Guidance Document
Management of Yard Trimmings
O.C.G.A. 12-8-40.2
LEGISLATIVE INTENT
In the past, most yard trimmings have either been land filled or
burned.
Because yard trimmings may constitute up to 15% of waste entering
landfills, and the Comprehensive Solid Waste Management Act sets
a 25%
disposal reduction goal, management of yard trimmings by means other
than
land filling is critical.
In O.C.G.A. 12-8-21.(g), the legislative intent for the handling of yard trimming
is stated as follows:
"It is further the intent of the General Assembly to provide a frame of
reference for the state and all counties,municipal corporations,
and solid waste management authorities in the state relating to
the handling of yard trimmings. The productivity of the soils of
Georgia requires that nature's way of recycling vegetative matter
be respected and followed and that such essential building materials
are no longer wasted by being buried in landfills but are returned
to the soil. The General Assembly, therefore, adopts and recommends
the following hierarchy for handling yard trimmings:
(1) Naturalized, low-maintenance landscaping requiring little or
not cutting;
(2) Grass cycling by mowing it high and letting it lie;
(3) Stacking branches into brush piles for use as wildlife habitats
and for gradual decomposition into the soil;
(4) Composting on the site where the material was grown, followed
by incorporation of the finished compost into the soil at that site;
(5) Chipping woody material on the site where such material was
generated;
(6) Collecting yard trimmings and transporting them to another
site to be chipped or composted for later use; and
(7) Chipping woody material for later use as fiber fuel."
DEFINITION OF YARD TRIMMINGS
The Act defines yard trimmings as follows:
O.C.G.A. 12-8-22.(42) - "yard trimmings means leaves, brush, grass
clippings, shrub and tree prunings, discarded Christmas trees, nursery
and greenhouse vegetative residuals, and vegetative matter resulting
from landscaping development and maintenance other than mining,
agricultural and silvacultural operations." Although it
is recommended that land-clearing debris (trees, stumps, limbs,
etc.) be managed in the same manner as yard trimmings, it is important
to note that these materials are not legally considered yard trimmings
and are therefore, not banned from landfills.
SWM-GD Management of Yard Trimmings 2/96
YARD TRIMMINGS DISPOSAL BAN
In order to encourage the reuse of yard trimmings, and to conserve
landfill capacity, the Act at O.C.G.A. 12-8-40.2 established disposal
restrictions of such waste in certain landfills.
Effective September 1, 1996, each city, county, or solid waste
management authority shall impose restrictions on handling for yard
trimmings generated or disposed of in respective jurisdictions.
These restrictions shall include, but are not limited to, the following:
1. Yard trimmings must be separated from all municipal solid waste
in order to facilitate collections and ultimate handling.
2. Disposal of yard trimmings is banned at certain types of landfills.
These landfills include:
- all municipal solid waste landfills with liners/leachate collection systems.
- all municipal solid waste landfills which have received a vertical expansion
under the Act (NOTE: this also includes all construction and demolition
landfills which have received a vertical expansion under the Act, since
they are considered a form of municipal solid waste landfill).
3. Disposal of yard trimmings are not banned at certain types of landfills.
These landfills include:
- private industry landfills which take solid waste from their own industry
only; and
- inert waste landfills which are considered permit-by-rule facilities.
4. Jurisdictions must require sorting and storage for collection in such a
manner to facilitate collection, composting, or other handling.
5. Yard trimmings must be:
sorted and stockpiled, or
chipped, or
composted, or
used as a mulch, or
otherwise beneficially reused or recycled to the extent feasible.
While the yard trimmings disposal restrictions must be in place
for all jurisdictions not later than September 1, 1996, the Act
encourages each city, county, or solid waste management authority
to take the initiative to impose such restrictions prior to September
1, 1996.
SWM-GD Management of Yard Trimmings 2/96
|