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Extracted from Consolidated Report

This investigation was originally published as part of a larger consolidated report containing multiple investigations. View the consolidated PDF for the complete document.

Napa County Grand Jury • 2001-2002

Napa – Vallejo Waste Management Authority

6 pages
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Findings 3 findings

F1 Page 60
The JPA has no staff of its own and is operated by the Napa County Department of Environmental Health staff in a very efficient manner. No single person is assigned full time to the JPA. Two or three of the Department’s staff are assigned to the JPA along with their regular duties.
F2 Page 60
The County made a decision in 1993 to build the transfer station to avoid the liability for closure of another landfill. The JPA made a decision in 1997 to switch from truck to rail to truck to truck, because liability for closure of another landfill was no longer a problem.
F3 Page 60
The JPA is paying Allied Waste Inc. (Allied) $54 a ton. It includes the cost of operation of the transfer station, transporting the waste to Keller Canyon and the fees charged by an Allied subsidiary to dispose of the waste at Keller Canyon. Because the $54 per ton is not broken down, it is not possible to tell if Allied is making more than it should on the cost of the operation of the transfer station, the transportation of the waste and the cost of disposal. The actual cost of burying the waste should be $8 to $9 per ton.

Recommendations 3