It’s been two months since the city adopted a dumpster ban in the Pike/Pine retail corridor of Capitol Hill. While Seattle Public Utilities reports the new garbage bag program has been running smoothly, not all businesses are happy about the increased cost.
SPU formed the Pike Pine Corridor Solid 91ֿ Site Review Program based on recommendations from Mayor Ed Murray’s LGBTQ Task Force last summer; one was to address dark alleys and other physical environments in Capitol Hill, which can be used as a hiding place for criminal behavior and drug consumption.
When the recommendations were released at the end of July 2015, there had been 41 anti-LGBTQ hate crimes or incidents reported to Seattle Police that year, up 46 percent from 2014.
The Pike Pine Corridor Solid 91ֿ Site Review Program began assessing businesses in April, looking for a way to get rid of large dumpsters and carts.
Implemented in October, the program requires businesses that had dumpsters on sidewalks and the street to now buy bags for trash and recycling, which are to be collected three and two times a day, respectively, by city contractor CleanScapes. There are still tote carts for food waste and glass.
“I understand when they talked about it, it was supposed to be a 17 percent increase,” said Jason Lajeunesse, managing partner at Neumos on East Pike, “but the business we do, it doesn’t work that way, because we use a lot of cans, a lot of canned products.”
Lajeunnesse said Neumos has seen a more than 200 percent increase in solid waste disposal costs as a result of the new bag program. The business had been paying around $1,600 a month prior to the bag program. The last bill was more than $4,000. Lajeunesse estimates the bag program for Neumos amounts to an annual increase of $30,000.
“Using their bag program, for us, doesn’t work; it’s disastrous,” he said. “That’s a full salary for someone.”
SPU sells 33-gallon garbage bags in rolls of 25 for $160 and 33-gallon recycle bags in rolls of 25 for $108.75.
Neumos is consistently purchasing more recycling bags than garbage bags to handle the large amount of canned beverages it sells and then discards. Lajeunesse said Neumos is seeing the largest increase in costs, but Lost Lake and Mario’s is also experiencing a spike in its solid waste costs. Lajeunesse operates these other businesses through Guild Seattle, with cofounders Joey Burgess and David Meinert.
“Everyone is experiencing a price increase, we’re not the only ones,” Lajeunesse said. “Of course, ours is more extreme.”
Chop Suey has also complained to SPU regarding an increase in its recycling costs.
“What is costing these guys the money is they sell a lot of cans and they don’t crush them and they take up a lot of volume and they have to buy a lot of bags,” said Andy Ryan with SPU.
There are manual and mechanical crushing machines available, the former being time-consuming and the latter possibly taking up too much space and cost-prohibitive, Ryan said.
Lajeunesse said crushing cans is impractical with the volume of cans being produced.
SPU has been working with Neumos and Chop Suey to address their increased costs.
“We don’t have any doubt that people’s costs are going up as a result of this,” Ryan said, “but it’s our impression that this is what the community wants.”
The Capitol Hill Chamber of Commerce’s Clean and Safe Committee and Capitol Hill Housing both identified dumpster management in their 2016 work plans.
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