File #: 17-989    Version: 1 Name:
Type: Action Item Status: Agenda Ready
File created: 11/7/2017 In control: BOARD OF SUPERVISORS
On agenda: 11/14/2017 Final action:
Title: Consideration of Potential Use of Eastlake Landfill as a Final Disposal Location for Debris Generated from the 2017 Wildfires Located Outside of Lake County
Sponsors: Public Services
Attachments: 1. Public Input_Eastlake Landfill
Title
Body
MEMORANDUM

TO: Board of Supervisors
FROM: Lars Ewing, Public Services Director
DATE: November 14, 2017
SUBJECT: Consideration of potential use of Eastlake Landfill as a final disposal location for debris generated from the 2017 wildfires located outside of Lake County

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY:
Public Services staff has been contacted by Environmental and Chemical Consulting, Inc. (ECC), the contractor tasked by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers for the cleanup operations in both Lake and Mendocino County, as well as the Mendocino County Environmental Health Department and private contract haulers, about the possibility of the Eastlake Landfill in Clearlake being used as a final disposal location for fire debris generated from both the public and private fire debris cleanup operations. While the Eastlake Landfill is equipped to accept the fire debris from the Sulphur Fire in Lake County, and additionally prepared to ramp up operations to handle debris from the fires located outside of Lake County, accepting fire debris from outside of Lake County does bring with it certain risks.

The Eastlake Landfill is steadily approaching the maximum capacity for the portion of land that has been developed, permitted, and is currently being used for solid waste disposal. The most recent disposal capacity estimate indicates that the landfill will reach maximum capacity in approximately eight to ten years. While work is currently in progress for a landfill expansion that will increase that capacity by 20-25 years, that process is expected to take six to seven years until the landfill is fully permitted and constructed to the point that it will be ready to accept the first load of solid waste in the expansion area. Furthermore, based on our experience from the 2015-2017 wildfires the debris we can expect to receive from the Redwood Valley Fire would consume landfill space equivalent to that of approximately one year of "normal" solid waste operations. The consumption of t...

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