Kimball shares solid waste committee findings

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Kimball said the difference is only 40 tons for a current truck and 36 tons for the side-load trucks.

The side-load trucks have less weight on the front axle.

Questionnaires were sent out throughout town for commercial pick up information. The findings showed people are paying somewhere in a range of $80 to $1,200 a month.

Kimball said one option is people could call Waste Management to try to negotiate a lower fee for commercial pick up.

After explaining the committee's findings, Kimball addressed the council directly.

"I would strongly suggest that if you have a contract with somebody like this that is almost $300,000 a year, that it ought to be out to contract," he said. "It ought to be out to bid."

Councilman Glenn Schaff asked about worker's compensation if the city gets into the garbage business.

Kimball said injuries typically occur when there is a truck that is being loaded from the back and requires two employees. In this scenario, it is the in-load truck where the tote is picked up, thrown into the back and put back to its original place.

"It's guys on ice. They slip. They fall. They're picking up things," Kimball said. "With the side-load truck, we won't have that problem."

Schaff asked Kimball if the city should get into the garbage business.

"I'm just giving you the numbers, Glenn. I would probably tell you no, not to get into the garbage business," Kimball said. "My reasons would be, it looks like it would take you about seven years just to break even."

He added, if Waste Management's rates go up, city officials should read the contracts.

"Their contracts are long, and they're made for their advantage," Kimball said.

The best advice would be to sit down, talk and negotiate or put it out to bid, Kimball said.

At the end of the city-council meeting, Councilman David Walkup said, "When we had our work session, the guy that was here wasn't negotiating on it. He heard that's what we wanted. These are the same things we wanted. He went back to his people, they came back and said, 'Here's a contract.' That's not negotiations. That's throwing it right down you're throat. … If we're going to negotiate … I want his boss here so we can talk to him."

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