Las Vegas City Council Extends Contract with Republic

The new agreement approved Wednesday runs a decade beyond that expiration date, through June 30, 2031.

Waste360 Staff, Staff

April 7, 2017

1 Min Read
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In spite of pressure from some local groups and with legislation under consideration that would affect how solid waste agreements are negotiated in Nevada, the Las Vegas City Council approved a long-term exclusive franchise agreement extension with Republic Services. The deal will run until 2031.

A group of competing waste companies as well as two state senators had urged the council to delay the vote.

Instead, the council moved ahead and approved the deal 5-2.

The Las Vegas Review-Journal has the details:

The current agreement between the city and Republic is due to expire in February 2021. The new agreement approved Wednesday runs a decade beyond that expiration date, through June 30, 2031.

 Republic has said it needs a long-term commitment to justify the cost of the move to single-stream recycling.

Tarkanian said she could not vote for the new agreement without the city soliciting bids.

“This is a clear choice for me, I don’t expect to win this,” she said. “It’s not just competition, it’s monopoly.”

Republic employees turned out en force to Wednesday’s City Council meeting, wearing blue hats and T-shirts that read “Don’t Trash Us.”

Dozens of speakers addressed the council, voicing support for Republic and good experiences with single-stream recycling. Others, including owners of smaller waste and recycling firms, urged the council to solicit competitive bids.

Read the full story here.

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