Sanitation leadership outlined recruiting and retention challenges for heavy-equipment crews, higher maintenance costs and route-structure changes intended to improve productivity.
Tracy, the sanitation director, told the council that sanitation work is physically demanding and continuous and described steps taken to increase mechanization and route efficiency. He said the department has increased equipment reliability through route redesign and additional trucks in some precincts; he noted that growing housing adds rooftops and revenue but also increases operating demands and maintenance costs.
Councilors asked whether outsourcing certain large-vehicle maintenance had become more cost effective than keeping specialized technicians in-house. Staff described a mixed approach: some departments prefer in-house quick-turn maintenance while larger trucks and specialized apparatus are sometimes sent to external vendors. Tracy said a trend of higher repair costs — for example gearbox and driveline issues on certain packer trucks — has pushed maintenance spending higher.
Councilors asked about recent rate history; staff said the most recent sanitation rate increase occurred around 2020 (a $1 increase in two consecutive years around 2020). Council members said they are not proposing a rate hike at this meeting but asked staff to track costs and return with an analysis if service costs outpace revenues.
Why it matters: sanitation is an essential, continuous city service; rapid fleet-maintenance cost growth or chronic staffing shortfalls could affect service levels or require rate adjustments.
Source: sanitation director and council discussion at the Prattville budget work session. No budget decision or rate changes were made at the meeting.