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HomeMy WebLinkAboutOrganic Waste-Unalaska Dutch Harbor City of Unalaska Steigers Corporation 09-2000 ORGANIC WASTE CHARACTERIZATION PROJECT UNALASKA/DUTCH HARBOR, ALASKA September 2000 Prepared for City of Unalaska Unalaska, Alaska Prepared by Steigers Corporation Englewood, Colorado September 2000 Organic Waste Characterization Project Steigers Corporation i ORGANIC WASTE CHARACTERIZATION PROJECT TABLE OF CONTENTS I. INTRODUCTION..................................................................................................................1 II. BACKGROUND...................................................................................................................1 Unalaska/Dutch Harbor Community Landfill Wastewater Treatment Plant Seafood Processors Anaerobic Digestion III. MET HODOLOGY................................................................................................................3 IV. RESULTS...............................................................................................................................4 Landfill Waste Categories Wastewater Treatment Plant Solids Seafood Processing Wastes V. UTILIZATION OF DIGESTER BY-PRODUCTS ..............................................................8 VI. ECONOMICS ........................................................................................................................9 Cafeteria/Galley Waste Household Organic Waste Wastewater Treatment Plant Screened Solids Miscellaneous Organic Materials Cellulose Seafood Processing Waste/Fish Meal Summary VII. CLOSING............................................................................................................................12 VIII. REFERENCES ....................................................................................................................13 September 2000 Organic Waste Characterization Project Steigers Corporation ii FIGURES Figure 1 Unalaska/Dutch Harbor Major Waste Sources Figure 2 Landfill Waste Summary, 1999 (Adjusted Categories) Figure 3 Summary of Wastewater Treatment Plant Screened Solids, 1999 Figure 4 Summary of Crab Waste, 1999 Figure 5 Summary of Fish Waste, 1999 TABLES Table 1 Summary of Landfill Waste by Category “As-Received,” 1999 Table 2 Summary of Landfill Waste by Adjusted Categories, 1999 APPENDICES Appendix A Monthly Landfill Data Sheets, 1999 Appendix B Landfill Rate Structure Appendix C Wastewater Treatment Plant Screened Solids Data, 1999 1 September 2000 Organic Waste Characterization Project Steigers Corporation I. INTRODUCTION The intent of the Organic Waste Characterization Project (project) is to identify, describe, and quantify the organic waste streams that are currently being generated in the Unalaska/Dutch Harbor, Alaska community. The project was undertaken to provide basic data to aid in the evaluation of Unalaska/Dutch Harbor, from both an economic and operational perspective, as a suitable site for an anaerobic digester-based facility. Others, considering their specific technologies and targeted applications, will perform the actual evaluation of the community as a suitable site. This report provides a background discussion describing the community and its sources of organic wastes, as well as the process of anaerobic digestion. The project’s methods and its sources of information are discussed, followed by a presentation of results. Discussions are then presented on the potential for utilization of digester by-products and of economic considerations useful in determining a digester operation’s viability. The report closes with a brief summary. Steigers Corporation of Englewood, Colorado performed the Organic Waste Characterization Project under contract to the City of Unalaska, Alaska. The City of Unalaska, in turn, was provided project funding through a grant from the Alaska Energy Authority and Alaska Industrial Development and Export Authority. II. BACKGROUND Unalaska/Dutch Harbor Community The Unalaska/Dutch Harbor community consists of the City of Unalaska and the immediately adjacent areas of Dutch Harbor, Iliuliuk Bay, and Captains Bay. This community of about 4,000 permanent residents is located on portions of Unalaska and Amaknak Islands within the Fox Island group of southeast Alaska’s Aleutian Chain. The community provides key support to the Bering Sea commercial fisheries as a supply and maintenance hub for the regional fishing fleets and lays claim to being the largest seafood port in North America, both in landed tonnage and in total market value. Unalaska’s location also enables it to serve as a convenient trans-shipment port for the maritime trade routes between the west coast of North America and Pacific Rim nations. The community’s largest employers, which are also the community’s largest generators of organic wastes, are the five major seafood processors. Each of the three largest, UniSea, Inc. (UniSea), Westward Seafoods, Inc. (Westward), and Alyeska Seafoods, Inc. (Alyeska), process a variety of fish and crab species into a number of seafood-based wholesale commodities and consumer products. The other two, Icicle Seafoods, Inc. (Icicle) and Royal Aleutian Seafoods, Inc. (Royal Aleutian), primarily process for the several crab fisheries in the region. Icicle’s processing “facility” consists of one or more mobile processing vessels. All the others are more or less permanent fixtures in the community. Figure 1 illustrates the layout of the community and shows the locations of the major generators of organic wastes (five major seafood processors). 2 September 2000 Organic Waste Characterization Project Steigers Corporation To serve the seafood processing industry, the community hosts a transient workforce of as much as 12,000 additional workers during peak processing periods. Landfill The City of Unalaska’s Municipal Solid Waste Landfill (Landfill), the only means of solid waste disposal available to the community, operates under the State of Alaska Solid Waste Permit 9625-BA006 issued in 1997. The Landfill staff prepares monthly reports in electronic spreadsheet format that tally the total daily quantities of accepted waste, separated into a number of categories. The waste categories utilized by the Landfill for 1999 are listed below: Categories January through June Categories July through December Organic Organic Cardboard Cardboard Metal Metal Plastic Plastic Nets Nets Fish Waste Fish Waste Tires Tires Wood Wood Miscellaneous Miscellaneous Construction & Demolition Wastewater Treatment Plant The City of Unalaska’s Wastewater Treatment Plant (WWTP) treats approximately 0.60 million gallons of municipal sewage per day. Raw influent undergoes a primary treatment process involving a rotary shear screen with 1-millimeter-diameter openings for solids removal (EPA 1996). The screened solids are collected in a chute, partially dewatered with a press, and hauled in reusable steel drums for disposal in the Landfill. The remaining water fraction is treated by high-energy ultraviolet radiation and is then discharged into Unalaska Bay under National Pollution Discharge Elimination System NPDES Permit AK-004345-1. According to WWTP staff, the screened solids are almost entirely organic in nature and are composed of a homogenous mixture of fecal matter, finely ground food (discharged into the sewer system by local grocers and cafeteria/galley operations), and cellulose. No further, more detailed, characterization or analyses of the solids were found to be available. 3 September 2000 Organic Waste Characterization Project Steigers Corporation Seafood Processors The Unalaska seafood processors evaluated for this study include, in order of largest to smallest production capacity, UniSea, Westward, Alyeska, Royal Aleutian, and Icicle. The three larger seafood processing facilities, UniSea, Westward, and Alyeska, operate meal plants that process wastes to produce fish meal, bone meal, fish oil, and other products. The major component of processing waste is water, which is discharged through the facilities’ respective NPDES discharge outfalls. Fish waste solids from finfish is routed to on-site fish meal plants. About 5 percent of the raw product weight is eventually discharged via the facilities’ NPDES permits in the form of suspended and/or dissolved proteins, which are too fine or otherwise not recoverable. The two smaller seafood processing facilities, Icicle and Royal Aleutian, do not have fish meal plants. These facilities primarily process crab, which has a higher recovery factor than most other processed seafood and, thus, yields proportionally lower quantities of waste. About 30 to 50 percent of the raw product weight is discharged under the facilities’ respective NPDES Permits. Anaerobic Digestion Anaerobic digestion is a treatment process commonly applied to organic materials to reduce their bulk, lower the level of their chemical “food” energy, and produce useful and potentially valuable by-products. Anaerobic digestion, in broad terms, is a process in which the organic material, or “feedstock,” is acted upon by a number of microbial species in an oxygen-free environment, hence the term “anaerobic.” Bulk reduction occurs during the digestion process via the conversion of organic materials to solid stable residue. A common and valuable by-product of digestion is a medium Btu gas consisting primarily of methane and carbon dioxide and commonly referred to as “biogas.” Appropriate feedstocks to an anaerobic digester may include food wastes, animal and plant wastes, sewage solids, and other similar materials. Careful, informed selection or “tailoring” of the suite of microbial species is often necessary to optimize the digestion process for a given mix of feedstocks and to promote the desired outcomes (by-products, rate of digestion, degree of digestion, etc.). III. METHODOLOGY This project utilized data that were primarily generated during the calendar year 1999. Calendar year 1999 data were readily available, relatively complete, and recent. While recognizing that the specific character and quantities of organic wastes generated in the community are subject to a variety of economic drivers, 1999 is considered to be adequately representative of what may be expected in coming years. The specific sources of data utilized for the project were routine reports prepared by the Landfill and the WWTP and annual reports to the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) by the seafood processors in accordance with their respective NPDES permits. Further data were obtained through communication with City of Unalaska staff and the various waste generators. 4 September 2000 Organic Waste Characterization Project Steigers Corporation Two methods were utilized in 1999 to categorize waste. From January through June 1999, the accepted waste was allocated by volume, and, from July through December 1999, it was allocated by weight. In order to facilitate a consistent presentation of the data, the volume-based data for the first half of the year were converted to weight-based data using average daily densities. It is important to note that the Organic category in the Landfill monthly reports does not include all of the organic wastes disposed of in the Landfill. Although Fish Waste is essentially 100 percent organic, it is placed in a separate Fish Waste category rather than included in the Organic category. Screened solids from the WTTP are primarily organic but are accounted for in the Miscellaneous category rather than the Organic category. The Organic category does not have a 100 percent organic content. For example, cafeteria/galley waste makes up about half of the Organic category by weight and contains about 65 percent organic material (primarily food wastes). Materials such as plastic can be present in cafeteria/galley waste. The other two major components of the Organic category are considered to be 100 percent organic. These are organic wastes of household origin and frozen food waste from Akutan Island. Because of the complications associated with the original Organic category, the Organics were recalculated to include organic materials in other categories and to correct for the inorganic portions that had been included in the category. These modifications, as well as modifications to other categories, are described in the Results section. Gathering of original data by means of laboratory analyses, directly observing and inspecting waste generating, handling, or receipt activities, and auditing or independently verifying data accuracy were beyond the scope of this project and were not performed. IV. RESULTS There are several potential sources of feedstock for an anaerobic digester that are currently present in the Unalaska/Dutch Harbor community. These sources include organic wastes disposed of in the Landfill and processing wastes from the local seafood processors. The organic wastes disposed in the Landfill are cafeteria/galley waste, household organics, frozen food waste originating on Akutan Island, fish waste from various local seafood-related facilities, and screened solids from the WWTP. The seafood processing wastes are wastes from the five local seafood processing facilities that are currently used in the production of meal or are discharged under NPDES Permits. Landfill Waste Categories A summary of the Landfill waste by category (as received) is provided in Table 1. The volumes for January through June 1999 were converted to weights in the table. Table 2 provides an adjusted summary of the Landfill waste by category that includes adjustments to the Organic category (added fish waste and WWTP solids to, and 5 September 2000 Organic Waste Characterization Project Steigers Corporation subtracted inorganic portions from Organics). Other category adjustments were also made as described in the notes for the table. The end result is the reorganization of Landfill waste data into three categories: organic, cellulose (containing cardboard, paper, and wood), and “other.” Figure 2 provides the quantities and illustrates the relative proportions of these three waste categories by month for 1999. The organic wastes currently disposed of in the Landfill are presented in detail in Tables 1 and 2. A tally of total and organic waste on a monthly basis is given below. Note that the Adjusted Organic Waste provided below is not the original Organic category because adjustments were made as described above. Month, 1999 January February March April May June July August September October November December Total Landfill Waste (tons) 684 766 841 840 809 583 695 819 1,071 769 591 439 8,906 Adjusted Organic Waste (tons) 317 336 369 131 308 244 181 253 217 262 153 107 2,878 Copies of the Landfill monthly data sheets are provided in Appendix A. Two sheets are provided for each of the months January through June 1999 (one with volumes and one with weights). On a yearly basis, about 32 percent by weight of the Landfill waste is organic waste, 43 percent is cellulose, and 25 percent is “other” waste. However, organic wastes make up as much as 45 percent of the total waste during several months of the year. The largest contributors of organic waste are household and cafeteria/galley organics, which make up about 55 and 36 percent of the Organic category on a yearly basis, respectively. Frozen food waste shipped in from Akutan Island is delivered to the Landfill on approximately a quarterly basis and contributes about 1 percent to the Organic category on a yearly basis. Fish waste is about 5 percent of the Organic category. According to the Landfill monthly data sheet, fish waste is disposed of at the landfill several days a month in quantities of about 2 tons each day. WWTP solids are shipped to the Landfill several days per month. These solids make up about 2 to 3 percent of the Organic category on an annual basis. The Cardboard and Wood categories make up the new Cellulose category described above. The Landfill’s Cardboard category is actually a mixture of paper and cardboard. 6 September 2000 Organic Waste Characterization Project Steigers Corporation During 1999, about 1,660 tons of cardboard and 540 tons of wood were disposed of at the Landfill. Hence, the Cellulose category contains about 75 percent paper and cardboard and about 25 percent wood. The Construction and Demolition (C&D) category, which was created in July for construction and demolition waste, also probably has some cardboard, paper, and wood content. However, because the specific composition of the C&D category is not known and it likely contains metal and other materials, the C&D category was combined into the Other category and the cellulose component of C&D was not considered as a viable feedstock in this project. The largest components of the Other category (by weight) are plastic and metal. Plastic waste is disposed of at a rate of about 1,060 tons per year and metal at about 890 tons per year. Nets contribute about 770 tons per year, the non-organic fraction of the Miscellaneous category contributes about 210 tons per year, and tires are disposed at a rate of about 180 tons per year. According to the Landfill staff, the Miscellaneous category consists of small “mixed” loads. These loads could contain organics and/or cellulose materials. However, the composition of these loads is unknown, and, therefore, the organics and cellulose wastes accounted for in this category are considered negligible. The rate structure for disposal of solid waste at the Landfill (Pages 19 through 21 of the City of Unalaska Schedule of Fees and Charges) is attached to this report as Appendix B. Wastewater Treatment Plant Screened Solids The volume of WWTP solids generated for disposal, by month for the period January 1998 through May 2000, was provided to the project by the WWTP. These data are provided in Appendix C. Utilizing information obtained by telephone interviews with WWTP and Landfill staff and by examination of detailed delivery records within the period, the volumes were converted to a weight-by-month basis. The density of the screened solids was determined to be about 8 pounds per gallon, slightly less than the density of water. During 1999, a total of about 70 tons (about 4 to 8 tons each month) of screened solids were generated and disposed of in the Landfill. About 6 trips were made to the Landfill each month to deliver these solids. The weight of solids per month in 1999 is illustrated in Figure 3. Available data for 1998 and 2000 were comparable to the 1999 data. As described above, the WWTP screened solids are classified by the Landfill as part of the Miscellaneous category. The solids make up about 25 percent of the Miscell- aneous category by weight. Seafood Processing Wastes According to personnel in the local seafood processing industry, relatively small quantities of fish waste are sent to the Landfill by seafood processors. Most of the approximately 150 tons per year of fish waste disposed of in the Landfill comes from small processing and storage operations or packaged fish meal that is damaged in handling or is otherwise unmarketable. 7 September 2000 Organic Waste Characterization Project Steigers Corporation All five of the local seafood processors hold NPDES Permits for the discharge of seafood processing waste streams. Four of the five processors are required to submit annual reports summarizing operations in order to maintain compliance with permits. Although Westward does not have an annual reporting requirement in its NPDES Permit, equivalent operational production statistics were provided by the facility for use in this project. As stated in the Background section, the three largest seafood processors have meal plants that utilize seafood processing wastes in the production of fish meal, bone meal, fish oil, and other products. However, some of the fish processing waste is discharged via the respective NPDES Permits. The two smaller seafood processing facilities, Icicle and Royal Aleutian, do not have meal plants. These facilities primarily process crab, which has a higher recovery factor than most other processed seafood and, thus, yields proportionally lower quantities of waste. Their liquid and solid processing wastes are discharged to local waters via under their respective NPDES Permits. During 1999, approximately 319,600 tons of raw fish and raw crab were processed by the five facilities. Approximately 95,900 tons of final fish and crab products were produced, which resulted in about 223,700 tons of seafood processing wastes. About 19,500 tons of various types of meal were produced from the processing wastes. A summary of the materials processed and processing wastes on a monthly basis is provided below. Data for this summary were obtained from the facility annual reports and other facility data for 1999. 1998 data were used for Icicle. Month, 1999 Crab Processed (tons) Crab Waste (tons) Fish Processed (tons) Fish Waste (tons) January February March April May June July August September October November December Total 2,444 8,525 6,751 60 24 49 87 0 1,813 1,739 2,337 689 84 24,577 909 3,206 2,533 24 20 36 0 1,460 436 629 241 40 9,534 16,010 86,900 17,946 3,878 3,651 831 3,480 73,151 54,753 34,394 62 11 295,068 11,823 63,312 12,193 2,286 1,922 338 1,686 55,425 40,089 25,092 19 10 214,195 8 September 2000 Organic Waste Characterization Project Steigers Corporation The greater part of the seafood processing waste is generated during the months of February, August, September, and October. Lesser quantities are produced in January and March, and waste generation drops substantially in April, May, June, July, November, and December. Graphic depictions of crab and fish waste, by month, are provided in Figures 4 and 5, respectively. V. UTILIZATION OF DIGESTER BY-PRODUCTS Depending on the siting of a digester operation, direct utilization of the by-product biogas by industrial facilities is likely to be relatively straightforward. Each of the five seafood processors in the Unalaska/Dutch Harbor community has substantial thermal energy requirements for their facilities, usually being met in the form of low-pressure saturated steam. The greater part of the steam is produced from multiple, dedicated boilers operated in the respective facilities. The boilers are operated near-exclusively on No. 2 diesel, with some provisions for supplementary fueling with fish oil and waste (lubricating) oils. Additionally, steam is often utilized for heating administrative/maintenance, housing, and processing spaces. While the annual thermal requirements are highly variable, cycling with seasonal weather and processing schedules, some level of thermal energy is needed year-round, particularly in the larger processor facilities. The year-round thermal requirements and the scale of many of these boilers would likely be a better fit for digester operations than, say, smaller, more seasonally dependent units in a strictly space-heating mode of service. Biogas may very likely be utilized directly, particularly in the larger boilers, as a supplementary fuel without the need to filter or otherwise purify it. A partial refit of dual-fuel jets on one or two of a facility’s boilers would allow firing of the biogas yet not impair a boiler’s capability to operate at full capacity on liquid fuels. A cursory assessment of the air quality permits indicates that many of the facilities would very likely be able to accommodate supplementary biogas fueling of boilers without triggering other than administrative revisions of their permits. Furthermore, no significant operating or maintenance issues would be created for the boiler owner/operator by doing so. Most of the processors and other industrial and public facilities throughout the community also operate diesel-fueled reciprocating internal combustion engine- generators for electric generation. Ranging in capacity from 250 to 2,000-plus kW(net), many of these units may also accommodate full or supplementary firing with biogas. Generally more sensitive to purity of the fuel-gas than boilers and less readily modified to operate in a dual-fuel mode, the suitability of these engines for utilization of biogas would likely require more detailed individual assessment. To the extent that biogas may directly displace diesel as a thermal fuel without operational or maintenance penalties, the economic benefits of doing so would be largely driven by the retrofit investment and the avoided cost of the displaced diesel fuel. Recognizing that petroleum prices are highly variable, an avoided cost of fuel may be 9 September 2000 Organic Waste Characterization Project Steigers Corporation estimated, for the Unalaska/Dutch Harbor area, at 3.0 to 4.5 cents per gallon over the Puget Sound market index price plus applicable taxes. Taxes will vary as to the purchaser (publicly owned vs. private operators) and the application. Boiler fuel is taxed on a different basis than fuel intended for electric generation. The disposition of digested solids may prove to be more problematic. Many of the more conventional methods of disposing of or marketing digested solids are not readily available to a digester operation in the Unalaska/Dutch Harbor community. There are no composting facilities and no significant agricultural industry in the region and a very limited residential market. Markets exist elsewhere (Anchorage, Puget Sound, Pacific Rim), but substantial transportation penalties would be incurred to reach those markets, particularly for a high-weight and -volume, low-value product. To the extent that the economics of a digester operation rely on avoided disposal expenses for the waste generators, use of the Landfill for disposal of digested solids would negate many of the benefits of a digester. Because there are no suitable solid-waste incineration operations in the region, this issue would require close examination. VI. ECONOMICS For waste streams currently being disposed of at the Landfill, transportation costs from the generator to a digester facility are assumed to be substantially equivalent to transportation costs to the Landfill and are, thus, economically neutral. Transportation costs for seafood processing wastes currently going to meal plants may reasonably be assumed to be equivalent to those charged by dumpster hauling contractors at approximately $11 per ton (based on interviews with processor personnel). In the event that a digester facility was co-located with a major waste generator, transportation expenses from that source would necessarily require adjustment. Similarly, handling costs by a generator prior to delivery may also be considered to be reasonably equivalent whether the ultimate destination is the Landfill or a digester. A discussion of the economics of the available organic wastes, by general category and origin, follows. The Adjusted Organic category in Table 2 at 2,878 tons of waste per year is broken out in the first four categories and the Cellulose and Seafood Processing waste categories are discussed separately. A table summarizing this discussion of economics is provided at the end of this section. Cafeteria/Galley Waste The 1,047 tons of cafeteria/galley waste, primarily discarded food, produced annually originates with the cafeteria/galley operations of the seafood processors. It is currently mixed with other non-food wastes and disposed of at the Landfill at a $67 per ton tipping fee (“Schedule B” of Appendix C). Availability of this waste stream would require segregation at the source and additional handling by the generator. Disposal costs are estimated at $70,000, exclusive of handling and transportation. 10 September 2000 Organic Waste Characterization Project Steigers Corporation Household Organic Waste The 1,579 tons of household organic waste produced annually originates as residential/light commercial trash. Currently, it falls under the monthly flat fee paid by customers as part of their monthly fee for utility services (“Schedule A” of Appendix C). It would likely be the most difficult waste stream to segregate and utilize. A meaningful estimate of its true disposal costs and, hence, the potential revenue associated with its utilization is not possible to develop within the scope of this project. Wastewater Treatment Plant Screened Solids The 70 tons of this WWTP solids produced annually are disposed of at the Landfill at $67 per ton (“Schedule B” of Appendix C). Annual disposal costs are estimated at $4,700, exclusive of handling and transportation. Miscellaneous Organic Materials This group includes the organic wastes classified in the remaining categories being received at the landfill. With a total of 182 tons generated in 1999 and a tipping fee of $67 per ton (“Schedule B” of Appendix C), disposal costs are estimated at $12,200. Of the 182 tons, 150 tons are Fish Waste, which incurs an additional $60 per load special handling fee (“Schedule D” of Appendix C), adding an additional cost of about $4,500 per year (assuming an average load of 2 tons). This yields an estimated annual disposal cost of $16,700, exclusive of handling and transportation. Cellulose About 2,199 tons of paper, cardboard, and wood are received annually at the landfill under the Cellulose category (Table 2). Cellulose is often included as a digester feedstock to optimize operation. The wastes in this category also are disposed of at the $67 per ton rate, yielding an annual disposal cost of $147,300, exclusive of handling, transportation, and any further processing that may be necessary. Seafood Processing Waste/Fish Meal The three largest processors in the Unalaska/Dutch Harbor community, UniSea, Alyeska, and Westward, all own and operate fish meal facilities to process the raw waste products of their seafood processing operations. Each of the three facilities produces a quality fish meal, bone meal (to a smaller degree), and fish oil, another marketable product of value. The plants are relatively recent additions, are well maintained and in good condition, and are sized appropriately to support their respective seafood processing operations. While the fish meal markets in which these plants sell are variable, the fish meal operations are generally characterized as economically “break-even” or even “marginally profitable” at times. The three largest processors regard their fish meal operations as crucial aspects of 11 September 2000 Organic Waste Characterization Project Steigers Corporation their overall operation. Regulatory and physical realities dictate that the fish meal plant can and, on occasion, does directly impact the processors’ ability to accept and process seafood. The remaining two processors in Unalaska/Dutch Harbor, Icicle and Royal Aleutian, are primarily crab processors. The waste from crab processing generated by these two operations is discharged under their current operating permits. On the occasions that fish are processed by Icicle or Royal Aleutian, arrangements are generally made with one of the three larger processors to accept and process the resulting fish waste. In summary, the processors have little economic reason and no pressing regulatory motives to shift their dependence away from the current arrangement, particularly since the capital to construct the existing fish meal plants has already been expended. An alternative, however, may be available. Given that mismatches occur, at times, between the rate at which waste is produced and the rate that waste may be accommodated in the fish meal plant, the ability of the processor to accept and process seafood is adversely impacted. This situation of the waste stream disposal process becoming the overall bottleneck is obviously very undesirable from the processor’s view because not only is throughput reduced, but quality of both the finished seafood and fish meal products is often degraded as well. Furthermore, seafood processing that occurs at other than during peak fishery seasons often does not produce sufficient volumes of waste to efficiently operate the fish meal plants. Since the waste must still be accommodated, the fish meal plants are started up and run for very short periods of time and for quantities of waste far below their design capacity. Operating the plants under these conditions imposes very poor economics and a relatively high maintenance burden. In light of the circumstances discussed above, some of the processors who have fish meal plants have expressed cautious interest in an arrangement under which they might commit a base level of waste to a digester operation. This, for them, could address a number of the issues discussed above. It would, effectively, increase their fish meal plant capacity so that, under peak processing conditions, they would reduce their exposure to impacts on their operations from the limits of the fish meal plant. It would also provide them a viable option to not run their respective fish meal plants during off-peak processing periods. The digester operation also may benefit under such an arrangement in that the feedstock is produced steadily and is not subject to the huge swings typically seen in fish waste production. The value of such an arrangement with the processors is estimated at $15 to $25 per ton (f.o.b. waste generator) for the base waste volumes committed. It is assumed that the seafood processors would cover the transportation and handling costs. A digester operation also has the potential to provide the processors with a short-term “safety valve” that could accept large volumes of waste in the event that a fish meal plant were to suffer a loss in capacity during a peak processing period. This capability would be dependent on the digester operation having suitable short-term “surge volume” storage capability. It would seem that the imposition of higher tipping fees would be reasonable for additional wastes beyond that of the committed base, received under contingency conditions. 12 September 2000 Organic Waste Characterization Project Steigers Corporation The levels of base commitments of waste that would yield the maximum benefits to the parties from both economic and operational perspectives should be set in the course of negotiations and analysis. For the purposes of this report, the base quantity is pegged at 1,000 tons per month, year-round. Thus, potential annual revenue of about $240,000, would be available. Summary A summary of economics for the organic waste streams discussed above is provided in the following table. The transportation and handling costs are not included in this table because it is estimated that the cost to transport the waste to the landfill would be approximately equivalent to the cost to transport the waste to the digester. Organic Waste Type Cafeteria/Galley Household Organics WWTP Solids Miscellaneous Organics (including Fish Waste) Cellulose Seafood Processing Waste Generation [tons/year] 1,047 1,579 70 182 2,199 223,729 Available Waste [tons/year] 1,047 0 70 182 2,199 12,000 Annual Disposal Cost $70,000 NA $4,700 $16,700 $147,300 $240,000 VII. CLOSING Steigers Corporation would like to express its appreciation for the cooperation and assistance of the staff of City of Unalaska’s Department of Public Utilities, the Alaska Energy Authority, and the many other individuals in the agencies and the private sector who contributed to this project. 13 September 2000 Organic Waste Characterization Project Steigers Corporation VII. REFERENCES EPA (Environmental Protection Agency). 1996. Fact Sheet, Proposed Reissuance of a National Pollution Discharge Elimination System Permit to Dishcarge Pollutants Pursuant to the Provisions of the Clean Waster Act - City of Unalaska Department of Public Utilities, Application No. AK-004345-1. March 1. I l i u l i u k R i v e r400,000 m E401,000 m E399,000 m E398,000 m E397,000 m E396,000 m E5,970,000 m N 5,971,000 m N 5,972,000 m N 5,973,000 m N 5,974,000 m N 5,969,000 m N 5,968,000 m N T 72 S T 73 S T 72 S T 73 S R 118 W R 118 W 14 13 10 11 12 1 34 35 27 26 25 23 15 23 24 22 Captains Bay Road Bayview RoadBr o ad w ay Ro a d L ANDIN G S T RI P Airport Bea ch Ro adBa llyh oo Ro ad 13 114 301 241 628 209 362 125 805 15 42 131 144 80 406 252 237 307 309 82 1590 899 641 745 283 524 783 783 1 657 42 49 817 282 725 536 226 922 281 1650 741 1021 42 Icicle Seafoods Alyeska Seafoods UniSea Westward Seafoods Royal Aleutian Landfill Waste Water Treatment Plant 50000 Feet 1000 Barrow JuneauAttu Island Fort Yukon FairbanksNome Anchorage Unalaska A L A S K A PROJECT LOCATION Figure 1 UNALASKA / DUTCH HARBOR MAJOR WASTE SOURCES CITY OF UNALASKA ORGANIC WASTE CHARACTERIZATION PROJECT Prepared By S T E I G E R S C O R P O R A T I O N Map Source: U.S.G.S. quadrangle, provisional edition, Aerial Photos:1983, Map Edited1990 Unalaska (C-2) Alaska Zone 10, UTM Zone 3 Boat Ramp Gatehouse City Hall Unalaska Tanks City Dock Tanks End-of-Spit Dock A m a k n a k I s l a n d U N A L A S K A I S L A N D Dutch Harbor D u t c h H a r b o rI l i u l i u k B a yU n a l a s k a B a yU n a l a s k a L a k e Mount Ballyhoo M a r g a r e t B a y Obernoi Point Spithead TN GN MN 014.5 01.22 DUTCH HARBOR POWER PLANT Figure 2 Landfill Waste Summary, 1999 (Adjusted Categories)3173363691313082441812532172621531071561832213541611151442102062031371092102472513563402243703556483043012230 100 200 300 400 500 600 700 800 900 1000 1100 Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Month, 1999Weight [tons]Organic Cellulose Other Figure 3 Summary of WWTP Screened Solids, 1999 6.576.467.355.435.574.554.235.876.006.245.163.915.966.967.604.913.854.795.546.678.206.675.423.175.427.787.565.193.560 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec MonthWeight [tons]1998 1999 2000 Figure 4 Summary of Crab Waste, 1999 9093,2062,53324203601,460436629241400 500 1,000 1,500 2,000 2,500 3,000 3,500 Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Month, 1999Mass [tons] Figure 5 Summary of Fish Waste, 1999 11,82363,31212,1932,2861,9223381,68655,42540,08925,09219100 10,000 20,000 30,000 40,000 50,000 60,000 70,000 Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Month, 1999Mass [tons] DATE ORGANIC CRDBRD METAL PLASTIC NETS WOOD TIRES FISH W C & D MISC TOTAL 1999 (tons)(tons)(tons)(tons)(tons)(tons)(tons)(tons)(tons)(tons)(tons) Jan 374.80 121.59 29.08 78.06 21.93 34.62 3.29 1.96 18.37 684 Feb 386.61 157.09 14.40 129.09 17.07 25.86 3.45 10.40 22.00 766 Mar 427.17 178.47 17.59 126.29 13.11 42.49 5.24 9.28 21.68 841 Apr 144.87 274.11 42.98 186.87 33.98 79.52 5.24 6.56 66.32 840 May 350.84 91.43 85.38 88.09 70.81 69.41 20.07 14.97 18.21 809 Jun 278.24 74.48 79.41 64.74 17.03 40.52 0.00 9.53 18.70 583 Jul 207.87 85.11 122.38 61.32 105.45 58.82 9.44 4.04 20.43 19.77 695 Aug 269.1 154.67 159.75 73.78 22.38 55.5 11.85 24.22 28.54 18.72 819 Sep 225.13 153.81 116.49 72.8 282.61 52.605 85.58 22.93 34.41 24.7 1071 Oct 263.28 178.63 69.5 96.28 53.58 24.11 15.49 37.83 7.36 22.67 769 Nov 170.53 102.01 115.84 50.95 71.38 34.63 15.07 6.7 7.83 15.89 591 Dec 124.14 89.09 41.14 37.68 63.26 20.06 9.12 1.15 38.08 14.96 439 Totals 3,223 1,660 894 1,066 773 538 184 150 137 282 8,906 TABLE 1 SUMMARY OF LANDFILL WASTE BY CATEGORY "AS-RECEIVED," 1999 Note: Data for months January through June were converted from volume to weight using average daily densities. Data shown above are presented for original Landfill categories. Adjustments were made to the Organic category and are presented in other tables DATE ORGANIC (ORIGINAL)CELLULOSE METAL, PLASTIC, NETS, TIRES, AND C&D FISH WASTE WWTP SOLIDS MISC (WITHOUT WWTP SOLIDS)TOTAL 1999 (tons)(tons)(tons)(tons)(tons)(tons)(tons) Jan 374.80 156.21 132.36 1.96 5.96 12.41 684 Feb 386.61 182.95 164.00 10.40 6.96 15.04 766 Mar 427.17 220.96 162.24 9.28 7.60 14.08 841 Apr 144.87 353.62 269.06 6.56 4.91 61.41 840 May 350.84 160.85 264.35 14.97 3.85 14.37 809 Jun 278.24 115.00 161.18 9.53 4.79 13.91 583 Jul 207.87 143.93 319.02 4.04 5.54 14.23 695 Aug 269.10 210.17 296.30 24.22 6.67 12.05 819 Sep 225.13 206.42 591.89 22.93 8.20 16.50 1071 Oct 263.28 202.74 242.21 37.83 6.67 16.00 769 Nov 170.53 136.64 261.07 6.70 5.42 10.47 591 Dec 124.14 109.15 189.28 1.15 3.17 11.79 439 Total 3,223 2,199 3,053 150 70 212 8,906 DATE ADJUSTED ORGANIC CELLULOSE "OTHER"TOTAL 1999 (tons)(tons)(tons)(tons) Jan 317.13 156.21 210.36 684 Feb 336.32 182.95 246.70 766 Mar 369.29 220.96 251.07 841 Apr 130.98 353.62 355.82 840 May 308.25 160.85 340.11 809 Jun 243.86 115.00 223.78 583 Jul 181.07 143.93 369.63 695 Aug 252.90 210.17 355.44 819 Sep 216.86 206.42 647.79 1071 Oct 261.71 202.74 304.28 769 Nov 152.80 136.64 301.39 591 Dec 106.74 109.15 222.79 439 Total 2,878 2,199 3,829 8,906 TABLE 2 SUMMARY OF LANDFILL WASTE BY ADJUSTED CATEGORIES, 1999 Notes: The Organic category shown above is "as received." The Cardboard and Wood categories are combined into the new Cellulose category. Metal, Plastic, Nets, Tires, and C&D categories are combined. Fish Waste remains separate but is added to the Organic category below. WWTP Solids are removed from the Miscellaneous category, which is also adjusted accordingly. WWTP Solids are added to the Organic category below. Notes: The Adjusted Organic category shown above includes Fish Waste and WWTP Solids. A portion of the "as received" Organics were removed because some inorganics had originally been included. These inorganics were added to the Other category. The Other category also includes Metal, Plastic, Nets, Tires, C&D, and Miscellaneous. The Cellulose category includes Cardboard and Wood. Appendix A Monthly Landfill Data Sheets, 1999 Monthly Breakdown Sheet Jan.1999 Date Organic Crdbrd Misc.Metal Plastic Nets Wood Tires Fish W Totals Tons 1 0 2 69 27 2 0 22 0 0 0 0 120 16.34 3 0 4 42 6 1 2 6 0 3 0 0 60 9.87 5 73 22 2 28 14 6 17 1 0 163 22.38 6 97 77 11 14 17 3 14 0 0 233 48.89 7 188 65 3 10 23 7 12 3 0 311 50.13 8 81 61 11 8 19 2 20 1 0 203 37.96 9 58 11 0 5 11 17 8 0 2 112 15.38 10 0 11 146 33 3 3 20 11 10 0 0 226 44.25 12 140 37 2 8 27 7 10 6 0 237 22.83 13 181 30 11 8 28 12 17 0 0 287 43.65 14 86 14 2 5 12 7 2 0 0 128 14.92 15 208 38 7 8 33 10 19 4 0 327 38.83 16 98 28 0 5 20 10 15 0 0 176 17.53 17 0 18 0 19 264 53 13 14 43 23 33 0 0 443 60.51 20 198 35 5 19 36 16 8 0 0 317 48.38 21 80 30 1 17 15 3 12 0 0 158 20.16 22 42 17 0 0 7 0 0 5 0 71 12.45 23 8 53 17 1 55 3 10 0 0 147 21.36 24 0 25 82 24 1 9 17 9 13 0 0 155 27.6 26 15 4 6 5 3 0 0 3 0 36 6.6 27 42 12 6 2 7 1 2 0 0 72 9.78 28 102 29 6 5 32 0 2 0 0 176 25.94 29 170 52 7 12 37 2 3 0 11 294 45.11 30 106 45 1 10 40 5 5 0 0 212 22.86 31 0 Totals 2576 803 118 198 544 154 235 23 13 4664 683.71 Sundays - Landfill Closed Holidays - Landfill Closed Monthly Breakdown Sheet - Corrected from Volume to Weight Jan.1999 Date Organic Crdbrd Misc.Metal Plastic Nets Wood Tires Fish W Totals Tons 1 0 2 9.3955 3.677 0.27 0 2.9957 0 0 0 0 16.34 16.34 3 0 4 6.909 0.987 0.16 0.329 0.987 0 0.4935 0 0 9.87 9.87 5 10.023 3.021 0.27 3.844 1.9222 0.8238 2.3341 0.1373 0 22.38 22.38 6 20.353 16.16 2.31 2.938 3.5671 0.6295 2.9376 0 0 48.89 48.89 7 30.304 10.48 0.48 1.612 3.7074 1.1283 1.9343 0.4836 0 50.13 50.13 8 15.147 11.41 2.06 1.496 3.5529 0.374 3.7399 0.187 0 37.96 37.96 9 7.9646 1.511 0 0.687 1.5105 2.3345 1.0986 0 0.2746 15.38 15.38 10 0 11 28.586 6.461 0.59 0.587 3.9159 2.1538 1.958 0 0 44.25 44.25 12 13.486 3.564 0.19 0.771 2.6009 0.6743 0.9633 0.578 0 22.83 22.83 13 27.528 4.563 1.67 1.217 4.2585 1.8251 2.5855 0 0 43.65 43.65 14 10.024 1.632 0.23 0.583 1.3988 0.8159 0.2331 0 0 14.92 14.92 15 24.699 4.512 0.83 0.95 3.9186 1.1875 2.2562 0.475 0 38.83 38.83 16 9.761 2.789 0 0.498 1.992 0.996 1.494 0 0 17.53 17.53 17 0 18 0 19 36.06 7.239 1.78 1.912 5.8734 3.1416 4.5075 0 0 60.51 60.51 20 30.218 5.342 0.76 2.9 5.4943 2.4419 1.2209 0 0 48.38 48.38 21 10.208 3.828 0.13 2.169 1.9139 0.3828 1.5311 0 0 20.16 20.16 22 7.3648 2.981 0 0 1.2275 0 0 0.8768 0 12.45 12.45 23 1.1624 7.701 2.47 0.145 7.9918 0.4359 1.4531 0 0 21.36 21.36 24 0 25 14.601 4.274 0.18 1.603 3.0271 1.6026 2.3148 0 0 27.6 27.6 26 2.75 0.733 1.1 0.917 0.55 0 0 0.55 0 6.6 6.6 27 5.705 1.63 0.82 0.272 0.9508 0.1358 0.2717 0 0 9.78 9.78 28 15.033 4.274 0.88 0.737 4.7164 0 0.2948 0 0 25.94 25.94 29 26.084 7.979 1.07 1.841 5.6771 0.3069 0.4603 0 1.6878 45.11 45.11 30 11.43 4.852 0.11 1.078 4.3132 0.5392 0.5392 0 0 22.86 22.86 31 0 Totals 374.8 121.6 18.4 29.08 78.063 21.929 34.621 3.2876 1.9624 683.71 683.71 Monthly Breakdown Sheet Feb.1999 Date Organic Crdbrd Misc.Metal Plastic Nets Wood Tires Fish W Totals Tons 1 12 2 0 2 1 0 0 0 0 17 11.25 2 102 42 0 0 37 2 3 0 4 190 18.49 3 154 62 0 3 37 8 5 0 0 269 33.97 4 114 34 3 2 33 2 7 0 0 195 26.36 5 132 46 2 3 40 5 8 4 8 248 24.1 6 64 80 20 5 67 3 5 0 0 244 27.28 7 0 8 116 34 3 4 29 0 11 0 0 197 23.5 9 103 38 6 12 32 17 41 0 0 249 38.32 10 185 65 12 0 49 4 3 8 0 326 41.44 11 105 25 6 0 20 2 3 0 6 167 21.87 12 258 71 16 1 60 1 5 3 0 415 77.05 13 54 125 10 8 81 13 11 0 0 302 49.04 14 0 15 0 16 176 76 13 7 62 6 7 0 16 363 59.62 17 184 33 9 2 34 0 7 10 0 279 41.36 18 72 21 2 0 15 0 0 0 0 110 12.83 19 131 42 6 2 33 5 5 0 9 233 34.99 20 109 38 0 0 33 2 3 0 0 185 29.48 21 0 22 170 50 18 20 35 16 21 0 16 346 63.31 23 84 28 3 1 24 0 5 0 10 155 23.94 24 64 22 4 4 15 4 4 0 0 117 26.73 25 51 42 3 4 34 12 5 0 0 151 15.98 26 142 21 2 1 22 2 9 0 0 199 29.86 27 18 70 6 4 84 9 4 0 0 195 35.2 28 0 0 0 0 Totals 2600 1067 144 85 877 113 172 25 69 5152 765.97 Sundays - Landfill Closed Holidays - Landfill Closed Monthly Breakdown Sheet - Corrected from Volume to Weight Feb.1999 Date Organic Crdbrd Misc.Metal Plastic Nets Wood Tires Fish W Totals Tons 1 7.9412 1.324 0 1.324 0.6618 0 0 0 0 11.25 11.25 2 9.9262 4.087 0 0 3.6007 0.1946 0.2919 0 0.3893 18.49 18.49 3 19.448 7.83 0 0.379 4.6725 1.0103 0.6314 0 0 33.97 33.97 4 15.41 4.596 0.41 0.27 4.4609 0.2704 0.9463 0 0 26.36 26.36 5 12.827 4.47 0.19 0.292 3.8871 0.4859 0.7774 0.3887 0.7774 24.1 24.1 6 7.1554 8.944 2.24 0.559 7.4908 0.3354 0.559 0 0 27.28 27.28 7 0 8 13.838 4.056 0.36 0.477 3.4594 0 1.3122 0 0 23.5 23.5 9 15.851 5.848 0.92 1.847 4.9247 2.6162 6.3097 0 0 38.32 38.32 10 23.517 8.263 1.53 0 6.2287 0.5085 0.3813 1.0169 0 41.44 41.44 11 13.751 3.274 0.79 0 2.6192 0.2619 0.3929 0 0.7857 21.87 21.87 12 47.901 13.18 2.97 0.186 11.14 0.1857 0.9283 0.557 0 77.05 77.05 13 8.7687 20.3 1.62 1.299 13.153 2.111 1.7862 0 0 49.04 49.04 14 0 15 0 16 28.907 12.48 2.14 1.15 10.183 0.9855 1.1497 0 2.6279 59.62 59.62 17 27.277 4.892 1.33 0.296 5.0403 0 1.0377 1.4824 0 41.36 41.36 18 8.3978 2.449 0.23 0 1.7495 0 0 0 0 12.83 12.83 19 19.672 6.307 0.9 0.3 4.9557 0.7509 0.7509 0 1.3515 34.99 34.99 20 17.369 6.055 0 0 5.2586 0.3187 0.4781 0 0 29.48 29.48 21 0 22 31.106 9.149 3.29 3.66 6.4042 2.9276 3.8425 0 2.9276 63.31 63.31 23 12.974 4.325 0.46 0.154 3.7068 0 0.7723 0 1.5445 23.94 23.94 24 14.622 5.026 0.91 0.914 3.4269 0.9138 0.9138 0 0 26.73 26.73 25 5.3972 4.445 0.32 0.423 3.5981 1.2699 0.5291 0 0 15.98 15.98 26 21.307 3.151 0.3 0.15 3.3011 0.3001 1.3505 0 0 29.86 29.86 27 3.2492 12.64 1.08 0.722 15.163 1.6246 0.7221 0 0 35.2 35.2 28 0 0 0 0 Totals 386.61 157.1 22 14.4 129.09 17.071 25.863 3.4451 10.404 765.97 765.97 Monthly Breakdown Sheet Mar.1999 Date Organic Crdbrd Misc.Metal Plastic Nets Wood Tires Fish W Totals Tons 1 219 43 4 1 28 2 31 0 12 340 62.71 2 164 47 0 0 35 0 1 0 0 247 49.93 3 200 65 4 5 63 2 9 0 16 364 41.51 4 98 63 7 10 32 0 5 0 0 215 24.3 5 129 55 2 2 34 3 5 0 5 235 34.01 6 10 59 11 5 71 7 6 0 0 169 17.18 7 0 8 179 37 7 15 37 0 5 10 0 290 48.48 9 138 45 0 14 31 6 7 10 0 251 56.96 10 101 36 8 3 18 0 21 8 0 195 26.4 11 0 0 2 1 1 0 2 0 0 6 1.01 12 69 25 5 8 20 7 75 0 0 209 30.38 13 168 75 4 6 54 3 5 0 0 315 50.37 14 0 15 112 47 0 8 33 11 15 0 8 234 25.21 16 75 17 0 2 22 0 10 0 0 126 14.83 17 37 22 1 0 7 0 2 0 0 69 9.3 18 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 19 183 50 13 1 37 5 14 0 0 303 51.12 20 44 71 8 0 48 0 4 0 0 175 29.2 21 0 22 35 10 0 0 5 0 0 0 0 50 8.96 23 30 11 11 0 8 1 2 0 0 63 9.63 24 152 29 1 4 28 7 6 1 3 231 50.74 25 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 26 52 29 9 1 15 3 4 0 6 119 23.37 27 103 49 7 6 17 10 11 0 0 203 41.08 28 0 29 121 84 8 5 40 5 16 0 3 282 51.29 30 123 55 11 9 31 2 10 0 3 244 38.76 31 46 100 15 4 98 6 7 0 5 281 44.59 Totals 2588 1124 138 110 813 80 273 29 61 5216 841.32 Sundays - Landfill Closed Holidays - Landfill Closed Monthly Breakdown Sheet - Corrected from Volume to Weight Mar.1999 Date Organic Crdbrd Misc.Metal Plastic Nets Wood Tires Fish W Totals Tons 1 40.393 7.931 0.74 0.184 5.1644 0.3689 5.7177 0 2.2133 62.71 62.71 2 33.152 9.501 0 0 7.0751 0 0.2021 0 0 49.93 49.93 3 22.808 7.413 0.46 0.57 7.1844 0.2281 1.0263 0 1.8246 41.51 41.51 4 11.076 7.12 0.79 1.13 3.6167 0 0.5651 0 0 24.3 24.3 5 18.669 7.96 0.29 0.289 4.9206 0.4342 0.7236 0 0.7236 34.01 34.01 6 1.0166 5.998 1.12 0.508 7.2176 0.7116 0.6099 0 0 17.18 17.18 7 0 8 29.924 6.185 1.17 2.508 6.1854 0 0.8359 1.6717 0 48.48 48.48 9 31.317 10.21 0 3.177 7.0349 1.3616 1.5885 2.2693 0 56.96 56.96 10 13.674 4.874 1.08 0.406 2.4369 0 2.8431 1.0831 0 26.4 26.4 11 0 0 0.34 0.168 0.1683 0 0.3367 0 0 1.01 1.01 12 10.03 3.634 0.73 1.163 2.9072 1.0175 10.902 0 0 30.38 30.38 13 26.864 11.99 0.64 0.959 8.6349 0.4797 0.7995 0 0 50.37 50.37 14 0 15 12.066 5.064 0 0.862 3.5553 1.1851 1.616 0 0.8619 25.21 25.21 16 8.8274 2.001 0 0.235 2.5894 0 1.177 0 0 14.83 14.83 17 4.987 2.965 0.13 0 0.9435 0 0.2696 0 0 9.3 9.3 18 0 0 19 30.874 8.436 2.19 0.169 6.2424 0.8436 2.362 0 0 51.12 51.12 20 7.3417 11.85 1.33 0 8.0091 0 0.6674 0 0 29.2 29.2 21 0 22 6.272 1.792 0 0 0.896 0 0 0 0 8.96 8.96 23 4.5857 1.681 1.68 0 1.2229 0.1529 0.3057 0 0 9.63 9.63 24 33.387 6.37 0.22 0.879 6.1503 1.5376 1.3179 0.2197 0.659 50.74 50.74 25 0 0 26 10.212 5.695 1.77 0.196 2.9458 0.5892 0.7855 0 1.1783 23.37 23.37 27 20.844 9.916 1.42 1.214 3.4402 2.0236 2.226 0 0 41.08 41.08 28 0 29 22.007 15.28 1.46 0.909 7.2752 0.9094 2.9101 0 0.5456 51.29 51.29 30 19.539 8.737 1.75 1.43 4.9244 0.3177 1.5885 0 0.4766 38.76 38.76 31 7.2994 15.87 2.38 0.635 15.551 0.9521 1.1108 0 0.7934 44.59 44.59 Totals 427.17 178.5 21.7 17.59 126.29 13.113 42.487 5.2438 9.2763 841.32 841.32 Monthly Breakdown Sheet April 1999 Date Organic Crdbrd Misc.Metal Plastic Nets Wood Tires Fish W Totals Tons 1 37 73 11 0 83 6 15 1 0 226 42.97 2 24 89 12 9 65 8 17 0 0 224 37.46 3 17 58 4 4 38 3 7 3 0 134 21.54 4 0 5 14 48 11 7 37 0 16 2 0 135 28.33 6 38 79 11 10 59 3 39 0 0 239 38.66 7 18 44 2 18 31 3 3 0 0 119 26.02 8 31 90 22 3 55 7 18 0 4 230 31.95 9 38 83 65 10 70 5 64 1 0 336 57.74 10 19 35 15 16 13 5 3 4 0 110 14.23 11 0 12 45 34 9 2 23 5 10 2 0 130 34.76 13 63 78 16 13 45 7 17 1 3 243 44.82 14 50 93 17 13 57 12 7 0 0 249 37.49 15 32 48 15 11 36 3 34 1 0 180 28.62 16 17 17 5 17 17 10 15 0 1 99 31.03 17 57 41 7 6 23 7 1 1 0 143 35.29 18 0 19 32 96 17 5 83 10 43 4 5 295 59.13 20 31 100 30 11 69 15 34 0 3 293 36.78 21 45 55 18 7 33 4 21 5 2 190 39.75 22 7 34 9 9 15 7 21 0 0 102 20.01 23 11 33 6 5 13 1 3 0 1 73 18.52 24 38 86 15 4 62 4 13 0 3 225 25.71 25 0 26 21 60 15 11 40 53 10 2 1 213 29.59 27 35 36 20 4 26 1 4 0 2 128 22.02 28 21 49 12 5 26 2 10 0 2 127 21.88 29 22 62 20 15 35 5 13 0 2 174 23.74 30 26 59 5 18 20 11 10 1 8 158 32.39 31 0 Totals 789 1580 389 233 1074 197 448 28 37 4775 840.43 Sundays - Landfill Closed Holidays - Landfill Closed Monthly Breakdown Sheet - Corrected from Volume to Weight April 1999 Date Organic Crdbrd Misc.Metal Plastic Nets Wood Tires Fish W Totals Tons 1 7.0349 13.88 2.09 0 15.781 1.1408 2.852 0.1901 0 42.97 42.97 2 4.0136 14.88 2.01 1.505 10.87 1.3379 2.8429 0 0 37.46 37.46 3 2.7327 9.323 0.64 0.643 6.1084 0.4822 1.1252 0.4822 0 21.54 21.54 4 0 5 2.9379 10.07 2.31 1.469 7.7645 0 3.3576 0.4197 0 28.33 28.33 6 6.1468 12.78 1.78 1.618 9.5437 0.4853 6.3085 0 0 38.66 38.66 7 3.9358 9.621 0.44 3.936 6.7783 0.656 0.656 0 0 26.02 26.02 8 4.3063 12.5 3.06 0.417 7.6402 0.9724 2.5004 0 0.5557 31.95 31.95 9 6.5301 14.26 11.2 1.718 12.029 0.8592 10.998 0.1718 0 57.74 57.74 10 2.4579 4.528 1.94 2.07 1.6817 0.6468 0.3881 0.5175 0 14.23 14.23 11 0 12 12.032 9.091 2.41 0.535 6.1498 1.3369 2.6738 0.5348 0 34.76 34.76 13 11.62 14.39 2.95 2.398 8.3 1.2911 3.1356 0.1844 0.5533 44.82 44.82 14 7.5281 14 2.56 1.957 8.582 1.8067 1.0539 0 0 37.49 37.49 15 5.088 7.632 2.39 1.749 5.724 0.477 5.406 0.159 0 28.62 28.62 16 5.3284 5.328 1.57 5.328 5.3284 3.1343 4.7015 0 0.3134 31.03 31.03 17 14.067 10.12 1.73 1.481 5.676 1.7275 0.2468 0.2468 0 35.29 35.29 18 0 19 6.4141 19.24 3.41 1.002 16.637 2.0044 8.6189 0.8018 1.0022 59.13 59.13 20 3.8914 12.55 3.77 1.381 8.6615 1.8829 4.268 0 0.3766 36.78 36.78 21 9.4145 11.51 3.77 1.464 6.9039 0.8368 4.3934 1.0461 0.4184 39.75 39.75 22 1.3732 6.67 1.77 1.766 2.9426 1.3732 4.1197 0 0 20.01 20.01 23 2.7907 8.372 1.52 1.268 3.2981 0.2537 0.7611 0 0.2537 18.52 18.52 24 4.3421 9.827 1.71 0.457 7.0845 0.4571 1.4855 0 0.3428 25.71 25.71 25 0 26 2.9173 8.335 2.08 1.528 5.5568 7.3628 1.3892 0.2778 0.1389 29.59 29.59 27 6.0211 6.193 3.44 0.688 4.4728 0.172 0.6881 0 0.3441 22.02 22.02 28 3.618 8.442 2.07 0.861 4.4794 0.3446 1.7228 0 0.3446 21.88 21.88 29 3.0016 8.459 2.73 2.047 4.7753 0.6822 1.7737 0 0.2729 23.74 23.74 30 5.33 12.1 1.03 3.69 4.1 2.255 2.05 0.205 1.64 32.39 32.39 31 0 Totals 144.87 274.1 66.3 42.98 186.87 33.979 79.517 5.237 6.5566 840.43 840.43 Monthly Breakdown Sheet May 1999 Date Organic Crdbrd Misc.Metal Plastic Nets Wood Tires Fish W Totals Tons 1 38 22 5 0 16 2 3 0 0 86 14.91 2 0 3 0 4 176 31 5 13 34 84 33 0 0 376 83.4 5 99 37 11 10 28 4 22 0 0 211 25.47 6 69 16 5 41 12 15 18 3 0 179 38.63 7 90 29 5 28 28 0 35 0 0 215 45.18 8 12 4 0 30 4 0 0 0 0 50 15.17 9 0 10 0 11 72 29 3 21 45 0 22 0 0 192 35.68 12 11 2 2 4 8 0 19 0 12 58 12.46 13 49 13 0 26 13 6 18 2 0 127 22.21 14 135 51 0 0 42 0 0 8 0 236 26.85 15 76 14 3 22 19 17 18 8 17 194 43.48 16 0 17 0 18 254 58 2 18 61 5 38 0 6 442 78.67 19 10 15 5 21 5 0 12 2 4 74 27.81 20 16 2 5 15 2 0 0 0 6 46 20.18 21 104 27 8 15 22 4 15 9 0 204 27.3 22 100 23 2 14 29 0 32 0 5 205 34.61 23 0 24 0 25 249 53 11 5 41 124 5 20 0 508 122.53 26 50 4 4 32 11 24 8 20 0 153 73.36 27 55 25 2 26 13 0 30 0 15 166 28.01 28 83 21 1 0 20 3 19 0 0 147 20.05 29 65 20 2 2 15 0 8 0 0 112 13.25 30 0 31 0 Totals 1813 496 81 343 468 288 355 72 65 3981 809.21 Sundays - Landfill Closed Holidays - Landfill Closed Monthly Breakdown Sheet - Corrected from Volume to Weight May 1999 Date Organic Crdbrd Misc.Metal Plastic Nets Wood Tires Fish W Totals Tons 1 6.5881 3.814 0.87 0 2.774 0.3467 0.5201 0 0 14.91 14.91 2 0 3 0 4 39.038 6.876 1.11 2.884 7.5415 18.632 7.3197 0 0 83.4 83.4 5 11.95 4.466 1.33 1.207 3.3799 0.4828 2.6556 0 0 25.47 25.47 6 14.891 3.453 1.08 8.848 2.5897 3.2372 3.8846 0.6474 0 38.63 38.63 7 18.913 6.094 1.05 5.884 5.8839 0 7.3549 0 0 45.18 45.18 8 3.6408 1.214 0 9.102 1.2136 0 0 0 0 15.17 15.17 9 0 10 0 11 13.38 5.389 0.56 3.903 8.3625 0 4.0883 0 0 35.68 35.68 12 2.3631 0.43 0.43 0.859 1.7186 0 4.0817 0 2.5779 12.46 12.46 13 8.5692 2.273 0 4.547 2.2735 1.0493 3.1479 0.3498 0 22.21 22.21 14 15.359 5.802 0 0 4.7784 0 0 0.9102 0 26.85 26.85 15 17.033 3.138 0.67 4.931 4.2584 3.8101 4.0342 1.793 3.8101 43.48 43.48 16 0 17 0 18 45.209 10.32 0.36 3.204 10.857 0.8899 6.7635 0 1.0679 78.67 78.67 19 3.7581 5.637 1.88 7.892 1.8791 0 4.5097 0.7516 1.5032 27.81 27.81 20 7.0191 0.877 2.19 6.58 0.8774 0 0 0 2.6322 20.18 20.18 21 13.918 3.613 1.07 2.007 2.9441 0.5353 2.0074 1.2044 0 27.3 27.3 22 16.883 3.883 0.34 2.364 4.896 0 5.4025 0 0.8441 34.61 34.61 23 0 24 0 25 60.059 12.78 2.65 1.206 9.8892 29.909 1.206 4.824 0 122.53 122.53 26 23.974 1.918 1.92 15.34 5.2742 11.507 3.8358 9.5895 0 73.36 73.36 27 9.2804 4.218 0.34 4.387 2.1936 0 5.062 0 2.531 28.01 28.01 28 11.321 2.864 0.14 0 2.7279 0.4092 2.5915 0 0 20.05 20.05 29 7.6897 2.366 0.24 0.237 1.7746 0 0.9464 0 0 13.25 13.25 30 0 31 0 Totals 350.84 91.43 18.2 85.38 88.087 70.809 69.412 20.07 14.967 809.21 809.21 Monthly Breakdown Sheet June 1999 Date Organic Crdbrd Misc.Metal Plastic Nets Wood Tires Fish W Totals Tons 1 265 49 5 14 34 6 45 0 0 418 59.06 2 97 34 3 12 30 1 4 0 20 201 31.18 3 59 19 7 4 9 9 13 0 17 137 20.06 4 43 9 9 18 18 0 11 0 0 108 29.13 5 18 2 0 2 2 0 2 0 0 26 4.26 6 0 7 0 8 98 18 10 31 20 7 14 0 0 198 40.7 9 67 20 0 18 17 8 2 0 0 132 16.78 10 14 2 1 33 2 0 2 0 0 54 20.86 11 56 75 4 38 11 5 6 0 2 197 60.35 12 30 12 6 62 10 18 2 0 7 147 48.99 13 0 14 0 15 202 39 7 6 37 12 18 0 6 327 44.96 16 176 21 15 7 22 2 13 0 0 256 35.71 17 26 3 7 1 3 0 0 0 0 40 8.17 18 77 17 1 38 17 0 24 0 0 174 26.94 19 35 5 0 4 5 0 13 0 0 62 5.81 20 0 21 0 22 126 19 9 0 30 10 1 0 0 195 30.37 23 47 7 3 15 7 2 8 0 0 89 13.12 24 54 7 2 12 7 0 26 0 0 108 15.39 25 70 16 1 13 26 0 3 0 0 129 22.68 26 16 2 0 0 42 0 2 0 1 63 10.63 27 0 28 0 29 107 14 8 5 24 2 14 0 0 174 27.2 30 12 2 1 4 5 3 22 0 0 49 10.29 0 Totals 1695 392 99 337 378 85 245 0 53 3284 582.64 Sundays - Landfill Closed Holidays - Landfill Closed Monthly Breakdown Sheet - Corrected from Volume to Weight June 1999 Date Organic Crdbrd Misc.Metal Plastic Nets Wood Tires Fish W Totals Tons 1 37.442 6.923 0.71 1.978 4.8039 0.8478 6.3581 0 0 59.06 59.06 2 15.047 5.274 0.47 1.861 4.6537 0.1551 0.6205 0 3.1025 31.18 31.18 3 8.639 2.782 1.02 0.586 1.3178 1.3178 1.9035 0 2.4892 20.06 20.06 4 11.598 2.428 2.43 4.855 4.855 0 2.9669 0 0 29.13 29.13 5 2.9492 0.328 0 0.328 0.3277 0 0.3277 0 0 4.26 4.26 6 0 7 0 8 20.144 3.7 2.06 6.372 4.1111 1.4389 2.8778 0 0 40.7 40.7 9 8.5171 2.542 0 2.288 2.1611 1.017 0.2542 0 0 16.78 16.78 10 5.4081 0.773 0.39 12.75 0.7726 0 0.7726 0 0 20.86 20.86 11 17.155 22.98 1.23 11.64 3.3698 1.5317 1.8381 0 0.6127 60.35 60.35 12 9.998 3.999 2 20.66 3.3327 5.9988 0.6665 0 2.3329 48.99 48.99 13 0 14 0 15 27.773 5.362 0.96 0.825 5.0872 1.6499 2.4749 0 0.825 44.96 44.96 16 24.551 2.929 2.09 0.976 3.0688 0.279 1.8134 0 0 35.71 35.71 17 5.3105 0.613 1.43 0.204 0.6128 0 0 0 0 8.17 8.17 18 11.922 2.632 0.15 5.883 2.6321 0 3.7159 0 0 26.94 26.94 19 3.2798 0.469 0 0.375 0.4685 0 1.2182 0 0 5.81 5.81 20 0 21 0 22 19.624 2.959 1.4 0 4.6723 1.5574 0.1557 0 0 30.37 30.37 23 6.9285 1.032 0.44 2.211 1.0319 0.2948 1.1793 0 0 13.12 13.12 24 7.695 0.998 0.29 1.71 0.9975 0 3.705 0 0 15.39 15.39 25 12.307 2.813 0.18 2.286 4.5712 0 0.5274 0 0 22.68 22.68 26 2.6997 0.337 0 0 7.0867 0 0.3375 0 0.1687 10.63 10.63 27 0 28 0 29 16.726 2.189 1.25 0.782 3.7517 0.3126 2.1885 0 0 27.2 27.2 30 2.52 0.42 0.21 0.84 1.05 0.63 4.62 0 0 10.29 10.29 0 Totals 278.24 74.48 18.7 79.41 64.736 17.031 40.522 0 9.5309 582.64 582.64 Monthly Breakdown Sheet July 1999 Date Organic Crdbrd Metal Plastic Nets Wood Tires Fish W C & D Misc.Tons Bales 1 16.95 1.92 2.47 2.14 2.07 1.78 0.21 0.92 0.34 0.6 29.40 23 2 20.4 4.76 6.02 7.43 0.52 4.46 0.01 0.31 0.18 4.06 48.15 18 3 3.52 1.67 0.88 0.54 0.11 3.58 0 0 0.51 0.07 10.88 5 4 0 5 0 6 9.9 1.58 3.53 4.64 0.13 1.03 0.57 0.93 2.55 0.37 25.23 24 7 23.54 7.13 0.3 3.98 0.38 0.77 0 0 0.35 0.1 36.55 16 8 5.62 3.59 0.33 0.71 0.06 2.58 0 0 0.19 0.83 13.91 10 9 4.09 2 0.37 0.66 0 1.55 0 0 3.24 0.05 11.96 0 10 5.63 0.87 0 0.51 0 2.14 0 0 1.08 0 10.23 5 11 0 12 0 13 10.68 3.62 0.8 1.08 0.38 3.56 0.06 0.27 1.51 1.66 23.62 14 14 1.51 0.55 15.97 0.69 26.23 0 5.2 0 0.84 0 50.99 0 15 4.47 1.96 10.08 0.7 23.64 4.75 0 0.05 1.07 0.09 46.81 0 16 3.92 2.96 15.16 1.67 7.21 0.31 0.24 0 0.98 0.16 32.61 8 17 9.53 1.67 0.75 1.07 0.26 1.21 0 0.15 0 1.38 16.02 5 18 0 19 0 20 27 6.63 12.25 2.25 0.19 2.99 1.62 0.12 0.88 0.86 54.79 21 21 1.26 1.32 11.16 1.98 3.01 1.19 1.33 0 0 3.43 24.68 4 22 2.41 0.19 1.16 0.17 0.35 0.17 0 0.01 0.3 0.35 5.11 3 23 1.82 2.37 2.5 0.79 0.6 1.72 0 0.02 0 0.3 10.12 5 24 0.54 10.25 0 11.94 0 0.22 0 0 0.95 0.18 24.08 4 25 0 26 0 27 11.87 10.74 4.96 5.61 13.34 3.8 0.06 0.37 1.45 2.49 54.69 22 28 31.38 8.14 5.91 7.49 22.3 6.77 0 0.71 2.02 1.67 86.39 34 29 7.45 4.5 5.67 2.1 0.14 8.73 0 0.18 0.9 0.39 30.06 6 30 3.81 2.58 21.88 2.07 4.39 2.72 0 0 0.81 0.38 38.64 12 31 0.57 4.11 0.23 1.1 0.14 2.79 0.14 0 0.28 0.35 9.71 7 Totals 207.87 85.11 122.4 61.32 105.45 58.82 9.44 4.04 20.43 19.77 694.63 246 Sundays - Landfill Closed Holidays - Landfill Closed Monthly Breakdown Sheet Aug. 1999 Date Organic Crdbrd Metal Plastic Nets Wood Tires Fish W C & D Misc.Tons Bales Loads 1 0.00 2 3.04 5.13 4.22 6.23 0.48 4.19 0 0 0.45 0.06 23.80 13 10 3 32.72 9.95 0.87 6.1 1.64 2.21 0 0.26 0 0.99 54.74 27 16 4 7.21 6.94 10.07 1.36 1.29 2.1 0 0 0.4 1.3 30.67 14 15 5 3.95 1.53 5.15 0.72 0 0.32 0.75 0 0.76 0 13.18 5 8 6 29.62 7.38 2.74 2.77 1.62 5.61 0.36 0.28 0 1.1 51.48 16 16 7 0 0.08 1.39 0 0 0 0 0 0 1.01 2.48 0 6 8 0.00 9 23.98 6.87 0.52 6.55 0.45 2.35 0 0 1.64 1.37 43.73 24 11 10 9.75 5.22 8.92 1.77 0.89 3.79 2.44 0 6.1 1.78 40.66 18 19 11 12.74 6.65 1.71 1.79 0.37 2.11 0 0 1.48 1.46 28.31 18 9 12 8.65 3.97 2 1.49 0 0.36 0 0 0 0.07 16.54 11 7 13 1.99 0.83 0.39 0.5 0 2.77 0 0 0.59 0.53 7.60 4 5 14 3.83 3.1 1 1.27 0 0 0 0 0 0.42 9.62 6 4 15 0.00 16 26.17 7.15 0.55 2.21 0.25 1.03 0 0 0 0.21 37.57 11 9 17 7.18 11.91 14.33 6.35 1.66 1.29 0 0 0 1.19 43.91 22 20 18 1.66 3.28 33.54 1.93 0.42 2.88 3.55 2.71 1.28 0.65 51.90 7 24 19 1.64 3.55 34.04 5.02 1.13 3.84 0 0.37 9.6 0 59.19 11 18 20 9.31 9.3 0.21 4.24 0.72 1.44 0.8 1.94 0 0.56 28.52 13 10 21 0 0.09 2.77 0.05 0.89 0 0 0 1.41 0.06 5.27 0 7 22 0.00 23 13.26 11.51 0.77 4.54 0.34 2.19 0 1.26 0.5 0.2 34.57 18 12 24 7.62 4.37 6.82 3.63 4.02 6.88 2.33 6.54 0.98 1.75 44.94 17 18 25 11.33 7.6 5.92 2.15 0 0.74 0 1.95 0 0.03 29.72 17 12 26 13.78 4.69 7.84 2.79 0 0.68 0 4.13 0 0.38 34.29 17 10 27 4.05 5.71 6.89 1.97 1.03 4.84 1.62 0 3.06 2.44 31.61 13 19 28 1.77 3 2.28 1.6 0.21 0.42 0 0 0 0.59 9.87 8 4 29 0.00 30 21.03 9.97 0.06 3.3 2.47 0.81 0 3.86 0 0.57 42.07 20 8 31 12.82 14.89 4.75 3.45 2.5 2.65 0 0.92 0.29 0 42.27 18 15 Totals 269.1 154.67 159.8 73.78 22.38 55.5 11.85 24.22 28.54 18.72 818.51 348 312 Sundays - Landfill Closed Holidays - Landfill Closed Monthly Breakdown Sheet Sept.1999 Date Organic Crdbrd Metal Plastic Nets Wood Tires Fish W C & D Misc.Tons Bales Loads 1 13.24 9.59 0.34 4.14 0 1.1 0 1.36 0 0.4 30.17 22 9 2 12.48 9.55 3.66 4.03 6.64 3.2 0.55 0.12 0 0.37 40.60 20 14 3 6.15 4.13 7.6 1.54 0.51 2.18 0.21 0 0 1.41 23.73 9 14 4 6.66 5.6 0.85 2.65 0.99 1.72 0.49 0 0 1.2 20.16 18 10 5 0.00 6 0.00 7 8.76 10.27 4.64 3.08 0 0.65 0 3.37 0.26 1.32 32.35 20 18 8 9.59 2.98 10.97 1.23 0.11 0.51 0 0.45 0 0.14 25.98 5 11 9 1.08 0.51 0.72 0.11 0.39 0 0 3.01 0.09 0.24 6.15 0 7 10 3.14 3.17 3.92 1.07 6.25 2.66 0 0 0 0.68 20.89 10 14 11 5.97 2.02 0.48 1.93 0.43 11.31 0 0.54 0 0.55 23.23 10 9 12 0.00 13 27.08 14.85 3.82 5.64 53.23 0.42 0 1.47 0 0.63 107.14 29 19 14 19.62 10.62 0 3.03 0.74 1.55 0 0.39 0 7.53 43.48 19 14 15 13.27 8.11 8.47 3.05 0.49 0.13 0 0.82 0 0.39 34.73 17 11 16 3.9 4.32 5.85 1.24 7.17 0.98 0 3.54 0 1.04 28.04 6 18 17 6.73 6.01 3.47 3.69 0 1.39 0 0.92 0 0.62 22.83 7 16 18 1.51 2.91 0.39 2.26 0 0.45 0 0 0 1.48 9.00 8 5 19 0.00 20 11.25 9.02 0.36 2.31 7.03 0.98 0 0 0 0.53 31.48 17 10 21 7.64 3.61 1.59 1.77 0 0.49 0 0.1 0 0.05 15.25 5 7 22 6.17 7.57 2.47 2.98 3.45 0.87 40.65 0 17.17 0.21 81.54 14 18 23 1.38 2.03 8.5 0.95 36.51 5.93 43.68 3.15 15.82 1.7 119.65 7 35 24 7.31 4.64 4.54 5.53 94.15 2.26 0 0.41 0 1.66 120.50 13 27 25 1.18 1.18 5.7 1.64 0 0.84 0 0 0.27 0 10.81 3 9 26 0.00 27 22.7 10.79 11.85 8.48 53.27 1.31 0 1.51 0.31 1.13 111.35 30 21 28 10.95 6.28 22.41 2.54 10.21 10.55 0 0 0 1.16 64.10 12 21 29 4.35 4.9 3.89 3.31 0 0.64 0 0.53 0.07 0.12 17.81 10 10 30 13.02 9.15 0 4.6 1.04 0.49 0 1.24 0.42 0.14 30.10 19 9 0.00 Totals 225.13 153.81 116.5 72.8 282.6 52.61 85.58 22.93 34.41 24.7 1071.07 330 356 Sundays - Landfill Closed Holidays - Landfill Closed Monthly Breakdown Sheet Oct.1999 Date Organic Crdbrd Metal Plastic Nets Wood Tires Fish W C & D Misc.Tons Bales Loads 1 4.07 4.66 0.71 3.28 0.53 2.42 0 0 0 3.13 18.80 13 10 2 6.74 11.04 1.08 6.78 1.35 1.87 0.17 0.92 0 1.35 31.30 23 7 3 0.00 4 12.95 7.69 0.74 4.71 1.23 0 0 1.2 0.18 0.64 29.34 12 10 5 9.93 8.26 2.04 5.45 0.56 1.36 0 0.88 0.21 0.65 29.34 19 15 6 3.42 2.85 0.68 1.17 0.23 0.23 0 0 0.66 0.22 9.46 7 4 7 11.75 5.37 4.85 2.21 0.22 1.67 0.48 0 0 0.93 27.48 16 9 8 27.7 6.45 0 7.32 0 0 0.62 3.43 0 0.61 46.13 17 11 9 1.01 1.25 0 0.75 1.25 0.75 0 2.25 0.8 1 9.06 4 4 10 0.00 11 15.7 5.28 0.26 1.91 3.16 0.62 1.66 0.3 0 0 28.89 10 8 12 1.12 0.46 4.16 0.25 0.16 2.49 0 1.17 0.45 2.63 12.89 3 12 13 27.11 15.44 4.08 6.09 2.56 1.11 2.3 2.11 0 0 60.80 29 15 14 16.79 11.07 3.82 4.43 4.23 0.14 0 1.61 2.02 0.57 44.68 25 18 15 9.18 5.51 3.6 2.93 2.63 4.7 0 2.35 0 2.18 33.08 13 15 16 0 0 0 0.03 1.72 0.2 0 0 0 0 1.95 0 2 17 0.00 18 19.85 10.86 0.29 4.99 3.38 0.24 0 8.25 0 0.18 48.04 23 9 19 4.74 6.53 19.7 3.35 3.24 3.83 0 0.66 0 1.31 43.36 15 17 20 12.1 7.42 7.34 2.46 3.3 0.19 0 0 0 0.81 33.62 19 14 21 1.93 1.64 0 0.64 2.23 0.21 0 1.34 0 0 7.99 4 4 22 12.79 9.31 0 3.05 0.42 0.21 0 2.47 1.06 0.72 30.03 19 12 23 4.25 7.05 1.47 3.81 3.15 0.87 5.65 2.41 0 1.03 29.69 14 9 24 0.00 25 29.08 9.24 0.52 3.82 6.11 0.29 0.84 5.02 1.89 0.81 57.62 19 17 26 4.02 3.08 1.93 0.93 0.11 0 0 0 0 0 10.07 7 4 27 5 2.92 0 1.4 0.71 0 0 1.46 0 1.27 12.76 7 3 28 8.83 24.53 5.59 12.79 3.29 0.71 0 0 0 0.73 56.47 20 24 29 11.66 9.65 1 11.04 7.43 0 3.77 0 0.09 1.55 46.19 20 14 30 1.56 1.07 5.64 0.69 0.38 0 0 0 0 0.35 9.69 4 5 31 0.00 Totals 263.28 178.63 69.5 96.28 53.58 24.11 15.49 37.83 7.36 22.67 768.73 362 272 Sundays - Landfill Closed Holidays - Landfill Closed Monthly Breakdown Sheet Nov.1999 Date Organic Crdbrd Metal Plastic Nets Wood Tires Fish W C & D Misc.Tons Bales Loads 1 0.00 2 8.35 5.32 0 2.79 0.3 5.35 0 2.13 3.51 0.75 28.50 14 12 3 12.19 5.45 1.47 2.68 1.29 0.77 0 0.25 0 1.46 25.56 12 9 4 31.44 6.71 1.83 3.11 0 7.45 0.56 0.09 1.24 0.18 52.61 13 18 5 18.05 11.52 1.43 6.19 0.44 0.65 0 1.8 0 0 40.08 22 14 6 9.58 6.82 1 1.49 0.26 0 0 0 0 0 19.15 13 5 7 0.00 8 0.00 9 18.9 12.07 8.94 4.98 1.3 3.67 0 0 0 1.08 50.94 29 15 10 6.55 5.13 2.37 1.52 14.11 0.35 0 0.45 0.77 0 31.25 11 11 11 0.00 12 11.21 2.34 2.89 0.95 0.59 3.43 2.86 0 0.28 0.63 25.18 3 10 13 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1.2 0 0.03 1.23 2 1 14 0.00 15 0.00 16 7.32 6.01 47.19 1.99 29.26 4.49 11.07 0 0 1.26 108.59 12 23 17 15.58 5.44 31.92 2.53 15.01 0.95 0 0 1.01 0.76 73.20 12 15 18 0 0 2.6 0 0 0 0 0 0.77 0.33 3.69 0 4 19 0.98 1.38 4.59 0.98 0 0 0 0 0 0.59 8.52 5 2 20 0 0 0.56 0.28 1.35 0.49 0 0 0 0 2.67 0 3 21 0.00 22 0.00 23 9.57 12.84 4.23 6.36 5.65 2.87 0.42 0.44 0 3.09 45.48 32 18 24 10.15 9.39 3.14 7.98 1.32 2.34 0.16 0.13 0.25 3.19 38.06 20 15 25 0.00 26 3.01 3.55 1.39 2.88 0 1.08 0 0 0 1.28 13.19 8 7 27 1.44 2.55 0.19 1.26 0.5 0.31 0 0 0 0.59 6.83 7 4 28 0.00 29 0.00 30 6.21 5.49 0.1 2.98 0 0.43 0 0.21 0 0.67 16.08 12 3 0.00 Totals 170.53 102.01 115.8 50.95 71.38 34.63 15.07 6.7 7.83 15.89 590.81 227 189 Sundays - Landfill Closed Holidays - Landfill Closed Monthly Breakdown Sheet Dec.1999 Date Organic Crdbrd Metal Plastic Nets Wood Tires Fish W C & D Misc.Tons Bales Loads 1 8.51 8.69 1.86 3.16 1.67 2.16 0 0 0 2.59 28.64 14 7 2 0 0.08 0 0.01 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.09 0 1 3 2.39 3.68 10.62 2.98 0 2.59 0.12 0 1.5 0.5 24.38 11 9 4 0 2.1 0 0.13 0 0.23 0 0 0 0.08 2.54 0 3 5 0.00 6 0.00 7 3.5 4.02 1.19 1.86 0.32 0.41 0 0.32 0 1.57 13.19 13 5 8 0 0 11.47 0 33.86 0 2.72 0 0 0 48.05 0 4 9 11.75 10.88 3.78 5.14 22.31 1.43 6.07 0.1 0 2.67 64.13 25 15 10 1.98 3.04 3.02 1.38 0.86 2.22 0 0.28 0 1.28 14.06 7 5 11 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0.00 0 0 12 0.00 13 0.00 14 2.77 1.65 0.28 0.41 0 0.28 0 0 4.27 0.86 10.52 7 13 15 8.71 2.89 0.31 1.2 0 0.45 0 0 1.05 0 14.61 7 10 16 7.06 1.49 0 0.74 0 3 0 0 0 0.45 12.74 0 5 17 9.83 4.61 0 1.9 0 0 0 0 0 0 16.34 13 3 18 4.63 1.51 0 0.78 0 0 0 0 0 0.2 7.12 6 3 19 0.00 20 0.00 21 10.33 4.77 0 2.14 0.23 0.56 0.21 0 0 2.45 20.69 20 8 22 6.22 4.79 0 2.52 0 0.14 0 0 5.67 0.13 19.47 23 9 23 4.55 4.66 0 2.02 0.25 2.61 0 0 0.37 1.09 15.55 11 7 24 10.61 6.7 0 2.44 0.09 0.12 0 0 0 0 19.96 14 5 25 0.00 26 0.00 27 0.00 28 11.04 6.93 2.59 2.02 0 1.58 0 0 9.69 0.2 34.05 16 16 29 5.08 3.4 5.39 1.46 3.25 0 0 0 0 0.3 18.88 10 9 30 3.8 6.16 0 1.42 0 0.62 0 0.45 15.53 0.59 28.57 11 5 31 11.38 7.04 0.63 3.97 0.42 1.66 0 0 0 0 25.10 17 9 Totals 124.14 89.09 41.14 37.68 63.26 20.06 9.12 1.15 38.08 14.96 438.68 225 151 Sundays - Landfill Closed Holidays - Landfill Closed Appendix B Landfill Rate Structure Appendix C Wastewater Treatment Plant Screened Solids Data, 1999