A growing number of U.S. cities are seeking to hit waste diversion or reduction targets in the coming years. While the pandemic challenged many of these programs, renewed energy around climate change and federal funding could provide a boost. Learn how this trend fits into the broader zero-waste movement and how cities are working to track or certify their efforts.

Head to this article on Waste Dive for more information.

Gary Liss also provided more information beyond the hour in the webinar:

Evolution of ZW goals, frameworks and methodologies over the years, along with what is new for Zero Waste USA (GL)

  • Formation of ZWIA – 2002
  • ZW Definition – 2004, Revised 2018
  • ZW Business Principles – 2005
  • ZW Community Principles – 2009
  • ZW Business Recognition Guidelines – 2012 (became the basis for US ZW Business Council guidelines, which were rebranded in 2017 as TRUE Zero Waste rating system after acquisition by USGBC in 2016)
  • ZW Community Recognition Guidelines – 2014
  • ZW Hierarchy – 2014, revised 2018
  • ZW Declaration – 202
  • EPA Managing and Transforming Waste Streams – 2015

ZW USA Tools

  • Campaigns – COOL Now and Albatross Coalition
  • ZW Community Toolkit
  • ZW Business and Institutions Toolkit – NEW – 2023
  • Recycling Cornucopia Technical Assistance and Consulting – NEW – 2023
  • Pollution Prevention and Zero Waste training – NEW – 2022-2023

Next Frontier on Zero Waste

  • Definition of Zero Waste – Petition to UN to adopt
  • Zero Waste Cities Recognition: Zero Waste Cities and Zero Waste USA
  • Federal and State Policy Leadership

What parameters are to be considered to plan a city’s journey to become zero waste?

  • Goals and Definition
  • Existing system
  • Stakeholder engagement
  • Options and descriptions
  • Diversion analysis
  • Economic analysis
  • Implementation Plan & Timeline

How are US cities tracking or certifying their efforts?

  • ZWIA and Zero Waste USA Zero Waste Community Recognition Program
  • TRUE Zero Waste and other USGBC certifications
  • SWEEP

How are communities increasing fees on garbage (keeping recycling and composting lower) in an equitable manner that does not overly punish those who have large or multi-generational families under one roof?

PAYT equity – reduce per-household waste collection fees for eligible residents by a set amount, a percentage discount, or offer a predetermined number of bags or stickers free of charge to low-income/senior residents. Lower rates can be charged through existing low-income programs (e.g., other utility programs or according to federal poverty guidelines or guidelines for school lunch programs). Every other week trash collection will also help senior residents, as they may not need weekly trash service if the community has weekly food waste collection services. federal poverty guidelines

see the EPA website on PAYT for Special Populations.

What is your insight on assistance from federal legislation (e.g., Bipartisan Infrastructure Law or Inflation Reduction Act, etc)? Some entities feel the funding levels are actually too high for their communities to manage, and they wanted smaller $$.

  • Too high a grant or too much bureaucracy? For the latter, consider Brownfields grants which include Technical Assistance to help in getting grants. Also, there are now 17 new technical assistance centers for Federal Grants. The U.S. Department of Energy funds these Environmental Justice Thriving Communities Technical Assistance Centers (EJ TCTACs) to help underserved and overburdened communities across the country access funds.
  • Work together regionally and with community-based organizations. Figure out a team that can manage well.
  • Remember, “earmarks” are back, so ask your Congressperson or Senator for help.

What are cities doing to pursue real recycling goals? Diversion is a confusing term that often means materials are not recycled, they are merely diverted from landfill (and could end up in landfill anyway after being diverted!).

Diversion doesn’t mean materials are not recycled. It means they are diverted from destructive disposal (landfills and incineration). Zero Waste cities are all pursuing real recycling goals as PART of their solutions. ZW cities focus first on rethinking, redesigning, and refusing, then setting up reuse systems, then recycling, composting, and digestion.

moderator
  • Cole Rosengren

    Lead Editor, Waste Dive

    Cole Rosengren is a lead editor at Waste Dive and Packaging Dive and has been with Industry Dive sin...
speaker
  • Gary Liss

    Vice-President, Zero Waste USA

    Gary Liss has 50 years of experience in recycling, is a leading advocate of Zero Waste, and has work...
  • Natasha Dyer

    Executive Director, SWEEP Standard

    Lifelong zero-waster and recycler, when she is not found teaching members of her community about the...
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