Thursday, February 17, 2022

Yorba Linda plans trash waste education program for organics; Placentia-Yorba Linda school district lists campus-by-campus coronavirus infections

 

An educational program to alert Yorba Linda residents to new state-mandated regulations to separate kitchen food scraps from regular trash waste is on the drawing boards, financed by a grant from California's Resources Recycling and Recovery Department (CalRecycle).

Under a state law effective Jan. 1, all organic waste must be collected separately from the trash that is currently collected in the black containers provided by the city's longtime trash hauler, Republic Services.

Although the law is already on the books, Yorba Linda officials are advising residents to continue disposing of food waste in the regular trash barrels. New rules regarding trash disposal will be communicated to residents through the educational outreach program.

Officials are meeting with Republic Services personnel to determine how best to collect and recycle the organic waste. Residents who are already composting food waste are advised “to keep up the good work.”

Businesses and multi-family complexes that are not already in compliance with the law are asked to contact the recycling coordinator at Republic Services (Kate Schlentz at 714-238-3342) for more information.

The state grant is anticipated to total some $90,000, with funds expected to be received by the city April 1, if the city's application meets CalRecycle's March 1 funding deadline.

According to a report by Jamie Lai, the city's public works director and city engineer, the new organic waste disposal ruling “is the most significant waste reduction mandate adopted in the state...in the last 30 years....”

She said the regulations in Senate Bill 1383, “outline specific requirements related to organics collection, edible food recovery and compliance tracking and monitoring.” The law is expected to reduce organic waste disposal by 75% and increase edible food recovery by 25% by 2025.

The statewide program aims to reduce the methane released from organic waste in landfills.

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An informative report on positive COVID-19 cases among students and staff at the 34 campuses and the district office in the Placentia-Yorba Linda Unified School District is updated each school day on the district website (pylusd.org, click “COVID-19 dashboard”).

The dashboard lists the number of confirmed positive COVID-19 cases within a 10-day period, with the numbers for students and staff listed separately for each of the district's 34 campuses.

Two separate columns also list the total number of students and staff at each site and the proportion of each school's population with confirmed positive cases.

According to the dashboard page: “In the event that a student or staff member is identified as a close contact to a COVID-19 positive individual, they will be contacted directly by their school principal or a staff member. Individuals will receive a letter that may include self-isolation directions and other important information.”

Thursday, February 03, 2022

Decades long tradition broken as Placentia-Yorba Linda Unified School District trustees select officers for 2022 on various split votes

 

A longer-than-usual agenda faces Placentia-Yorba Linda Unified School District trustees when they gather for a Feb. 8 meeting because no business was conducted at two January sessions that were adjourned early due to state-mandated mask policy violations by audience members.

Among the 40 items delayed from the Jan. 19 session was a resolution framed as an “urgent request” to Gov. Gavin Newsom “to reconsider or rescind the COVID-19 vaccine mandate for public and private K-12 students and staff as a requirement in K-12 school settings.”

Other delayed items included the approval of new trustee area boundaries affecting the two westside trustee areas, review of the district policy regarding board self-evaluation and seating Esperanza High School senior Quynh Vo as student trustee for the second semester.

The Feb. 8 session can be seen live or viewed later (click “live board meetings” under “board” at pylusd.org). Four meetings are available on the site: Jan. 19 (2 minutes, 39 seconds), Jan. 11 (4 minutes, 33 seconds), Dec. 14 (4 hours, 23 minutes) and Nov. 16 (4 hours, 51 minutes).

Carrie Buck, selected as this year's president on a 4-1 vote, will chair the meeting. That vote and others cast for vice president and clerk broke a decades-long tradition of 5-0 votes in the annual selection of officers. The motions, seconds and votes reflect current board factions.

Since 12-year trustee Buck was vice president in 2021, she would be in line for president this year, under the district's long practice of rotating the positions among trustees. She was nominated by 33-year trustee Karin Freeman, with a second by Buck.

Joining the vote for Buck were Marilyn Anderson, who often serves as a “swing vote,” and Shawn Youngblood, elected in 2020. Leandra Blades, also elected in 2020, was opposed.

Since Freeman served as president through 2021, one of the new trustees would be up for the vice president position. Youngblood nominated Blades for the slot, seconded by Blades, but she lost, with three “no” votes cast by Anderson, Buck and Freeman.

Freeman nominated Anderson for the position (seconded by Buck), and she won 4-0, with Blades abstaining. Anderson nominated Youngblood for clerk (seconded by Freeman), but he declined and nominated Blades (seconded by Blades), who won 5-0.

Blades also was chosen as nominating representative to the Orange County Committee on School District Organization, with Youngblood as alternate, 5-0 (motion by Youngblood and second by Freeman).

Buck's nomination by Freeman (second by Buck) as the board's representative for a two-year term on the California School Boards Association Delegate Assembly lost 3-2, with opposition from Anderson, Blades and Youngblood.

However, the position was filled at a later meeting, with Buck and Anderson sharing the role (motion by Freeman and second by Anderson). The vote was 3-1; Blades was opposed and Youngblood was absent.