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I ff • <br />aim <br />meet all or a portion of the District's future solid waste processing and disposal <br />requirements, and that were consistent with its long -term objectives. While this was <br />not a procurement, it was understood that information obtained during the process <br />would be used to support future procurement(s). <br />The expressions of interest were due by October 2007, and 25 vendors responded to <br />the REFI. To date The Broward County Solid Waste Disposal District, Resource <br />Recovery Board has received all the expressions of interests from the 25 respondents <br />as well as 11 presentations made to the Board by some of the respondents and no <br />further decisions have been made. Not all of the submittals were for WTE solutions. <br />Negotiations for a contract extension are taking place with Wheelabrator, and a <br />decision to move to forward is expected in 2008. <br />4.2.5 St. Lucie County, FL <br />On April 30, 2006, the Board of County Commissioners, St. Lucie County, Florida, <br />solicited offers for the purpose of obtaining services to permit, finance, construct, <br />operate, and own a Plasma Arc Gasification Facility to process MSW for St. Lucie <br />County. The due date for the qualifications was May 2006. <br />There was only one respondent to the RFQ issued by the County: Jacoby /Geoplasma. <br />As of November 2007, the development contract has been signed, and the County is <br />moving forward with the project. The developer plans to process 3,000 TPD, <br />generating 120 megawatts of electricity, one -third of which will be consumed <br />internally. According to the developers, the plant will cost over $425 million and <br />take two years to construct. Construction is slated to begin in 6 — 8 months pending <br />permits. <br />4.2.6 Hawaii County, HI <br />In 1995, the County started searching for a landfill replacement. After searching for <br />more than a decade and spending about $1 million, it selected Wheelabrator <br />Technologies Inc., a wholly -owned subsidiary of Houston -based Waste Management <br />Inc. Wheelabrator emerged from a field of three finalists, including Covanta, which <br />runs HPower on Oahu, and L -Con Contractors, a partnership with Barlow Projects, <br />Inc. In January 2008, the County received a best - and -final offer from Wheelabrator. <br />In May, the County Council voted against the 650 TPD project because of the <br />estimated $12.5 million cost, leaving the County with no plan for dealing with Hilo - <br />area trash after 2012. <br />4.2.7 Pinellas County, FL <br />Pinellas County had three companies bid on the contract to operate the existing WTE <br />plant. The process began with an RFQ to pre - qualify firms. The three firms that were <br />pre - qualified all submitted bids. Those respondents were Wheelabrator, Covanta and <br />Veolia. The bid went out in September 2006 for an operator replacement for an <br />existing 2,000 ton per day plant and was awarded to Veolia in January 2007. Veolia <br />actually began operating the facility effective May 7, 2007. <br />4.2.8 Hillsborough and Lee Counties, FL <br />Two operating mass -burn waterwall facilities in Florida began expansions in 2007. In <br />Lee County, the 1200 TPD plant will add a third line with a 636 TPD capacity, using <br />the same Covanta technology as the two operating lines, at a cost of $123.2 million <br />GBB/C08027 -01 20 August 15, 2008 <br />