Illegal Dumping in Illegal Dumping in Bayview … Dumping in Illegal Dumping in Bayview Hunters...

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Illegal Dumping in Illegal Dumping in Illegal Dumping in Illegal Dumping in Bayview Hunters Point Bayview Hunters Point Bayview Hunters Point Bayview Hunters Point September 12, 2016

Discarded Lights and Used Motor Oil

Discarded Containers and Litter

Tires

Abandoned Drum with Hazardous Waste

Abandoned Materials on Sidewalks

Stains on Ground from Releases

Dumping “Hot Spots”

Yosemite Slough Upland Area – Van Dyke

Cars, boats…tar equipment?

Construction Waste

Photo provided by Literacy for Environmental Justice

Homeless encampments

Partnerships – Prevention, Clean-up, Enforcement

San Francisco Conservation

Corps

SF Public Works

Recology SF

District Attorney

SF Environment

Literacy for Environmental

Justice

SF Department of Public Health

BVHP EJ Task Force

SF City Attorney

SF Police Department

SF Department of Homelessness

SF 311 Residents SF MTA

District Supervisor

California Air Resources Board

Greenaction for Health and Environmental

Justice

Bayview Hunters Point Environmental Justice Response Task Force bvhp-ivan.org

Public Outreach and Education

Community Education to Prevent Used Oil Pollution and Encourage Reporting of Illegal Dumping to 311

Conduct Brownfield Site Assessment

Opportunities for Collaboration

© 2013 SF Environment All Rights ReservedThe author of this document has secured the necessary permission to use all the images depicted in this

presentation. Permission to reuse or repurpose the graphics in this document should not be assumed nor is it transferable for any other use. Please do not reproduce or broadcast any content from this document without

written permission from the holder of copyright.

Thank you.

Sraddha MehtaSenior Environmental Justice SpecialistSraddha.Mehta@sfgov.org(415) 355-3723

SF Department of Public Health’s Role in Managing Abandoned Hazardous Waste

Jeff NalleSenior Environmental Health InspectorSan Francisco Department of Public Health

SF Department of Public Health’s Role in Managing Abandoned Hazardous Waste

Jeff NalleSenior Environmental Health InspectorSan Francisco Department of Public HealthJeff.Nalle@sfdph.org(415) 252-3976

Ian Schneider

San Francisco Public Works

Outreach & Enforcement (OnE) Team

Outreach and Enforcement (OnE) Team overview

•311-based service requests

•Supervisor’s offices

•Other City Agencies

•Recology Sunset Scavenger

•Community/Neighborhood/Merchant groups

Public Works Outreach and Enforcementillegal dumping violation examples

Street and Sidewalk CleaningMarch-May, 2016

•311 data for District 10:

4,920 service requests

•2,828 (57%) to Public Works,

1,939 (39%) to Recology

•1,675 (34%) are bulky items,

461 (9%) are hazardous material,

965 (20%) are encampment-related

•961 (20%) are in Bayview, Hunters

Point, India Basin neighborhoods

Public Works Outreach and EnforcementMarch-May, 2016

•279 incidents recorded in District 10

•106 (38%) outreach incidents,

146 (52%) Notices of Violation,

29 (10%) citations

•22 incidents (8%) refer directly to

illegal dumping,

42 (15%) refer directly to lack of

garbage collection service,

113 (41%) refer directly to nuisance

conditions

•124 (44%) are in Bayview - Hunters

Point neighborhoods

•$3,100 collected in citation payments

from citations issued in this time period

Possible Solutions

•Better Lighting

•Camera installation and public/private partnership

•Targeted enforcement

•Property owner and merchant coordination

•Interagency collaboration

www.sfpublicworks.org

Recology San Francisco’s Role in Managing Abandoned Materials

Paul GiustiCommunity and Government Affairs Manager Recology San Francisco

Recology’s Abandoned Materials Collection