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Transfer/Processing Report <br /> Tracy Material Recovery and Transfer Facility <br /> 30703 5. MacArthur Drive, Tracy, California 95377 <br /> ® Station operations, bringing the overall footprint of the MRF/TS building to <br /> approximately 76,600 square feet. <br /> The MRF equipment inside the Processing Building will be upgraded over time as <br /> technology advances. <br /> Administration and Maintenance Building <br /> The administrative offices and maintenance occupy a common building at the <br /> southern end of the site. The building contains offices and work areas for <br /> management personnel and administrative employees, restrooms, conference <br /> rooms, storage and equipment rooms, in addition to mechanical equipment and <br /> tools for use in the maintenance and repair of company vehicles and waste <br /> handling equipment. <br /> Outdoor Facility Operations Areas <br /> Composting Area <br /> An 8.4 acre area to the north of the MRF/TS building is provided for processing <br /> and composting of yard waste. Yard waste is delivered via commercial collection <br /> vehicles or separated from self-haul load. Large woody material is separated from <br /> the yard waste prior to processing at the composting area, where the material is <br /> ground and placed into windrows on the concrete pad. The windrows are <br /> managed in accordance with California Codes & Regulations, Title 1 <br /> requirements until the composting process is complete. The finished compost <br /> product is then sold as a soil amendment to local markets. <br /> _Construction and Demolition/Inert Debris Processing and Wood Waste Storage <br /> and Processing Area <br /> A 3.8 acre area to the south of the Administration and Maintenance Building is <br /> provided for the processing of Construction and Demolition/Inert Debris (CDI) and <br /> wood waste. <br /> The facility receives mixed construction and demolition debris and processes it <br /> utilizing a "floor sort" operation; manual labor and mobile equipment are used to <br /> separate the materials for the recovery of recyclable materials, such as wood, <br /> metals, cardboard, wallboard, inerts, and plastics. Some of the materials, <br /> particularly inert and wood debris are received in source-separated loads that are <br /> diverted directly to their respective processing operations areas. <br /> Wood is separated from commercial, industrial, self-haul, and residential waste <br /> streams in the sorting area and stockpiled on site. Once a sufficient stockpile is <br /> accumulated, the material is chipped/ground and loaded into transfer trailers for <br /> delivery to biomass power plants, or sold as mulch to local markets. <br /> 8 <br />