Look for city council to spend $1,100,000 to purchase trash carts (96 gallon size) for every household in the city.
Sounds like what Cleveland did quite a few years ago. Now, if you overfill or have more than the can fits, you get billed for the difference. Recycling is also mandatory and they fine if they find recyclables in your trash. Oh, and they better be washed out too. Kind of stuff we do anyways, I have 5 recycle bins almost every pickup and about 2 bags of trash on average. But don't every say I didn't mention the price gouging to begin.
These 96 gallon trash carts are way too large for most elderly people in my neighborhood.
Can't wait to get detail on this--1. Who is responsible for it?
2. If it gets stolen, who is responsible for it
Just a few ??"S I am sure the residents will have more--
This is moving ahead with zero public comment.
Councilwoman Anita Davis does not accept public comments at the committee meetings that she chairs.
Davis heads the General Improvements Committee and also heads the Parks & Playgrounds Committee.
Ad does not want to look dumb in front of the informed public that has insight into the matters that concerns the ytown citizens.
Public Meetings-and No Public Comments== ??? ??? ??? ??? ??? ???
Your councilwoman said they were called "committee meetings" for a reason!
Pay me a million dollars and I'll pick up the trash and supply my own bags....
I blame the entertainment committee....
Where is the city officials going to find the monies for this project?
Did you notice that the topic of this meeting was not announced ahead of time in the newspaper?
I am surprised and shocked.
These trash carts are very large. Residents might have to find a new place to store them.
According to today's newspaper, the city is going to borrow the money to purchase the trash carts. :P
Not every local trash collection company has the specialized equipment to lift these new trash carts. As a result, fewer trash collection companies will be able to bid on the contract. The winning bidder will probably always be one of the larger multi-state trash companies.
As we can see, a 96-gallon trash cart is quite large.
(http://www.homedepot.com/catalog/productImages/400/96/96613289-53b7-408d-b21a-acc82b03b0fc_400.jpg)
I tested a garbage can like this by putting a political leader in it and it did the job. Can you imagine what we can do within one year of cleanup Mahoning County political mess? no more FBI probes and a huge savings for the taxpayers in the mahoningCounty.
Quote from: iwasthere on February 19, 2016, 08:36:34 PM
I tested a garbage can like this by putting a political leader in it and it did the job. Can you imagine what we can do within one year of cleanup Mahoning County political mess? no more FBI probes and a huge savings for the taxpayers in the mahoningCounty.
Now that's funny in a way...
The savings can be spent on us mahoning county residents.
The larger the bin, the harder it will be for seniors to haul the street......nice......the city's luck will be the homeless will use them for shelter under the Mahoning Ave. Bridge.....
Quote.the city's luck will be the homeless will use them for shelter under the Mahoning Ave. Bridge.....
(http://wave.images.worldnow.com/images/10558830_BG1.jpg)
Every other city that I know uses these bins. If you lived in the suburbs and had to provide for your own garbage pick up and you called a company and they said you have to use our bin what would you do?
I support the trash bin.
Down here in Maryland, the county provides several containers for recycling
paper, metals, glass and plastic - but they don't supply general trash containers.
We either buy our own cans or just put the trash bags on the ground next to
the recycle containers.
Law and garden waste has to be bagged in paper bags - we buy our own.
The recycle bins are provided free of charge.
From what i'm gathering, you won't be able to continue using your old can. I use about 1/8th of that giant trash can a week. And I also have nowhere to put it. Also upset with the fact that residents will be encouraged to dispose of their existing cans. Seems very wasteful.
Does this make sense?
The city wants to purchase 22,000 trash carts.
The city expects 21,638 users/stops in 2016.
In 2017, the city expects to have 21,314 users/stops.
Where are all the users going and why purchase way more trash carts than the city expects to need in another year?
Less than 2% extra. I don't really think that's excessive. Heck, I bet they run out of them due to vandalism and theft before the first two years are over.
The reason why these cans are used is because it allows for the truck to pick them up and dump them without being handled by a person. This could result in savings from going to 1 man per truck instead of two, and could result in running the routes faster. Over time the personnel and time savings could make the purchase of the cans a good investment over the old way of manhandling garbage.
https://youtu.be/z591G_PlkbQ
A one-man truck picks up the trash in Youngstown right now. A shallow trash box is located in front of the truck. The driver rides close to ground level and just steps off the truck to throw the trash into the box. As the box fills, a mechanism lifts it over the cab and dumps the contents into the top of the truck body where it is compacted.