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AIML <br /> Item No. 2 <br /> PC: 12-16-93 - <br /> ER-93-1/UP-93-4 <br /> F Page 5 " <br /> STAFF ANALYSIS <br /> BACKGROUND: <br /> In 1990,Assembly Bill 939,the Integrated Solid Waste Management Act, became effective and required <br /> that by the year 1995, 25 percent of the solid waste generated be diverted from IandfiI disposal or <br /> transformation facilities through programs such as source reduction,recycling,and composting. This act <br /> further mandates that this diversion rate increase to 50 percent by the year 2000. In compliance with AB <br /> 939,the Solid Waste Division of the San Joaquin County Department of Public Works has prepared a <br /> Source Reduction and Recycling Element(SPIRE)SRR <br /> facility should be develo E)• This SRRE indicates that a regional materials recovery <br /> ped in the south County area with the following solid waste functions: material <br /> recovery, transfer of residual waste, composting; and wood processing. <br /> The project applicant,Tracy Delta Solid Waste Management, Inc., of Tracy,Califomia, currently provides <br /> refuse collection for the City of Tracy and portions of the unincorporated south County area. Collect <br /> refuse is then disposed of-at the County-owned Corral Hollow Landfill located approximatelyed <br /> southwest of the City of Tracy along Highway 580. This Class III landfill currently ra"eves pproxi ately <br /> 1,200 cubic yards of nonhazardous solid waste per day, six days per week,from the City of Tracy and <br /> the surrounding unincorporated area and is scheduled for closure by,Janu 1995. Tracy Delta Solid <br /> Waste Management, Inc,, is seeking to establish the'Tracy Materials Recovery and Transfer Facility in <br /> order to provide materials recovery and transfer services, given the planned closure of the Corral Hollow <br /> Landfill. Until the County establishes a replacement site for the Corral Hollow Landfill, solid waste will be <br /> transferred via the proposed Tracy Materials Recovery and Transfer Facility to either the North Countyor <br /> Foothill Sanitary Landfills. Without the proposed transfer station, the waste would be hauled <br /> landfills (a distance of'approximatefy 45 mites one b d to these <br /> residents. With the proposed transfer station, waste would be tra sportedmercial lfrom�he project site to one <br /> vehicles and private <br /> of the landfills in large trailers with up to 25-ton capacity. To date, the County has not been successful <br /> in locating a replacement site for the closing landfill. However, the County <br /> a new sanitary'landfill in the south County area if a site can be identified and securred��'t and develop <br /> POLICY CONSIDERATIONS: <br /> The site is designated as A/G(General Agriculture)on the maps of the 2010 General Plan and zoned AG- <br /> 40 (General Agriculture; 40-acre minimum parcel size), which is a consistent implementing zone for the <br /> A/G General Plan designation. The project is consistent with the General Plan Objectives and Policies <br /> regarding the operation and location of waste facilities, as described in the Solid Waste Disposal section <br /> of the Infrastructure Services chapter. The proposed use falls-within the'Major Impact Services, use type <br /> and may be permitted in the AG=40 zone with an approved Use Permit application. <br /> AREAMEiGHBORHOOD COMPATIBILITY <br /> Land Use: <br /> From 1971 to 1975, the project site was mined for gravel by Lone Star Industries, which resulted <br /> In a large excavated pit approximately 30 feet deep that makes up most of the 39.2-acre site. <br /> Except for the office and maintenance building and related activities,the transfer station building, <br />