The
Solid Waste Management Division (SWMD) provides residential solid
waste (household garbage, recycling and yard waste) collection service
for approximately 200,000 residential customers in unincorporated
Hillsborough County. In the event of a disaster, normal solid waste
collection service may be suspended for a period of time. The information
below will help prepare you to better manage your solid waste before and after a disaster.
Disaster can happen quickly, without warning, anytime
and anywhere. It can force residents to evacuate their neighborhoods
or confine them to their homes.
After a disaster, if solid waste collection service
is cut off, restoration of service will not happen right away. Therefore,
you should be prepared just in case normal solid waste (household
garbage, recycling and yard waste) collection service is interrupted.
We will also provide some helpful tips in putting together a disaster
kit.
It is also possible that kitchen sink garbage disposal
units may be useless for awhile. You may want to buy a compost bin
to set out in your yard. You can dump your organic food waste (except
animal products) into your bin to use later as compost for your garden
or plants, etc. Your remaining solid waste should be stored in heavy
plastic garbage bags until normal collection service has been restored.
Be sure to never put food waste in bags outside, as
they will attract dogs, disease-carrying rodents, other animals and
a variety of wildlife. Rodents, in particular, can be a major health
threat where garbage accumulates, so make sure you have enough sturdy,
lidded containers to hold the solid waste that you generate for at
least a two-week period.
Be prepared to keep your yard clean if other people’s
solid waste finds its way to your property. Be sure to store paper
and other flammables away from any heat sources or open flames. If
your solid waste begins to build up, consider burying your garbage
bags in pits, and use lime to cut down the smell and contamination.
As soon as possible following a disaster, the SWMD
will notify you about debris removal activities, regulations and
the schedule for resuming normal solid waste collection services.
Until then, you should separate any debris materials, broken tree
limbs and other yard waste resulting from the disaster into different
piles.