Orange County NC Website
Draft <br /> computers for residents and businesses, compost bins sales and education and outreach. The <br /> electronics recovery program is already positioned to meet the pending statewide landfill ban on <br /> televisions and computers because we have been collecting them for five years at our permanent <br /> facility. <br /> Door-to-door solid waste collection services are all privately provided in unincorporated Orange <br /> County. The three Towns all provide public waste collection to residential customers in their <br /> respective incorporated areas and a mix of public and private providers is used by <br /> commerciaUnon-residential entities in the incorporated areas.UNC provides most waste <br /> collection and recycling services by contract. The majority of waste generated in Orange County <br /> is delivered to the Orange County Landfill(see Table ES-2). <br /> Incorporated areas <br /> The Towns continue to deliver their MSW to the Orange County landfill as a key element of the <br /> interlocal agreement adopted in 1999 All three Towns operated their own municipal residential <br /> waste collection service and all responded to the landfill ban on residential cardboard with <br /> passage and enforcement of their own bans on putting cardboard in the garbage. <br /> Each of the three Towns continues to make marginal improvements to their already relatively <br /> efficient, cost-effective waste collection systems. Carrboro has automated 100%of its <br /> residential collection and integrated its commercial and multifamily routes.Hillsborough <br /> automated over 90%of residential routes in 2007 and in 2009 renewed its exclusive franchise <br /> contract with Waste Industries to continue collecting non-residential waste within its corporate <br /> limits. Chapel Hill continues its semi-automated residential collection and continues to consider <br /> fully containerized brush collection to reduce yard waste collection costs.I1NC's 1VISW is now <br /> hauled by contractor Waste Industries to the Waste Industries transfer station in Durham. <br /> Generally the Work Group and Solid Waste Advisory Board(SWAB)have not addressed the <br /> management of waste from within the incorporated areas except as it might pertain to a future <br /> interlocal agreement. The Town and County Managers have discussed the delivery of their MSW <br /> to out of county facilities but have not made any collective decision about whether to enter a <br /> cooperative disposal arrangement. It is Orange County's intention to enter an agreement with the <br /> City of Durham to deliver MSW and bulky waste from County facilities to the City of Durham <br /> Transfer Station after the Orange County Landfill closes. <br /> Unincorporated Areas <br /> The County collects the majoriry of residential MSW generated in the unincorporated area from <br /> its five staffed convenience centers throughout the County.Last year that included 8,005 tons of <br /> MSW and another 3,468 tons of bulky waste that were placed in the MSW landfill as well as <br /> 1,298 tons from the schools and County government buildings.An estimated 5,000 residences or <br /> 25%of unincorporated area households subscribe to a variety of private waste collection services <br /> that generally haul waste out of County. A few very small local haulers use the Orange County <br /> landfill.Private customers account for an estimated 5,000 tons of MSW; an estimated 500 tons <br /> of which was delivered to the Orange County landfill. <br /> 13 <br />