Moncton eyes switch from garbage bags to carts, privatization of collection - Action News
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New Brunswick

Moncton eyes switch from garbage bags to carts, privatization of collection

Moncton is exploring switching from a bagged residential garbage collection system to using curbside carts with a private company replacing city collection workers, according to tenders the city issued recently.

Proposed changes outlined in tenders would require city council approval

Moncton is exploring switching to a three-colour cart system, like those shown here, for garbage collection from residential properties. (Pat Fogg/CBC)

Moncton is considering changes to its garbage collection systemthat could affect how residents leave waste at the curb and city employees who collect it, according to two tenders issued recently.

The first calls for a private company to collect household waste,a task traditionally done by unionized city employees.

The second says the city is considering switching from plastic bags to carts for waste at houses and apartment buildings with five or less units. It seeks a company to supply more than 70,000 carts that could be collected with an automated boom on a truck.

Any change requires city council approval.

Several councillors and the union representing outside workers say they were surprised by the tenders, saying staff had seemed to brush aside switching to carts in the past and expected further discussion of privatization before a tender would go out.

"We are always told that the bin system was too expensive, that to update the [truck] machinery would be too expensive, and that the sorting process could not be handled by the citizens of Moncton," Deputy Mayor Shawn Crossmansaid.

The current three-bag system involves sorting recyclables into blue bags, organics into green bags and garbage into clear bags. (CBC)

CBC News requested an interview with the city Wednesday about the tenders but no interview was provided.

Isabelle LeBlanc, a city spokesperson, said in an email that staff were directed by council earlier this year to explorecontracting out the service, continue using city employees but adding a second person to each truck, or using an automated boom that would collect carts.

LeBlanc said the tenders allow staff to present council with "real market value for the three proposed options."

Crossman supports switching to carts. He's heard from residents frustrated by irregular collection times and garbage spread around neighbourhoods after plastic bags have been ripped open by animals.

Coun. Paulette Thriault also supportsswitching to carts.

"From an environmental perspective, it would make a lot more sense, and I think it would be a lot easier for the residents," Thriault said.

Shift to private collection

The city's waste collection system recently left it at odds with municipal workers who are members of the Canadian Union of Public Employees Local 51.

City staff cited climbing injury rates and retention issues as reasons to temporarily use a private company for collection in one of the city's seven waste collection zones.Councillors voted in 2018 to return to collection by city workers only,but that didn't happen.

Since then, Fero Waste and Recycling Inc. has gone from collecting waste inone zoneto six. Local 51 members regularly attended city council meetings last winter as the sides neared a lockout or strike.

"Frustrated is the word I'd use," Keith Hatto, a vice-president with the local, said of the tender that could privatizecollection. He said the city hadn't told theunion a tender would be issued.

LeBlanc said the city was under "no obligation" to inform the union.

In April, staff told council Fero's contract needed to be extended into December while they examined what to do with the collection system.

Keith Hatto, second vice-president of Canadian Union of Public Employees Local 51, says the union was surprised and 'frustrated' to discover the tender that would privatize waste collection in the city. (Shane Magee/CBC)

Under the current system, residents of homes and apartment buildings with up to five units put recyclable materials in a blue bag, organics in a green bag and garbage in a clear bag.

A city worker drives the truck, gets out, tosses the bags into the truck, then continues to another pickup point. Each worker tosses approximately eight to nine tonnes of material from about 650 households per shift, according to figures city staff presented to council several years ago.

A 2017 risk assessment looked at ways to reduce worker injuries. The assessment recommended adding a second worker to each truck, reducing the pace and volume of work, and adding a mechanical arm to trucks which would grab large bins.

The mechanical arm was estimated to cost $2,696,628 per year or $110.44 per household. The switch would include the purchase of three large carts per household.

Hatto said the union had suggested the city switch to carts given the concerns about injuries. Instead, the city used the private contractor.

"I'm kind of surprised that they're bringing it back up," Hatto said.

If collection is privatized, he said, the union contract would see affected workers shifted to other city roles.

Members of CUPE Local 51, which represents City of Moncton outside workers, attended a 2019 meeting where council considered using private contractors to replace vacant unionized garbage collection positions. (Shane Magee/CBC)

It's not clear based on the tenders whether households would have to pay for each cartor if that cost would be paid by the city.

"I was always told by my city staff that these bins were expensive, and the end user would have to be the one paying for them," Crossman said.

If the city opts not to privatize collection, it would still need new or retrofitted trucks if it switches to the cart system.

Carts could roll in 2022

It's not clear exactly when the resultsof the tender will go to city council, though LeBlancsaid it will be sometime before the 2021 budget process.

One tender says that if council approves the switch, the 10-year contract to supply the carts would begin May 1, 2021.

Residents would be able to select the quantity and size of carts for their household. The carts would be deliveredin May and June 2022.

The tender calls for carts that can last 10 years and withstand temperatures between 40 Celsius and 55 C.