that is always a possibility. And down here with the added heat and humidity, I think we're at more of a risk of that happening than the northern states even. So I just wanted, very briefly, to make sure the public is aware of what is going on, and that's all I have to say. Thank you. MR. CONSTANTINE: Let me interject one thing. I, knowing the Waste Management proposal, the increased height only accounted for, I think, 2.4 years of that total amount. So that's something that -- because of the vision, and those are some of the other potential concerns. I think that's something the Board can look at.' I don't think that's going to have -- overall, going to have an impact if we opt not to increase it to 155, if we opt to privatize. MR. DORRILL: Mr. Marcis. MR. MARCIS: Mr. Marcis, then Mr. Stewart. My name is Dan Marcis, and I live on OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 114 44th Terrace Southwest, and I appreciate the County Commissioners giving us this opportunity so that we can present our thoughts. Most of what I wanted to talk about has been covered, but I would like for the County Commissioners to think about, seriously, getting a new site because I lived here before the landfill was started. And I know back in '76, they didn't have the stringent requirements, and I'm not so sure that anyone knows what the condition of the liners are at this time. And I do know, at that time, we were able to throw -- we were able to throw batteries, we were able to throw lead paint and all of these things had gone in without any kind of control. And with any upward buildup, it generates a terrific amount of pressure. This could cause leakage. And what concerns me most is you have -- you have monitoring of the water systems throughout the county, but if you do find a leak and find that the water is contaminated, I don't think that we have something in the system that is a fixed, a -- that would be immediate. I think it would be a catastrophic problem, and I don't even know how we could handle anything like this if it were to become contaminated. OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 0 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 115 I think 21 years is an awful long time, or 23 years, to get into a contract , and especially when I've heard things such as, almost always, very little odors. And I don't know exactly what that means, contractual -- in contract. But I think that privatization is good in this respect. It's an equalizer. The county and private sector, there seems -- you seem to get twice as much for half the price. And I don't know the quality of this, but it should put the county on notice that they should do some streamlining in some of their departments that could bring the costs on a competitive basis. And I don't see any reason that it can't be done. It's just that up to now, heretofore, we've had unlimited resources any time we need it. All we had to do was pass a levy and we've got it. And I think that the time has come where we have to pick ourself up at the bootstraps and get in line with the private sector, and I don't see any reason why we can't compete with the private sector or even get somewhere close to it. And I do wish that the County Commissioners and County Manager, Mr. Dorrill, would consider to limited -- OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 116 limiting this area for the seven-year period, just as required by law, because there has been -- I don't -- I can't seem to get it through my mind that the Waste Management did not know that there has been quite an explosion up in the New York area a few years back by accumulation of methane gas. And this could happen here, but it's in an urban area now. Another thing that bothers me very much is that at one of their sites, that they are building condominiums within feet of the waste site. And that may be true, but it sure doesn't seem likes it's a very, very good idea. Thanks very much, Commissioners, and thanks for giving us the opportunity to express our views. MR. DORRILL: Mr. Stuart, then Mr. Henning. MR. STUART: For the record, I'm Jim Stuart, speaking on behalf of the Golden Gate area Chamber of Commerce. It is the Chamber's position that this landfill location is not now an appropriate location for a landfill, and it is becoming increasingly inappropriate. This area is the gateway into Collier County, and a continuation of the landfill at this location will diminish the economic development, not only of the Goldeli OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 117 Gate community, but of Collier County as a whole. A year ago, the Board of County Commissioners told us that it was your intention to cap off the landfill and move it on. I have a couple of questions. First of all, what efforts have been made by the county since that time to locate an alternate site for the landfill? I don't necessarily expect a response, but I don't think that a lot of effort has been made to locate an alternate site. The folks from Waste Management were very -- said something very interesting, I thought. They said that they could put in place an effective gas management program within six months of taking over the landfill. A year ago, the Board of County Commissioners told us they thought it was very important we put in a gas management program; that's twice as much. We're happy to hear that the Board has included the effective, hopefully effective, gas management program in next year's budget, but we'd like to see that moving along. It seems appropriate for the Chamber that the existing landfill be moved, rather than continuing to stuff more stuff in it. We're being -- we're doing our part to help out the Board, help out the county, by being OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 118 patient, by patiently waiting for the permits and everything to occur so that we can have this landfill moved. But we ask that you do your part by getting the ball rolling and getting us moved in the right direction. Thank you. MR. DORRILL: MR. HENNING: positive direction. Mr. Henning, then Mr. Cornell. Golden Gate has and is going in a We have a Golden Gate Information Center welcoming people from 1-75 into Collier County, directing them into the right areas where they want to go. The Golden Gate Contractor's Association is building a model home in Golden Gate Estates to showcase Golden Gate. A residence citizens' group has bonded with the Golden Gate Civic Association to deal with code compliance in our area. We feel that it's -- we are having a positive growth in Golden Gate. My feeling is, I would like to see the Board -- and Commissioner Constantine, I appreciate your comments on, yes, we have $7 million and we should move forward to relocate the landfill. Also in that, I would -- maybe we could find a site, if it's big enough, to locate the East Naples sewer OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 119 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 system in that same site and get rid of two problems at once. Commissioners, I just want to thank you. Manager Dorrill, I want to thank you for coming out to Golden Gate, and I'm sorry that Betty Matthews had to leave early. Thank you. MR. DORRILL: Mr. Chairman, Mr. Cornell is your final speaker. Mr. Cornell. MR. CORNELL: My name is Bradley Cornell. I do thank you for this opportunity to speak. I'm a resident of Naples Park, but I think my garbage comes out to Golden Gate like everybody else's, so I feel kind of obligated to show up and have my two cents put into this discussion. In consideration of privatizing the county's Solid Waste Department, I think that we all need to acknowledge that managing solid waste and recycling is one of the primary responsibilities of any local government in attending to the health, safety and welfare of it's citizenry. In light of that, I'd like to offer five brief points for consideration. The first is that the citizens OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 120 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 Of Collier County must be given every opportunity for input into the solid waste and recycling operation. Loss of this input is one of the biggest risks in privatizing so fundamental a service. Number two, no matter who actually runs the landfill, everyone's first priority in solid waste management must be waste reduction, both individually and institutionally. Coupled with an even more aggressive recycling program that we currently have, including collecting mixed paper, cardboard and composting the entire organic fraction of the waste stream, plus a commercial program, many landfill problems can be effectively mitigated. Number three, I support the maximum optimization of the current site, but as I have just said, that optimization includes aggressive waste reduction, recycling and composting programs up front. Number four, I'd like to concur with Mr. Krasowski and Mr. Keller, and maybe go one step further and say, if in the county does go forward with privatization, which I recommend that you do not, I believe it would be very wise to consider appointing citizens to a solid waste and recycling advisory board. This has been a suggestion in OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 121 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 the past, and I think it is still a good idea. This, in my opinion, would be a necessity in assuring the proper oversight and involvement of we, who are most effected by these decisions. And finally, I hope that you will delay any privatization decision until after all the.alternative technology proposals are received. These technologies should not be an afterthought in the county's long range solid waste management plan. Thank you very much. MR. CONSTANTINE: Well, I want to thank everyone for coming tonight. Much like last year, it is very helpful for us to have the public input. And hopefully, I know from time to time it's easy to get cynical about government, but, hopefully, the exercises we've gone through in the last 12 months helps renew a little bit of faith that everybody is part of trying to solve the I think together we'll end up at the right problem. place. This is not scheduled to be on next Tuesday's agenda. I don't think that we have it scheduled for a particular Tuesday now when we'll bring it back. I would urge you, certainly, to keep your eyes on the newspaper. OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 122 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 If you have the opportunity -- I know many of you are working during the day, but if you have an opportunity to be with us, whether it's two weeks or three weeks, or whenever we next discuss this, by all means, please come. If you can't, feel free to call any of the members of the Commission and share your thoughts ahead of time if you didn't have an opportunity to tonight or if you have anything to add to that. Again, thanks for coming this evening, and if there's nothing else, we will stand adjourned. MR. PERKINS: One question. MR. CONSTANTINE: A1. MR. PERKINS: Are any of the employees out there in any danger? MR. CONSTANTINE: I don't believe so. Mr. Lorenz can probably answer that. That's a good question. MR. LORENZ: Yes. The question, is anybody in danger? We do daily monitoring at around a dozen locations on the surface of the site where our personnel are working and where the public is likely to be. And all those numbers for the readings of methane and the hydrogen sulfide go way below any type of safety threshold, one part per million in terms of hydrogen OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 123 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 sulfide. MR. SAUNDERS: Mr. Lorenz, while you're there. Mr. Zak mentioned the number of 13,000 parts her million hydrogen sulfide gas and the fact that that was a serious health hazard. There wasn't much of a reaction from the County Commission, I think, primarily because we understand that we are monitoring out there and that we are in compliance with DEP standards, which are far, far, far, less than 13,000 parts her million. But I think you need to clarify for the Commission and for the audience, is there a situation where residents are in danger, because that's -- that has been said, and we really haven't answered that accusation. MR. LORENZ: No. There is no situation where the residents are in danger. There are high concentrations of gas within the landfill itself, within the cells. And indeed, that's what a landfill does, it produces gas, that's why you can take advantage of the gas utilization. If the question is: Is it coming out of the site at very high concentrations? And it is not, that's why the residents are not in danger. MR. SAUNDERS: Thank you. MR. CONSTANTINE: And with that, thanks again. OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 Good night. (Meeting adjourned at 10:02 p.m.) 124 OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 125 STATE OF FLORIDA ) COUNTY OF COLLIER ) I, Terri L. Schultz, Deputy Official Court Reporter, do hereby certify that the foregoing proceedings were taken before me at the date and place as stated in the caption hereto on Page 1 hereof; that the foregoing computer-assisted transcription, consisting of pages numbered 2 through 124, inclusive, is a true record of my Stenograph notes taken at said proceedings. Dated this 31st day of October, 1994. Terri L. Schultz Deputy Official Court Reporter 20th Judicial Circuit 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 STATE OF FLORIDA COUNTY OF COLLIER The foregoing certificate was acknowledged before me this 31st day of October, 1994, by Terri L. Schultz, who is personally known to me. State of Florida at Large OFFICIAL NOTARY SEAL JUDTTI! E BICE COMMISSICH N~MBER 348394 COMM;SSION EXP OFFICIAL COURT REPORTERS, COLLIER COUNTY, NAPLES, FL 33962