At the Solid Waste Committee segment of the meeting, several residents pressed county leaders about sanitation operations and the feasibility of residential pickup.
Joe Davis, who identified himself and his neighborhood, called attention to the county sanitation fund and the budget numbers, saying: “I thought we were getting out of the garbage business... I looked at that garbage trucks ... 3,854,000.” He questioned why the county continues to operate multiple convenience centers and whether residential curbside collection had been considered as a contract alternative.
County staff responded with line‑item clarification: the convenience‑center line covers the nine convenience centers and associated workers, while a separate “sanitation management” line funds truck drivers, curbside pick‑up operations and recycling efforts. Staff cautioned that running rural collection routes is expensive in sparsely populated counties and said moving to residential pickup could actually increase operational costs.
Public commenters and some commissioners said high convenience‑center staffing and perceived inefficiencies merited additional study. Citizens urged clearer budget descriptions and called for exploring contractor options to reduce burdens on residents without vehicles.
No formal change to service delivery was adopted; staff told the committee they would include the issue in budget discussions and bring detailed cost comparisons if the commissioners asked.
Next steps noted by the chair: staff will retain the convenience center cost information for the budget review and bring any proposals for residential collection back to committee consideration.