Rivanna Solid Waste Authority: Difference between revisions
(→2009 strategic plan: cville may end rwsa partnership.) |
m (fixing redlink) |
||
Line 4: | Line 4: | ||
The RWSA operates three facilities in addition to its main office. | The RWSA operates three facilities in addition to its main office. | ||
* the [[McIntire Road Recycling Center]], | * the [[McIntire Road Recycling Center]], | ||
* the [[ | * the [[Ivy Materials Utilization Center]], and | ||
* the [[ | * the [[Paper Sort Facility]]. | ||
==Board of Directors== | ==Board of Directors== |
Revision as of 17:12, 27 January 2010
The Rivanna Solid Waste Authority (RSWA) was formed in 1990 as a political subdivision of the Commonwealth of Virginia to handle solid waste disposal and recycling activities in the City of Charlottesville and the Albemarle County. It serves a combined population of 114,200 people[citation needed].
Facilities
The RWSA operates three facilities in addition to its main office.
- the McIntire Road Recycling Center,
- the Ivy Materials Utilization Center, and
- the Paper Sort Facility.
Board of Directors
RSWA is governed by a seven-member Board of Directors, which consists of the City Manager and the Director of Public Works for the City of Charlottesville, the County Executive and the Director of Engineering and Public Works for Albemarle County, and a Chairperson selected jointly by the City Council and County Board of Supervisors. In 2009, the RSWA charter was changed to add one City Councilor and one member of the Albemarle County Board of Supervisors[citation needed].
The current board consists of:
- Michael Gaffney, Chairman
- Mark B. Graham, P.E., Director of Community Development, Albemarle County
- Judith Mueller, Director of Public Works, City of Charlottesville
- Gary O'Connell, City Manager
- Robert Tucker, County Executive
- David Brown, Charlottesville City Councilor
- Ken Boyd, Albemarle County Supervisor
RSWA Citizens Advisory Committee
The Board is supported by a Citizens Advisory Committee of three representatives from the city, three from the county, two from the University of Virginia, and a Chairperson selected jointly by the City Council and Board of Supervisors.
- Jeff Greer, Joint City of Charlottesville / Albemarle County Representative, Chairman
- Kim Blatz, City of Charlottesville Representative, Vice Chairman
- Vacant, City of Charlottesville Representative
- Kevin O. Martin, City of Charlottesville Representative
- Stephen Kirkup, Albemarle County Representative
- Reed Muehlman, Albemarle County Representative
- Teri Kent, Albemarle County Representative
- Elizabeth Bowling, University of Virginia Representative
- Todd Marshall, University of Virginia Representative
Staff
- Thomas L. Frederick, Jr. P.E. - Executive Director
- Lonnie E. Wood - Director of Finance and Administration
- Mark Brownlee - Manager, Ivy Site Operations
- Bruce J. Edmonds - Recycling Operations Manager
- David Atkins - Environmental & Safety Manager
Employee Safety Committee
Health and Safety are administered, policies developed and recommendations made to Executive Management by this committee which is a joint program between the Rivanna Solid Waste Authority and the Rivanna Water & Sewer Authority. Members serve two-year terms and are approved by the Executive Director. The committee is charged with maintaining and improving our safety consciousness as well as improving the safety rules and safety education.
Current members are as follows:
- David L. Atkins - Environmental & Safety Manager
- Guy Maupin - Chairman - Water Department
- Jim Heller - (co-chair) - Sold Waste Department
- Debra Hoyt - Secretary - Laboratory
- Michael Webb - Vehicle Safety - Water Department
- Mike Ralston - Maintenance Department
- Brian Haney - WWT Operator - Wastewater Department
Legal issues
2001 gag order
In 2001, the RSWA settled with 15 Albemarle County landowners that had filed a suit claiming the Ivy Landfill leaked, poisoning their water supply. As part of the terms of the settlement, the landowners were not allowed to publicly criticize new construction at the landfill. To protest, many of them attended a City Council meeting wearing gags[1].
van der Linde
This section documents a current lawsuit. Information may change rapidly as the event progresses. |
RSWA is suing Peter van der Linde, who runs a competing recycling facility, in a $20 million RICO suit.[2]
2009 strategic plan
RSWA is undergoing a strategic planning process to examine solid waste and recycling services in Charlottesville and Albemarle County. The goal is determine a new focus for the area's solid waste management system[3].
In January 2010, Mayor Dave Norris raised the possibility of Charlottesville ending its relationship with the RWSA when its current agreement expires in June 2010[4].
External links
References
- ↑ "Albemarle County Residents Protest Gag Order in Settlement." Daily Progress [Charlottesville] 3 Apr. 2001. George Loper's Archive. Web. 15 Aug. 2009. <http://george.loper.org/trends/2001/Apr/78.html>.
- ↑ Web. Flow blow: Wasteworks may seek trash monopoly, Dave McNair, The Hook, 9/28/09
- ↑ RWSA - Strategic Plan retrieved Jun 12 2009
- ↑ Web. City may end RSWA partnership, Rachana Dixit, Daily Progress, Lee Enterprises, January 13, 2010