Chelsea Mulls Over Curbside Compost Service | The Sun Times News

2022-09-09 23:24:18 By : Ms. Eva He

Curbside pickup for compostable items such as grass clippings in Chelsea has been a hot topic.

“It is something that is discussed quite a lot on certain social media channels to the point that like hundreds of comments of people wanting that service and the confusion also about it having been offered in the past,” said Mayor Pacheco at the Sept. 6, 2022, City Council meeting.

There has been some confusion over the service, which has gotten some people understandably riled. The city provided curbside pickup for compostable items such as grass clippings and plants, and now it is not.

The confusion comes from the fact that the city has never officially offered curbside pickup of compostable materials, only brush. But, while picking up the brush, if there were a bag of clippings or weeds, the workers would pick it up out of goodwill. The problem is now what began as a nod-and-a-wink courtesy has grown beyond what the city’s DPW can manage. So, the informal service had to stop until something official could be figured out to handle the volume.

Derik Bollinger of Chelsea’s DPW explained the situation to the council at its meeting.

“The City has never before offered curbside compost pickup,” said Bollinger in his written statement. “We have, however, picked up small amounts of these items during monthly brush pickup operations as a courtesy to residents.”

On its website, the city tells residents:

“The Public Works Department picks up brush placed along the street-side curb extension. Scheduled brush pickup starts on the second Monday of the month. Crews pick up different size materials at different times that week due to the equipment required.

That last bullet is the point of consternation for folks. The city was picking it up. Now it's stopped. Residents would like it back. Bollinger reminded the council of what the website also says. “Residents can take this material to the Solid Waste Facility on Werkner Rd. where they can dispose of it for free.”

Bollinger informed the council that the Solid Waste Facility is already at its permitted capacity for compostable materials with people dropping it off. Implementing an official curbside pickup service would require a larger capacity the permit doesn’t allow.

Bollinger offered some questions and ideas for the council to ponder in pursuing the service on a citywide scale:

The item was on the council’s agenda for discussion only. City Manager Roy Atkinson closed the conversation by stating they would do more research on the subject and bring the information back to the council.