The Knoxville City Council approved a new $4 million waste management contract Tuesday with Waste Connections of Tennessee.
The
company is the city's current trash provider. Under the new contract,
Waste Connections will provide collection for household garbage and
recycling materials for a seven-year term with three optional three-year
renewals.
Tuesday’s vote comes two weeks after the city council voted to allow the city to purchase about 62,000 95-gallon trash receptacles.
Each
homeowner will receive a new 95-gallon trash cart that trucks can lift
instead of workers under the new plan. The 95-gallon cans replace
citizens’ four 32-gallon can that are currently permitted.
City leaders said the plan will save Knoxville about $2 million per year.
Director of Public Service Chad Weth said the new service will not cost workers their jobs.
"They
do hire temporary labor. So it might require less temporary labor,"
Weth said. "If they have to lose folks, they would find work for anyone
that's currently understaffed."
Also during Tuesday's meeting, the
council approved a resolution for an agreement with Wilson Construction
to expand the First Creek Greenway.
The resolution calls for up to $1.22 million to be spent expanding the greenway to connect Woodland Avenue to Edgewood Park.
The
new portion will run along Fulton High School, cross a new pedestrian
bridge across First Creek to North Broadway, and then continue along
Edgewood Avenue to Edgewood Park, the North Knoxville Library and the
Larry Cox Senior Center, according to the city council agenda.
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