MEETING MINUTES Tuesday, February 16, 2021 at 6:30 pm Town Hall, 40 Center Street Fairhaven, Massachusetts
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MEETING MINUTES Tuesday, February 16, 2021 at 6:30 pm Town Hall, 40 Center Street Fairhaven, Massachusetts Meeting was called to order by Chairperson Ann Richard at 6:30pm, via Zoom Present: Chairperson Ann Richard, Susan Spooner, Deirdre Healy, Karen Gent, Leon Correy, Wendy Drumm, Jim Anderson and Sustainability Coordinator Whitney McClees. Alternates Present: Kathryne Moniz and Christin Ritz Absent: Lois Callahan, Anne O’Brien Guests: Eliana DaCunha LAND ACKNOWLEDGEMENT Deirdre Healy read a formal Land Acknowledgement meant to show respect to the original inhabitants of the land where we reside and the committee plans to read at the start of every meeting. “The Fairhaven Sustainability Committee acknowledges Indigenous Peoples as the traditional stewards of the land, and the enduring relation-ship that exists between them and their traditional territories. The land on which we sit is the traditional unceded territory of the Wampanoag Nation. We acknowledge the painful history of genocide and forced occupation of their territory, and we honor and respect the many diverse indigenous people connected to this land on which we gather from time immemorial.” There are maps at native-land.ca that show the original inhabitants of the land across the world in terms of different territories and indigenous groups. MINUTES Jim Anderson is now a voting member. Since Anne O'Brien was Vice Chair, we need to fill that position. Deirdre nominates Leon Correy as Vice Chair and seconded by Jim. Vote was unanimous by roll call (7-0). Approval for minutes of December 15, 2020 motioned by Wendy Drumm, seconded by Jim, unanimous by roll call (7-0). Motion to approve the January 26, 2021 meeting minutes is made by Leon, seconded by Wendy, unanimous by roll call (7-0). BEACH PERMITS AND BICYCLE ACCESS An e-mail was received from Selectman Bob Espindola about this issue and requested by Leon for this to be on the agenda. There was a Board of Public Works meeting where this was discussed. Leon comments if you are a resident you should be able to have beach access if you decide to ride a bicycle there. Jim wrote a letter in support of Bob Espindola's motion. As a group we should write a letter of support, and come up with some sort of solution like showing proof of residency to allow bike access to the public beach. At the meeting it wasn't resolved but all agreed there should be bike racks at a future meeting this will be addressed further. Overall positive about people bringing bikes. Ann will draft a letter of support from the Committee. Susan wonders if there was any discussion on what a backup plan would be if they Page 1 of 3
don't have proof of residency. Whitney McClees assumes it would be handled the same way if a car shows up without a pass but this will all be discussed. When Jim spoke with Bob his concern was the fee structure of bicycles vs cars. 2021 TOWN MEETING ARTICLES Whitney shared those documents as discussed in the last meeting. Whitney put in 3 placeholders 1. plastic pollution reduction bylaw, 2. polystyrene reduction bylaw, 3. authorization from the state to allow Fairhaven to establish a fee for checkout bags. We will have to submit the language before the Town Meeting and we will have a google doc to share comments because of the length of the articles. Wendy has done a lot of prior research with the plastic straws/cups and can help with that and would like to see how other towns have dealt with this. Any new bylaws need to be submitted to the Attorney General's office for approval, it’s unusual for anything of this sort to be rejected. If we did have a Town charter the first 2 items could be approved but since we don’t, they'd have to go to the Attorney General, item 3 would either way. Eliana can reach out to find out how other towns have had these passed. Alex who was the main proponent for Sudbury has a list of positive arguments that can be shared. Legal counsel in the town has to approve first for the wording and there would need to be public education. With Covid there is a lot of takeout using containers and we need to keep in mind businesses and their cost. Jim asks if its customary to offer what substitutes there are that could work within the bylaws for businesses to use instead. Ann says it wouldn’t be part of the bylaw language but would-be part of the education piece on alternatives. Eliana will research what type of replacement items could be used. For example, her school uses compostable containers but doesn't do compost. Christin notes a lot of the compostable containers won't compost or biodegrade they don't actually breakdown in a landfill and need to be in a specific industrial compost system with high heat and can take more resources and actually be more detrimental. Ann wraps up with stating the google doc is where we can all write our comments. MARINE DEBRIS- WATERGOAT, other ideas Tim Cox spoke at the Marine Resources meeting and it was discussed and also was an article in the Standard Times. Susan updates that Tim hasn't had time to measure the area discussed at the last meeting which is needed to get a price. Jim participated in a cleanup on Palmer Island which is directly on the other side of the identified area in New Bedford where there was a tremendous amount of garbage and debris. Susan says we need to figure out the cost, location and ways to fund and will update again next month. 2040 MASTER PLAN Whitney sent out a webinar for LEED cities and communities. Kathryne had trouble trying to log into the webinar- there could be a recording we can track down. Deirdre brings up an item in the Master Plan 3.3-5 establish neighborhood networks and communicate effectively in emergencies is a goal worth working on. Whitney thinks we could collaborate with emergency management, Rave Alerts on this. Page 2 of 3
SUSTAINABILITY COORDINATOR'S REPORT Whitney updates we submitted the green communities annual report back in November and has been officially approved by DOER and Friday submitted the final report for the designation grant which resulted in LED lighting, smart controls and energy management upgrades. This should set us up to submit in the spring round competitive grant for green communities. Been in contact with Energy Source moving forward, still discussing types of projects such as LED lighting in High School, continuing energy management upgrade at HS and Middle School. Should be finishing up MVP grant in the next month or two, 3 tasks were funded. Should be getting draft of that final deliverable to set us up for an action grant. Spoke to the regional coordinator about ways to improve last year’s grant application. The EcoChallenge is coming up again in April the 1st -30th registration opens up in March, we should be promoting. GENERAL BUSINESS Next meeting is March 16th, 2021. Ann is still working on the Seeds for Seniors and we received a donation from a viewer of our meeting. Start small this year and see how it goes. It will be on agenda for next meeting. Climate Reality Group is working on a virtual Earth Day celebration that will be an art festival on April 8th. "Art meets science" to reflect a sustainable future with their creativities. Video or take a photo to submit and will be on a map to view then a summit to close the event with prizes. Something to look forward to and participate in. Susan asks if we've had any contact with ABC regarding the towns recycling. It’s no longer under board of health but under public works. Health dept would still be responsible for education and outreach. Christin regarding EcoChallenge- there wasn't great turnout we had previously talked about having different teams, do we create teams to get more residents involved. We could contact the schools and neighborhood news. Whitney offers to help Christin on this. Jim received a note about Complete Streets and now we're in phase 2 there will be a call for lighting on various streets- this could be factored into other initiatives we are involved in. Jim will share list with Whitney and distribute to group. ADJORNMENT Leon motions to adjourn and is seconded by Susan. Vote was unanimous by hand raise (7-0). Respectfully Submitted, Karen Gent Page 3 of 3
3/15/2021 Town of Fairhaven Mail - Fwd: Compost Bins for Fairhaven residents Whitney McClees Fwd: Compost Bins for Fairhaven residents Ann Richard Tue, Mar 9, 2021 at 11:07 AM To: Whitney McClees FYI- this is the response I finally received about my inquiry into the compost, kitchen scrap question. I will look into it. I would love to get it started again. I am on vacation next week, no classes so I will work on finding out what we can do. Ann ---------- Forwarded message --------- From: McGovern, Ann (DEP) Date: Mon, Mar 8, 2021 at 4:53 PM Subject: Re: Compost Bins for Fairhaven residents To: Ann Richard Hi Ann, I apologize for my slow response. I’m writing to update you on the state contract for ordering compost bins and kitchen scrap buckets and suggestions for continuing or restarting your compost bin distribution program. If your previous compost bin grant funds have run out, I encourage you to offer compost bins in your community at cost or consider subsidizing the cost, because in the Sustainable Materials Recovery Grant program: a Recycling Dividends point will be awarded to applicants who sell compost bins at a discount ($25 or less), promote their program on-line and in the press and offer composting outreach to the public at least once per year. If your municipality also offers a drop-off collection point for food waste in conjunction with their compost bin program, 2 points will be awarded under the RDP program, for more info, visit https://www.mass.gov/how-to/apply-for-smrp-recycling-dividends-program-funds. Your community may use Small Scale Investment Grants, available through the Sustainable Materials Recovery Program Grants, to purchase or subsidize the cost of compost bins. http://www.mass.gov/eea/agencies/massdep/recycle/grants/smrp-grants.html. Recycling Dividends Program funds may also be used to purchase compost bins and kitchen scrap buckets. The state contract for recycling bins, carts, compost bins and kitchen scrap buckets and rain barrels has been rebid and is effective through January 31, 2022. The state contract prices are still only about 50% of what the retail prices for these products would be. The state contract is FAC113 (formerly FAC87). For vendor, product and pricing information, see the FAC113 Master Price File at https://www.mass.gov/media/2242696/download. This is a multi- page excel worksheet. The first sheet contains vendor contact information, and each additional sheet lists the vendors, products and pricing on contract for each category. Consult the sheet for the type of items you are seeking, then contact the vendors directly for additional information or to place orders. A contract user guide is also available at https://www.mass.gov/doc/fac113designateddep/download, which provides more information about using FAC113. The previous compost bin vendors, New England Plastics and Orbis Corp/Norseman Environmental Products, are still on contract and offer the same products as the previous contract. (FYI, in addition to compost bins and kitchen scrap buckets, FAC113 also includes vendors for recycling bins, carts, other recycling containers and rain barrels). Key differences between the compost bins are size/capacity (New Age Bin-24 has 24 cu ft capacity; Earth Machine has 10 cu ft capacity) and design. There’s also a dual tumbler option with a small capacity that may be appropriate for urban https://mail.google.com/mail/u/0?ik=8215db3a60&view=pt&search=all&permmsgid=msg-f%3A1693771178460913400&simpl=msg-f%3A16937711784… 1/3
3/15/2021 Town of Fairhaven Mail - Fwd: Compost Bins for Fairhaven residents areas, which is available on Interim FAC87, https://www.mass.gov/media/863486/download. Additional kitchen scrap buckets are also available on Interim FAC87. Public interest in composting continues to grow, and Spring is a good time to encourage people to compost. I encourage you to take inventory and place orders for compost bins (and kitchen scrap buckets, if those are part of your program) for Spring cleanup season and Earth Day. I’ve attached a compost press release which you may modify to fit your program and use to get the word out. (Insert your own specific information into the brackets throughout the document). For outreach, CT DEEP produced an excellent “How-To” video, “Home Composting – Turning Your Spoils to Soil,” which is available online at http://www.ct.gov/deep/cwp/view.asp?a=2718&q=399598 and is useful to show when giving public presentations on home composting or on local cable. In addition, MassDEP produced a home composting webinar, available at Turn Garbage into Gold Composting at Home - YouTube. You are welcome to link to this and the many home composting educational resources at Home Composting & Green Landscaping | Mass.gov. We have also posted a list of municipal compost bin distribu on programs in Massachuse s, https://www. mass.gov/doc/list-of-massachusetts-compost-bin-distribution-programs/download. Please review the informa on for your municipality and let me know if you have any updates or correc ons. The contact information for the vendors is: Bin Type: New Age Composters (Bin-11, Bin-24, Bin-30) Manufacturer: New England Plastics Corp. 126 Duchaine Blvd. New Bedford, MA 02745 Contact: Maria Vieira Tel: 508-998-3111 ext. 420 Fax: 508-995-8895 Email: sales.nep126@gmail.com Prices for quantities of 21 or more: Bin-11: $53; Bin-24: $61; Bin-30: $66 No minimum order - for quantities of fewer than 21: Bin-11: $55; Bin-24: $65; Bin-30: $70 (plus shipping) Bin Type: Earth Machines and Kitchen Collectors Manufacturer: ORBIS Corp (Norseman Environmental Products) 39 Westmore Dr. Rexdale,Ontario M9V 3Y6 Contact: Carla Manzella Tel: 888-675-2878, ext.7106 Fax: 416-745-4478 Email: carla.manzella@orbiscorporation.com Prices: Earth Machine: $49.50 for quantities up to 20; $46 for quantities over 21 Minimum order: 1 pallet (20 per pallet) Kitchen scrap bucket: $17.99 (1-30 units); $8.25 (31-100 units); $7.00 (101-250 units) Note: Kitchen scrap buckets are shipped 26 per case Also, you might be interested in 2 videos we recently made as part of our school Green Team program on how to set up the compost bins https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=08qDLLv1Hgc&feature=youtu.be and how to compost at schools; https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vBG8vFyX6ns. You are welcome to refer bin purchasers to these videos since they could be helpful to anyone buying these bins. (They are also available free to schools through MassDEP’s The Green Team program, http://www.thegreenteam.org/request-equipment/). Please let me know if you have any questions or need any promotional materials to help you distribute compost bins. Thank you for helping reduce waste and promote sustainable landscaping by promoting home composting in your community. https://mail.google.com/mail/u/0?ik=8215db3a60&view=pt&search=all&permmsgid=msg-f%3A1693771178460913400&simpl=msg-f%3A16937711784… 2/3
3/15/2021 Town of Fairhaven Mail - Fwd: Compost Bins for Fairhaven residents Ann McGovern Consumer Waste Reduction Coordinator Mass. Dept. of Environmental Protection One Winter St., 6th Fl. Boston, MA 02108 617-292-5834 tel 781-775-4739 cell 617-292-5858 fax email: ann.mcgovern@mass.gov web site: www.mass.gov/dep https://recyclesmartma.org From: Ann Richard Sent: Monday, February 1, 2021 10:00 AM To: McGovern, Ann (DEP) Subject: Compost Bins for Fairhaven residents CAUTION: This email originated from a sender outside of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts mail system. Do not click on links or open attachments unless you recognize the sender and know the content is safe. Hello Ann- Hope you are doing well. I am on our local Sustainability Committee and wondered if we could start up our program again this year to get compost bins for our residents. In the past these were available from the state at a discount and now in Nb and Dartmouth they still are but not in Fairhaven. I spoke to NB and they mentioned the RDP which seems great but there is no info about the program for this grant cycle. We have had residents ask about how they could purchase compost bins for their yards and we want to help them and promote composting. Any thoughts or help you could provide would be much appreciated. As always you are very knowledgeable and helpful to me so I thought I would ask again. Thanks Ann Richard Cmpstg is Easy bins PR template 21.doc 36K https://mail.google.com/mail/u/0?ik=8215db3a60&view=pt&search=all&permmsgid=msg-f%3A1693771178460913400&simpl=msg-f%3A16937711784… 3/3
Compost Bin Program Sample Press Release For Immediate Release Contact: Date: Phone: COMPOSTING IS EASY AND HELPS REDUCE GREENHOUSE GASES Composting is a great way to recycle our organic “waste” into a beneficial soil amendment for our yards and gardens. Composting at home can also help reduce methane production at landfills. Using the compost in our landscapes helps store carbon in the soil instead of releasing it to the atmosphere. And you can reduce your trash by 50 percent or more by composting leaves, grass clippings, garden debris, fruit peels, vegetable scraps, tea bags, coffee grounds, egg shells, paper towels, napkins and even paper bags. It’s easy to make compost, and the [Town of insert name] makes it even easier by offering rodent-resistant home composting bins for [insert price], over 50% off the retail price. To obtain a discounted compost bin, [insert procedure for obtaining bins in your community]. Act now, supplies are limited! (Include or exclude information in this paragraph based on which compost bins your program distributes.) [Two types of compost bins are available on state contract – the New Age Composter (formerly Brave New Composter) and the Earth Machine. The New Age Composter is adjustable and has a capacity of 24 cubic feet, the equivalent of about 12 bags of leaves. It has a cone shaped floor and cover which provide air and moisture to the composting material, requiring a minimum of maintenance while producing compost in about 3 months. It is made in Massachusetts from 100% post-consumer recycled plastic. The Earth Machine has a capacity of 11 cubic feet, the equivalent of about 4 bags of leaves. It has a sliding door at the bottom for removing compost and a locking lid. It is made from 50% post-consumer recycled plastic. Samples of the bins can be seen at [insert location of local bin demonstration area.] The compost bins help hold in heat and moisture, keep animals out, and look more attractive than open compost heaps. Organic material will start to turn to compost in the bins in 3 to 6 months. Compost, known as "black gold" to gardeners, replenishes nutrients in the soil, helps retain moisture, makes the soil easy to work, and helps plants resist disease. Compost makes plants healthy so they can overcome adverse conditions without pesticides or chemical fertilizers. Fill your compost bin using three parts “brown” material and one part “green” material. This provides food for the compost organisms in a recipe that will not create odors. “Brown” ingredients include leaves, straw, dried grass clippings, wood chips, sawdust, pine needles, and paper products such as paper towels, napkins, bags, plates, coffee filters, tissue and newspaper. “Green” materials include fresh grass clippings, weeds, fruit and vegetable scraps, coffee grounds, tea bags, eggshells, manure, and seaweed. Make sure the materials are damp as you build the pile, especially the “browns.” As you build the pile, sprinkle on several shovelfuls of rich garden soil or finished compost after every 12” of fresh material.
Leaves are an important ingredient of a compost pile. Without them, a compost pile may become too wet and create odors. If you have leaves available, use them to start your compost heap and save the rest to add during the summer. Compostable food scraps and grass clippings should be buried under about 6" of leaves, where they will decompose odorlessly. If leaves are in short supply, add plenty of paper towels, napkins and torn up paper bags to provide the necessary carbon, and always bury your food scraps under this material. Most of the composting work is done by soil organisms that convert organic material to humus. They need oxygen, just as we do. Lack of oxygen will slow down the composting process and cause odors. Turn your pile, fluff it with a hoe or turning tool, or build air passages into the pile to keep your compost pile aerobic and odor-free. Or use a compost bin that allows air to penetrate the pile. In about three months, the material will start to turn to compost. The material at the bottom of the pile will be ready first. As more time goes by, the level of compost in the pile will rise until it is easy to access just below the surface. You will know your compost is ready to use when it looks like rich, brown soil and no longer resembles the original materials. Compost benefits all plants, and there are many different ways to use it. Add a handful of compost to each transplant hole when planting seedlings or potted plants. Spread another handful on the surface of the soil around the newly planted seedling, making sure that the compost is not touching the stem or trunk of the plant. Spread compost as a mulch around perennials, shrubs and other existing plantings. If you are planting seeds, apply one-half to three inches of compost and mix it in with the top four inches of soil in the seedbed. To rejuvenate lawns, screen your compost using ½” screening. Sprinkle the screened compost on the lawn about ¼” deep. Screened compost is also excellent for reseeding lawns. Sprinkle it ½” deep over the bare spots and distribute new grass seed on top. You can even make excellent potting soil with compost by mixing equal parts compost, sand and loam. A free composting workshop is being offered on [date, time location] to help you get started. Composting brochures are available at the [town hall (insert locations)], and an in-depth webinar is available at Turn Garbage into Gold Composting at Home - YouTube. A video entitled "Home Composting; Turning Your Spoils to Soil" is available for streaming at http://www.ct.gov/deep/cwp/view.asp?a=2718&q=399598&depNav_GID=1645.
3/15/2021 Town of Fairhaven Mail - Fwd: [Fairhaven MA] recycling stats (Sent by susan spooner, Whitney McClees Fwd: [Fairhaven MA] recycling stats (Sent by susan spooner, Susan Spooner Sat, Mar 13, 2021 at 12:23 PM To: Whitney McClees Figured you would want to see the recycling/trash figures for the Tuesday meeting. As you are much more computer savvy than I, perhaps you wouldn’t mind circulating the charts to the other members? susan Begin forwarded message: From: Kathy Tripp Subject: Re: [Fairhaven MA] recycling stats (Sent by susan spooner, ) Date: March 9, 2021 at 1:58:09 PM EST To: Hi Susan, Attached is a spreadsheet of the % of recycling and trash with tonnage. It's clear that #'s are up for trash because of the pandemic. Word needs to get out about the importance of recycling even though it costs more to dispose of recycling. I have reached out to ABC regarding not picking up extra trash and recycling that is only in carts. I'm not out on the road to see it but it has been brought to my attention people putting out extra trash and ABC picking it up. We do have an agreement with ABC for residents to purchase extra recycling carts. We do have a list ready for them. Just waiting for the logistics on how they want to handle it. I only work part-time Monday & Tuesday if you need to reach me in the future. Kathy On Tue, Mar 9, 2021 at 12:59 PM Contact form at Fairhaven MA wrote: Hello ktripp, susan spooner has sent you a message via your contact form (https://www.fairhaven-ma.gov/user/74/contact) at Fairhaven MA. If you don't want to receive such e-mails, you can change your settings at https://www.fairhaven-ma.gov/ user/74/edit. Message: Hi Kathy: I'm reaching out to you as a member of The Sustainability Committee. We were wondering, as so many folks are eating at home, if there has been marked increase of garbage and recyclables over the past year. I know that the BPW took over recycling from The Board of Health and that there had been a modest increase of recycling in Fairhaven before this lousy virus struck. We were thinking about doing a reminder campaign about the importance of this effort, and hoping to remind people about no plastic bags in recycling barrels and the importance of cleaning glass jars etc. Also, it would be great to remind the folks at ABC about how necessary it is to work with the truck drivers in delivering the best product. This might mean declining to pick up contaminated barrels. Lots of outreach to do and we would like to help the BPW in their effort. Please feel free to share with Vinny. Thank so much Susan https://mail.google.com/mail/u/0?ui=2&ik=8215db3a60&view=lg&permmsgid=msg-f:1694138327678909414 1/2
FAIRHAVEN TONNAGE CURBISDE - RECYCLING AND TRASH Recycling Trash % Tipping Year Month Total Tons SEMASS Tons Tons Recycled Fee Tons 2014 July 89 573 662.00 13.4% $42.52 $24,363.96 August 73 437 510.00 14.3% $42.52 $18,581.24 September 83 508 591.00 14.0% $52.52 $26,680.16 October 88 498 586.00 15.0% $52.52 $26,154.96 November 80 430 510.00 15.7% $52.52 $22,583.60 December 97 544 641.00 15.1% $52.52 $28,570.88 2015 January 51 408 459.00 11.1% $52.52 $21,428.16 February 75 344 419.00 17.9% $52.52 $18,066.88 March 107 372 479.00 22.3% $52.52 $19,537.44 April 128 420 548.00 23.4% $52.52 $22,058.40 May 115 377 492.00 23.4% $52.52 $19,800.04 June 129 409 538.00 24.0% $52.52 $21,480.68 $269,306.40 5320 17.5% 2015 July 143 405 548.00 26.1% $52.52 $21,270.60 August 128 412 540.00 23.7% $52.52 $21,638.24 September 133 427 560.00 23.8% $62.52 $26,696.04 October 132 374 506.00 26.1% $62.52 $23,382.48 November 120 368 488.00 24.6% $62.52 $23,007.36 December 155 432 587.00 26.4% $62.52 $27,008.64 2016 January 121.71 333 454.71 26.8% $62.52 $20,819.16 February 118.12 446 564.12 20.9% $62.52 $27,883.92 March 127.12 393.57 520.69 24.4% $62.52 $24,606.00 April 117.41 349.36 466.77 25.2% $62.52 $21,841.99 May 114.91 385.81 500.72 22.9% $62.52 $24,120.84 June 146.50 452.12 598.62 24.5% $62.52 $28,266.54 $290,541.81 4777.86 24.6% 2016 July 120.94 400.08 521.02 23.2% $62.52 $25,013.00 August 132.91 462.67 595.58 22.3% $62.52 $28,926.13 September 120.32 406.79 527.11 22.8% $63.40 $25,790.49 October 121.83 389.36 511.19 23.8% $63.40 $24,685.42 November 128.79 417.56 546.35 23.6% $63.40 $26,473.30 December 134.80 392.49 527.29 25.6% $63.40 $24,883.87 2017 January 133.32 383.74 517.06 25.8% $63.40 $24,329.12 February 108.83 320.40 429.23 25.4% $63.40 $20,313.36 March 120.23 349.34 469.57 25.6% $63.40 $22,148.16 April 118.17 360.46 478.63 24.7% $63.40 $22,853.16 May 133.07 438.43 571.50 23.3% $63.40 $27,796.46 June 152.60 451.07 603.67 25.3% $63.40 $28,597.84 $301,810.31 4772.39 24.3%
FAIRHAVEN TONNAGE CURBISDE - RECYCLING AND TRASH Recycling Trash % Tipping Year Month Total Tons SEMASS Tons Tons Recycled Fee Tons 2017 July 136.09 446.80 582.89 23.3% $63.40 $28,327.12 August 149.08 476.68 625.76 23.8% $63.40 $30,221.51 September 134.53 411.37 545.90 24.6% $65.71 $27,031.12 October 138.52 427.69 566.21 24.5% $65.71 $28,103.51 November 132.25 445.40 577.65 22.9% $65.71 $29,267.23 December 128.23 362.65 490.88 26.1% $65.71 $23,829.73 2018 January 137.64 412.27 549.91 25.0% $65.71 $27,090.26 February 116.76 340.07 456.83 25.6% $65.71 $22,346.00 March 128.84 375.03 503.87 25.6% $65.71 $24,643.22 April 136.02 404.67 540.69 25.2% $65.71 $26,590.87 May 146.79 468.43 615.22 23.9% $65.71 $30,780.54 June 141.00 440.03 581.03 24.3% $65.71 $28,914.37 $327,145.49 5011.09 24.6% 2018 July 137.67 484.19 621.86 22.1% $65.71 $31,816.12 August 131.45 465.87 597.32 22.0% $65.71 $30,612.32 September 119.00 428.79 547.79 21.7% $67.88 $29,106.27 October 118.13 456.12 574.25 20.6% $67.88 $30,961.43 November 115.00 429.00 544.00 21.1% $67.88 $29,120.52 December 116.00 364.00 480.00 24.2% $67.88 $24,708.32 2019 January 143.01 416.00 559.01 25.6% $67.88 $28,238.08 February 100.96 321.03 421.99 23.9% $67.88 $21,791.52 March 101.53 357.61 459.14 22.1% $67.88 $24,274.57 April 118.48 384.71 503.19 23.5% $67.88 $26,114.11 May 133.72 461.50 595.22 22.5% $67.88 $31,326.62 June 120.29 433.80 554.09 21.7% $67.88 $29,446.34 $337,516.22 5002.62 22.6% 2019 July 139.32 499.63 638.95 21.8% $67.88 $33,914.88 August 127.20 469.76 596.96 21.3% $67.88 $31,887.31 September 113.29 428.94 542.23 20.9% $68.60 $29,329.51 October 130.54 459.50 590.04 22.1% $68.60 $31,521.70 Calendar 2019 November 98.97 378.76 477.73 20.7% $68.60 $25,982.94 Trash 5037.57 December 131.4 426.33 557.73 23.6% $68.60 $29,246.22 Recycle 1458.71 22.5% 2020 January 126.64 421.67 548.31 23.1% $68.60 $28,926.56 February 95.62 343.75 439.37 21.8% $68.60 $23,581.25 March 119.36 411.91 531.27 22.5% $68.60 $28,257.03 April 120.98 491.32 612.30 19.8% $68.60 $33,697.20 May 124.25 477.97 602.22 20.6% $68.60 $32,788.74 June 136.05 549.21 685.26 19.9% $68.60 $37,675.81 $366,809.15 5358.75 21.5%
FAIRHAVEN TONNAGE CURBISDE - RECYCLING AND TRASH Recycling Trash % Tipping Year Month Total Tons SEMASS Tons Tons Recycled Fee Tons 2020 July 147.56 505.40 652.96 22.6% $68.60 $34,670.44 August 116.15 476.62 592.77 19.6% $68.60 $32,696.13 September 111.59 490.63 602.22 18.5% $69.04 $33,873.10 October 128.61 436.85 565.46 22.7% $69.04 $30,160.12 Calendar 2020 November 118.31 461.86 580.17 20.4% $69.04 $31,886.81 Trash 5621.21 December 149.56 554.02 703.58 21% $69.04 $38,249.54 Recycle 1494.68 21.1% 2021 January 127.58 449.00 576.58 22% $69.04 $30,998.96 February 110.5 352.66 463.16 24% $69.04 $24,347.65 March $69.04 April $69.04 May $69.04 June $69.04
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