Garbage contract needs accountability

By Staff
July 23, 2001
As Meridian City Council members study the possibility of terminating the city's garbage pickup contract with Waste Management Inc., they would do well to consider injecting a core concept into their deliberations:
Accountability.
As it stands now, city council members get to hear the complaints but have little to do with actually getting the complaints resolved. They are, in essence, powerless over enforcement of a contract they wrote and approved  powerless, that is, short of terminating the contract and starting over.
Residents have complained for months of pine straw, tree limbs, leaves and other debris piled high and rotting in front of their homes. Fire and police officials have said these piles are hazardous. When a pile sat for more than two weeks in front of city councilman Dr. George Thomas' house, he began to see the problem up close and personal.
The problem is poor service, exacerbated by the tendency of some residents to throw out tree trunks with the limbs and leaves. Waste Management will only pick up limbs a maximum size of four feet long and two inches in diameter. But few homeowners bother to measure and length and diameter of what they're throwing out.
They just want it gone.
Trash pickup is a fundamental, albeit expensive, public service of city government. City residents expect it, indeed, pay extra for it.
Waste Management is a multi-billion-dollar corporation that has handled garbage collections in Meridian for about eight years. The contract was renewed last September for four years, with the city having the option to extend it two additional years.
The relationship between the company and the city has disintegrated now to words like "breach of contract" and "I'm tired of playing these games" and "something needs to be done."
Council members are right something needs to be done, and they are the ones to do it.

Galleries

PHOTOS: RHS exhibits skills during Northwest Alabama Marching Classic

High School Sports

Russellville High School holds mini cheer camp

Galleries

PHOTOS: Red Bay Founder’s Fest

Features

Third generation stonecutter takes pride in continuing legacy

Franklin County

Meet current group of Franklin County Junior Leaders

News

PHOTO: Tharptown High School Homecoming Court Underclassmen

Franklin County

State issues fire alert

Galleries

PHOTOS: Roxy holds cruise-in events in downtown Russellville

Galleries

PHOTOS: Tharptown senior homecoming representatives take court

News

Phil Campbell, Red Bay FFA place at North Alabama State Fair

News

BTCPA announces auditions for first production of season

News

RCS Education Foundation honors excellence

News

Downtown Russellville Collective receives grant to further efforts

Franklin County

NWSCC sees fall enrollment continue to rise

News

AlmostBama show raises money for Place of Grace Sept. 23

News

Roxy holds Cruise-In

Franklin County

Political announcement: Doug Aaron announces run for county commission seat 


Franklin County

TVA plans to invest $15 billion over next three years

Franklin County

Alabama Young Farmers vie for top titles

News

RHS ranks 18th on best Alabama high schools list

News

Downtown Russellville Collective receives statewide recognition at Main Street Alabama conference

Franklin County

PHOTOS: Franklin County celebrates Watermelon Festival

Franklin County

Chamber names watermelon winners

Franklin County

NWSCC hosts Run for Reading 5K, Family Fun Run on Sept. 16

x