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EXECUTIVE SUMMARY <br /> The Department of Environmental Management, County of Hawaii is in the process of <br /> <br /> redesigning its entire solid waste management system. This initiative is in response to several <br /> factors: <br /> • An updated integrated solid waste management plan, completed December 1, 2002. <br /> • Projected closing of the Hilo landfill within approximately one to two yeazs. <br /> • Rising costs for solid waste management. <br /> • Budget restrictions. <br /> • Long-standing problems requiring immediate resolution. <br /> This plan is intended to: <br /> • facilitate integration of the Kea`au recycling and reuse center into the evolving County solid <br /> waste management system; <br /> • identify ways to sustain the Kea`au recycling and reuse center as a permanent part of the <br /> County solid waste management system; and <br /> • outline a process for creating a system of neighborhood recycling centers by replicating the <br /> Kea`au model at other transfer stations. <br /> Chapter II gives an overview of the Kea`au pilot community recycling and reuse project, <br /> including its history, structure, accomplishments, and lessons learned. This plan was heavily <br /> influenced by lessons Teamed during the Kea`au project. <br /> Chapter III provides a brief overview of the current situation in all aspects of the county solid <br /> waste management system. The chapter includes available data projecfions through yeaz 2020. <br /> The data aze used in Chapter V to reclassify 21 existing transfer stations and one new facility. <br /> Chapter IV establishes goals and objectives relative to completing, sustaining, and replicating the <br /> Kea`au model. A key goal is to complete conversion of existing transfer stations within ten years. <br /> Chapter V describes in detail the completed Kea`au model. The model was shaped by <br /> experiences and lessons learned from the pilot project, as well as by input from community <br /> residents. The model now encompasses a system of four classes of neighborhood recycling <br /> centers (NRCs), each with a standard set of features. Chapter V describes in detail the physical <br /> facilities, customer base, staffing, materials accepted, mazkets for materials collected, linkages to <br /> community needs, operations policies and standazds, and disaster mitigation measures for each <br /> class of NRCs. <br /> Chapter VI is an action plan for completing and sustaining the Kea`au model, integrating the <br /> model into the County solid waste management system, and adapting and replicating the model <br /> island-wide. Chapter VI builds upon and synthesizes material in the previous five chapters. <br /> 1 <br /> <br />