California’s 1989 Assembly Bill 939 (AB 939) required local governments throughout the state to develop integrated waste management plans to detail how they will reach certain diversion goals outlined in the legislation. AB 939 also allowed for governments to levy a fee to pay for the cost of developing and implementing these plans.
“CAPÍTULO 8. Autoridad local encargada de las tasas
41900. Cada ciudad y condado deberá demostrar que dispone de una o varias fuentes de financiación para sufragar los gastos de preparación, adopción y aplicación del elemento o plan, tal y como exigen las secciones 41003, 41230, 41303 y 41430.
41901. Una ciudad, condado o ciudad y condado pueden imponer tasas en cantidades suficientes para pagar los costos de preparación, adopción y aplicación de un plan integrado de gestión de residuos elaborado de conformidad con este capítulo. Las tasas se basarán en los tipos o cantidades de residuos sólidos y se utilizarán para sufragar los costos reales en que incurra la ciudad o el condado en la preparación, adopción y aplicación del plan, así como en la fijación y recaudación de las tasas locales. Al determinar el importe de las tasas, la ciudad o el condado incluirá únicamente los costos directamente relacionados con la preparación, adopción y aplicación del plan y con la fijación y recaudación de las tasas locales.
41902. Una agencia local puede cobrar directamente las tarifas autorizadas por este capítulo o puede, mediante acuerdo, disponer que las tarifas sean cobradas por una empresa de transporte de residuos sólidos que preste servicios de recolección de residuos sólidos a la ciudad o al condado.”
The County of San Mateo uses a $9.89/ton AB 939 fee levied on all waste disposed of at landfills in the county to pay for programs associated with its integrated waste management plan. This fee funds various solid waste reduction and diversion programs and household hazardous waste programs for the county.
Funded Waste Diversion and Compost Programs
The County of San Mateo’s Office of Sustainability (OOS) uses its AB 939 fee revenue to administer various waste diversion and recycling programs for the county, including programs around public education and outreach, construction and demolition waste management, composting education and awareness, Green Business, and a schools outreach program focused on the 4Rs (reduce, reuse, recycle, rot). A number of infographics are available for schools and gardens to use, including both hot composting y vermicomposting infographics.
Public education programs include a sustainability hotline for information on where to recycle items and a website with resources for learning how to compost at home.
The OOS has also piloted several projects including education on an disposable food service ware ordinance, un grants program for nonprofits, schools, and government agencies, a community garden partnership program, and an edible food recovery program. Many of these programs are countywide in reach, but there are also some programs focused specifically on the unincorporated areas of the county.
4Rs Grants Program
El 4Rs (Reduce, Reuse, Recycle, Rot – Compost) Grants Program offered funding assistance to government agencies, nonprofit organizations, and educational institutions between 2018 and 2023, though currently, the program is indefinitely suspended. It offered Mini Grants ($2,000-$5,000) and Mega Grants (up to $25,000) to entities diverting waste from landfill, awarding a total of over $1.1 million over the 5 annual grant periods that the program was active.
Funded projects included numerous composting projects, including Burlingame School District’s Green Waste Diversion and Composting, The HEAL Project’s School Farm Compost Education Program, Fresh Approach’s Community Composting Hubs, and Cabrillo PTO’s 4Rs Lunchtime Learning Program, to name a few. Past years’ grantees are documented below:
- PY2018-19 Grantee Snapshot: $200,239 total grant funding, 6 Mega Grants and 10 Mini Grants distributed.
- PY2019-20 Grantee Snapshot: $302,038 total grant funding, 11 Mega Grants and 15 Mini Grants distributed.
- PY2020-21 Grantee Snapshot: $199,615 total grant funding, 6 Mega Grants and 12 Mini Grants distributed.
- PY2021-22 Grantee Snapshot: $245,236 total grant funding, 8 Mega Grants and 12 Mini Grants distributed.
- PY2022-23 Grantee Snapshot: $194,066 total grant funding, 6 Mega Grants and 10 Mini Grants distributed.
Más información
- Waste Reduction – County of San Mateo Office of Sustainability
*This policy writeup was a collaborative effort between ILSR and Krista Keuhnhackl, Sustainability Coordinator for San Mateo County*
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Original post from March 13, 2023
Updated February 20, 2025