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Talking Trash: Recyclables and Organic Waste <br />SUMMARY <br />In 2016, the State of California enacted Senate Bill (SB) 1383, requiring counties, cities, <br />and other organizations responsible for waste collection to coordinate with their <br />residents to divert organic waste, including food scraps, from the landfill waste disposal <br />stream. Another provision makes jurisdictions responsible for procuring a quantity of the <br />recovered organic waste products resulting from the diversion. The 2023-2024 Orange <br />County Grand Jury (OCGJ) investigated how Orange County jurisdictions are complying <br />with the requirements and goals of SB 1383 that impact single-family residential units. <br />The investigation revealed that the approaches to meeting SB 1383's requirements vary <br />greatly from jurisdiction to jurisdiction. The majority of Orange County jurisdictions have <br />not yet distributed residential waste containers that meet the SB 1383 standardization <br />requirements, leaving outdated labeling/embossing in place. Education and outreach <br />have not yet taken place at all in some jurisdictions. Even when information has been <br />disseminated in other jurisdictions, the methods disproportionately favor intermittent <br />paper mailings. Also, the State's unrealistic targets for the procurement of recycled <br />organic waste products do not account for a jurisdiction's population density or <br />geographic size, which frequently makes them extremely difficult to meet. <br />The local enforcement stage of SB 1383 started on January 1, 2024. However, the <br />majority of Orange County jurisdictions are unlikely to meet the SB 1383 targeted <br />seventy-five percent reduction in the amount of organic waste sent to landfills by <br />January 2025. <br />The OCGJ concludes there is a clear need to improve education and outreach efforts, <br />develop enforcement mechanisms and processes, and to coordinate and collaborate <br />among all jurisdictions to collectively address the challenges and to achieve the goals <br />and targets of SB 1383. <br />BACKGROUND <br />Organic waste comprises more than a third of the waste stream in California and <br />includes green waste, wood, food waste, and fibers such as paper and cardboard. <br />When left to decompose in landfills, organic waste releases large amounts of methane <br />gas which is harmful to the environment (CalRecycle, 2024). In September 2016, SB <br />1383 set reduction targets in a statewide effort to reduce emissions of Short -Lived <br />Climate Pollutants (SLCP) including methane. Simply put, this required all statewide <br />jurisdictions to implement mandatory organic waste collection and recycling to divert <br />organic waste from landfills. Another key benefit of the diversion of organic and other <br />recyclable material from landfills is the preservation of overall landfill capacity. <br />In 2014, the State conducted random sampling of twenty-six landfills, Material Recovery <br />Facilities (MRF), and Transfer Stations located in twenty-one of California's fifty-eight <br />counties (none in Orange County). The results were used to establish the baseline for <br />2023-2024 Orange County Grand Jury Page 3 <br />