Consultants from Tetra Tech presented a Recycling & Transfer Station study to the Needham Select Board on Nov. 25 that reviewed facility operations, surveyed residents and benchmarked neighboring programs. The consultants concluded the RTS is generally well managed and does not need major capital investment now, but recommended targeted operational improvements and increased public education.
The consultants said they surveyed residents (a 20% household response rate) and found broad satisfaction among users. Key recommendations include improving site signage and traffic flow, fixing surface and yard‑waste drop‑off conditions (unpaved areas and potholes), expanding swap‑shop capacity and textile bin services, enhancing online/social media outreach to younger residents, and evaluating modest accessibility and traffic‑flow investments.
Consultants also noted an evolving statewide regulatory context: the Massachusetts Department of Environmental Protection is phasing in stricter organics diversion requirements for commercial generators and plans a residential organics mandate by 2030. The town’s consultants recommended the Select Board consider phased approaches to curbside food‑waste or expanded composting and explore regional partnerships for shared services and end markets for compost.
DPW staff cautioned that scaling food‑waste processing to larger volumes raises contamination and vector management challenges; they recommended phased pilots, enhanced education and use of available MassDEP program funds for outreach. The board asked staff to consider detailed traffic‑flow work and to pursue targeted outreach and grant funding for education and minor capital improvements.
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