Council approves $120,205 purchase of trailer‑mounted leaf collector to continue fall leaf program
Get AI-powered insights, summaries, and transcripts
SubscribeSummary
Council approved purchase of an ARM 25‑24K trailer‑mounted leaf collector for $120,205.49 under Sourcewell cooperative contract after staff presented repair history and cost comparisons. The purchase replaces aging machines that had heavy repair costs and aims to preserve the city's leaf pickup program.
Fraser — The Fraser City Council authorized the Department of Public Works to purchase an ARM 25‑24K trailer‑mounted leaf collector for $120,205.49 via the Sourcewell cooperative contract, preserving the city’s fall leaf pickup program.
DPW staff described the current leafer fleet as aging (units dating to 1997 and 2007) and said the city spent more than $26,000 on repairs in the last two years; one unit was out of service for most of last season. Staff presented a less costly trailer‑mounted option compared with a previously considered chassis‑mounted unit and recommended the ARM 25‑24K to meet the department’s operational needs.
Council discussion noted prior debate about leaf program cost‑benefit versus having the trash hauler handle leaves; staff said eliminating the city program would create additional expenses from the hauler and cause storm‑drain clogging risks. Public commenters who live in condominium complexes and neighborhoods with large trees spoke in support of the program.
Why it matters: The city’s leaf‑collection program reduces instances of leaves clogging storm drains and supports residents with mature tree canopy. Replacing the oldest machines reduces ongoing repair costs and should improve program reliability.
What’s next: DPW will finalize the purchase under the Sourcewell contract and schedule delivery and deployment in advance of the next leaf season.
