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Tag: Sanitation Department

  • Don't let your Christmas tree become a fire hazard. Recycle it now. Here's how

    Don't let your Christmas tree become a fire hazard. Recycle it now. Here's how

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    Now that St. Nick has delivered his Christmas gifts, it’s your job to toss the discarded wrapping paper, cardboard boxes and ribbons and vacuum up the tinsel scattered around the house.

    As for the wilting yuletide pine that has been shedding needles for days, you have several options for disposing of it.

    Fire officials warn that dry Christmas trees can pose a fire hazard so don’t put off your disposal chore for too long.

    Within the city of Los Angeles, Los Angeles Sanitation and Environment is offering curbside collection for Christmas tree recycling through the end of January, according to the city’s website.

    Several options are available for scheduling a pickup, such as creating a ticket on the MYLA311 website, submitting a ticket request on the L.A. Sanitation and Environment homepage, or calling the 24-hour customer service line at (800) 773-2489.

    Before your tree can be hauled away, the sanitation department requires the removal of all decorations, tinsel and stands. Additionally, you need to cut the trees into pieces, place them in the green bin and set them out for regular collection on trash day.

    Residents of multifamily buildings can place trees on the curb for regularly scheduled collection days.

    The city will not accept artificial trees and trees layered in fake snow for recycling. If your tree is covered in fake snow, you should put it in the black trash can designated for landfill disposal.

    The city’s sanitation department uses recycled Christmas trees to produce compost and mulch, which residents can obtain for free.

    If you want to drop off your tree for mulching, the city offers two locations.

    The Gaffey Street SAFE Center at 1400 N. Gaffey St. in San Pedro will accept trees from Jan. 2 to Jan. 31, Monday through Sunday, from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. The Lopez Canyon Environmental Education Center in Lake View Terrace will accept trees on the same dates and hours.

    The Los Angeles Fire Department urges people to immediately remove and recycle natural trees. The department warns that dry Christmas needles can turn a small fire into an inferno in less than 7 seconds.

    In addition to the mulching facilities, you can also drop your trees off at 13 Los Angeles city fire department stations until Jan. 12. Participating stations include:

    108 N. Fremont Ave., 90012 — Civic Center / Bunker Hill

    1192 E. 51st St., 90011 — South Los Angeles

    11641 Corbin Ave., 91326 — Porter Ranch

    4029 Wilshire Blvd., 90010 — Hancock Park

    1005 N. Gaffey St., 90731 — North San Pedro

    1410 Cypress Ave., 90065 — Cypress Park

    10811 S. Main St., 90061 — South Los Angeles

    1801 E. Century Blvd., 90002 — Watts

    9224 Sunland Blvd., 91352 — Sun Valley

    14355 Arminta St., 91402 — Panorama City

    5101 N. Sepulveda Blvd., 91403 — Sherman Oaks

    4470 Coliseum St., 90016 — South Los Angeles

    23004 Roscoe Blvd., 91304 — West Hills

    Several L.A. recreation centers and parks will also offer a one-day drop-off event on Jan. 7, from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. The locations include: the Los Angeles Zoo parking lot; the Rancho Cienega Recreation Center in Baldwin Hills; the Balboa Sports Center in Encino; the Cheviot Hills Recreation Center in Rancho Park; Sunland Park near Sun Valley; and the Westchester Municipal Building near the Los Angeles International Airport.

    Long Beach

    The Long Beach Public Works Department is offering its annual “Treecycling” disposal program for residents until Jan. 12. The city has a dozen free drop-off locations available Monday through Friday, from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., and on the weekends from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m.

    If you are unable to drop off your old tree, the city will pick up it for one day only on Jan. 13. Long Beach residents must place their trees on the curb by 7 a.m.

    Don’t forget to remove all decorations and stands and cut any tree over 12 feet in half. Flocked trees will be accepted.

    Santa Monica

    Santa Monica’s holiday tree collection will run until Jan. 31. The city advises residents to place bare trees on the curbside or alleys ready for pickup and to avoid placing trees in parking lots or parks. Calling 311 is not necessary for tree pickup.

    Pasadena

    Pasadena offers curbside pickup for bare trees to all solid waste customers on their regularly scheduled trash days from Jan. 2 to Jan. 16.

    If you prefer to drop off your Christmas trees, locations are open daily from 7 a.m. to 2 p.m. at Eaton Blanche Park and Robinson Park until Jan. 2.

    Newport Beach

    Residents of Newport Beach have until Jan. 15 to place their cut-up trees in the green recycling bins. The local sanitation company, CR&R Environmental Services, requests that all ornaments, tinsel, lights and tree stands be removed.

    Artificial trees and those with fake snow should be placed in black trash bins in Newport Beach, as they will not be recycled.

    Laguna Beach

    In Laguna Beach, Waste Management will for the next three weeks collect and recycle holiday trees. Trees taller than 6 feet must be cut in half and placed on the curb during a regular collection day.

    Waste Management transports the trees to Tierra Verde Industries in Irvine for composting.

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    Anthony De Leon

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  • Eric Ulrich associate got towing job with NYC agency while under criminal indictment

    Eric Ulrich associate got towing job with NYC agency while under criminal indictment

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    Weeks before he was indicted on bribery charges alongside ex-Buildings Department head Eric Ulrich this summer, a Queens tow truck operator got paid by a city agency for a vehicle hauling job — even though he had for years been barred from receiving municipal business due to a separate, ongoing legal battle, the Daily News has learned.

    The Sanitation Department’s $9,000 payment to Michael Mazzio’s Mike’s Heavy Duty Towing firm came in two installments — $3,500 on June 28 and $5,500 on July 7, city records show. The disbursements were for a “non-standard” job the company performed that involved towing vehicles, including an excavator, for the Sanitation Department over a three-day span in May and June, agency spokesman Josh Goodman confirmed this week.

    The award marked the first time a city agency had given Mike’s Heavy Duty a taxpayer-funded gig since 2018. That year, after nearly a decade of contracting with the firm for vehicle repair services, procurement records show the city stopped offering any more business to Mike’s Heavy Duty in the wake of then-Manhattan District Attorney Cy Vance indicting Mazzio on criminal charges that he helped orchestrate a conspiracy to rig city contracts for vehicle towing on highways.

    Sanitation Department

    New York Sanitation Department equipment is moved by Mike Mazzio’s Heavy Duty Towing firm in the spring of 2023. (Sanitation Department)

    The 2018 case is still ongoing, and Mazzio has pleaded not guilty to those charges.

    Procurement rules from the Mayor’s Office of Contract Services state that an unresolved criminal indictment of a company executive is grounds for barring that company from being considered for any city business. Private companies, meantime, are under the same rules required to disclose details about their principals, such as investigations or indictments they’re facing, before they can receive a city contract.

    But Goodman, the Sanitation spokesman, said Mike’s Heavy Duty never filed such a disclosure before this summer’s hauling job — and wasn’t required to — because the firm didn’t sign a formal contract with the agency.

    Former New York City's Buildings Commissioner Eric Ulrich, left, is sits at Supreme Court with his attorney, Wednesday, Sept. 13, 2023, in New York.

    Mary Altaffer/AP

    Former New York City’s Buildings Commissioner Eric Ulrich, left, is sits at Supreme Court with his attorney, Wednesday, Sept. 13, 2023, in New York. (AP Photo/Mary Altaffer)

    Rather, records show Mike’s Heavy Duty was able to do business with the Sanitation Department because of a loophole. The award was made via a “purchase order” — a form of procurement that does not require a competitive bidding process or disclosures about executives as long as the award is below $20,000.

    Since there was no disclosure, Goodman said the department did not realize Mazzio was already under indictment at the time of the haul job.

    If it did know, he said the department wouldn’t have given Mazzio’s firm the job and promised it won’t get any more work with the agency going forward. Goodman declined to spell out what type of due diligence the department does for purchase orders, or explain how it’s possible for a pending criminal indictment to not appear in any screening performed on Mike’s Heavy Duty.

    It’s unclear if the city keeps companies it’s barred from doing business with in a database.

    New York Sanitation Department equipment is moved by Mike Mazzio's Heavy Duty Towing firm in the spring of 2023. (Sanitation Department)

    Sanitation Department

    New York Sanitation Department equipment is moved by Mike Mazzio’s Heavy Duty Towing firm in the spring of 2023. (Sanitation Department)

    Asked why the department went with Mazzio’s firm in the first place, Goodman said the tow job required a so-called “beam trailer,” and that the agency’s own one was being repaired at the time.

    As a result, Goodman said the agency hired Mike’s Heavy Duty because a Sanitation Department mechanic “who needed these vehicles moved knew that this company had [a beam trailer], and so made arrangements.”

    Goodman declined to name the mechanic. He said the job was performed to satisfaction and provided The News with photos of the haul.

    This summer’s tow job payment to Mike’s Heavy Duty came less than a month before Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg filed criminal charges in August alleging Mazzio and five other men gave Ulrich bribes in 2021 and 2022 in exchange for Ulrich using his government powers to do them favors, including helping them get business with the city.

    A spokeswoman for Bragg declined to comment on Sanitation’s payment to Mike’s Heavy Duty.

    Ulrich resigned as Mayor Adams’ Buildings commissioner in November 2022 after it first became known Bragg’s office was investigating him over bribery allegations. The ex-commissioner, who has pleaded not guilty, declined to comment Thursday on Mazzio’s recent Sanitation Department gig.

    Mazzio, who was alleged by authorities to have reputed mob ties in 2018 and helped raise tens of thousands of dollars for Adams’ 2021 campaign with Ulrich, also declined to comment via his attorney, James Frocarro. Mazzio has pleaded not guilty to the bribery charges, too.

    One of the five indictments Ulrich was arraigned on this month alleges he used his influence as a top Adams administration official to help Mazzio get his tow truck license with the Department of Consumer and Workers Protection restored after the agency initially refused to renew it in the wake of his 2018 indictment, threatening his firm’s ability to operate. In return, Mazzio showered Ulrich with bribes, including cash and Mets tickets, prosecutors say.

    As first reported by the news outlet The City this week, Mazzio also convinced Adams’ administration to scrap a license renewal for one of his top competitors in the tow trucking industry.

    Mayor Eric Adams

    Benny Polatseck/NYC Mayor’s Office

    New York City Mayor Eric Adams delivers remarks at the Appeal of Conscience Foundation Award Dinner in New York on Monday, September 18, 2023. (Benny Polatseck/NYC Mayor’s Office)

    Neither Adams nor any current members of his administration are accused of any wrongdoing as part of Ulrich’s indictments.

    Adams and his chief adviser, Ingrid Lewis-Martin, met on multiple occasions with Ulrich and his co-defendants, including Mazzio, according to court papers.

    In a series of conversations shortly after Adams took office in January 2022, Mazzio and another co-defendant, Joseph Livreri, urged Lewis-Martin “to get authorization for Mike’s Heavy Duty Towing to tow from NYC’s highways during a snowstorm” and to convince her and “other high ranking NYC officials to remove a competing tow truck company from its arterial towing contract,” one of the indictments charge.

    That competing firm is Runway Towing, who had its license renewal application denied by the Department of Consumer and Workers Protection around the same time Mazzio and Livreri discussed the matter with Lewis-Martin, according to The City’s report.

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    Chris Sommerfeldt

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