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WASTE INFRASTRUCTURE SYSTEM ENTERPRISE AGREEMENT <br /> THIS WASTE INFRASTRUCTURE SYSTEM ENTERPRISE AGREEMENT ("WISE Agreement" or <br /> "Agreement" are used interchangeably) is made and dated as of the date indicated on the cover page hereof between <br /> the County of Orange, a political subdivision of the State of California(the"County"), and the City of Santa Ana, a <br /> charter city and municipal corporation existing under the Constitution and laws of the State of California(the"City"). <br /> County and City may hereinafter be referred to singularly as"Party"or collectively as"Parties.". <br /> RECITALS <br /> The County owns,manages and operates a Waste Infrastructure System to manage municipal and solid waste <br /> generated within the County of Orange or imported from outside the County pursuant to contractual agreements. The <br /> Waste Infrastructure System collectively includes active Class III sanitary landfills ("County Landfills"), resource <br /> recovery, recycling and organics programs, infrastructure and operations, closed landfills, and regional household <br /> hazardous waste collection centers and other waste management related systems as may be deemed necessary by the <br /> County. <br /> The County is also responsible for the long-term management of twenty(20)closed landfills as required under <br /> Applicable Law. <br /> County Landfills are used for the management of municipal solid waste pursuant to legislation including but <br /> not limited to the California Integrated Waste Management Act of 1989(Division 30 of the California Public Resources <br /> Code)(the"Act")and the Short-lived Climate Pollutants Reduction Act("SB 1383").County Landfills are also subject <br /> to other State and federal regulations designed to ensure that landfill operations minimize the impacts to public health <br /> and safety and the environment. <br /> Pursuant to Resolution, the County established the Waste Management Enterprise Fund pursuant to <br /> Government Code §25261 to ensure that all costs associated with the operation and management of the Waste <br /> Infrastructure System are financed by charges imposed for services provided by the Department and are not funded by <br /> tax revenue or the County General Fund. <br /> The City,in the exercise of its police power,its powers under the Act,and other Applicable Law,has entered <br /> into a franchise or other agreement with or issued permits or licenses to one or more private haulers for the collection, <br /> recycling,diversion and disposal of municipal solid waste generated within the City. <br /> A significant portion of municipal solid waste generated within the City historically has been and currently is <br /> delivered by such hauler or haulers to the County for disposal in the Disposal System. <br /> Since 1997, the City and the County have provided for the management of municipal solid waste through <br /> Waste Disposal Agreements("WDAs"), wherein the County agreed to provide disposal capacity for waste generated <br /> in the City,and the City agreed to deliver or cause the delivery of waste generated in the City to the Disposal System, <br /> as more specifically set forth in,and subject to the terms and conditions of the WDAs. <br /> Starting in approximately 2014,the Legislature of the State of California passed several pieces of legislation <br /> ("Organics Legislation") that require significant reductions in the disposal of Organic Waste. The purpose of the <br /> Organics Legislation is to mandate organics recycling and curtail the impacts of climate change by reducing <br /> greenhouse gas emissions such as methane, In this regard,the decomposition of organic material in the State's landfills <br /> was identified as a significant source of methane that could be reduced. <br /> On April 23, 2019, the Orange County Board of Supervisors passed Resolution 19-031 to respond to the <br /> State's increasing landfill diversion requirements and identified the need for additional organic processing <br /> infrastructure in the County and directed the Department to develop additional organics recycling infrastructure to <br /> support the region in meeting State organic recycling mandates. <br /> The County has developed an Organics Infrastructure that is comprised of organic processing facilities to <br /> receive and process Organic Waste to support the State's Organic Legislation goals, promote local recycling, assist <br /> local jurisdictions in meeting their organic diversion requirements and correspondingly conserve capacity in the <br />