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edible food generators, food recovery organizations, and haulers, as well as procedures <br /> for inspections and investigations will need to be included in the code amendments. <br /> StopWaste has developed a model SB 1383 county wide ordinance along with an opt in <br /> ordinance for each member agency to customize and adopt. City staff have been <br /> engaged in the development of these ordinances and will bring forward to the City <br /> Council in early fall 2021 for consideration. <br /> 5. Establish edible food recovery program for all Tier 1 and 2 commercial edible food <br /> generators and plan and secure access for recycling and edible food recovery capacity. <br /> This means ensuring that there are edible food recovery organizations that have <br /> enough capacity and may entail providing funding to ensure there is adequate capacity <br /> and collection services. Tier 1 generators include supermarkets, grocery stores 10,000 <br /> square feet or larger, food service providers, food distributors and wholesale food <br /> vendors. Tier 2 generators are Restaurants with 250 seats or 5,000 square feet or <br /> more, hotels with onsite food and 200 or more rooms, health facilities with onsite food <br /> and 100 or more beds, Large events and venues, Local education facility with on-site <br /> food facility. <br /> The City of Pleasanton plans to delegate the implementation of this program to the <br /> Alameda County Waste Authority, also known as StopWaste. Additionally, it is <br /> expected that Alameda County Department of Health will conduct the required <br /> education and inspections of the Tier 1 and Tier 2 commercial edible food generators <br /> through their regular inspection process. City staff will actively work with both partners <br /> to ensure that all aspects of this program comply with the law. <br /> 6. Conduct education and outreach to all generators. This will require education to be <br /> provided to all generators and when applicable, education may need to be provided in <br /> Spanish and other languages. <br /> The City, in collaboration with StopWaste, the Go Green Initiative and PGS will develop <br /> educational materials and begin outreach efforts beginning in October 2021. StopWaste <br /> is in the process of creating messaging along with a variety of educational material <br /> templates. Go Green Initiative through their summer student intern program and school <br /> year program Leaders of the 21st Century, is working on employing these materials <br /> provided by StopWaste to create Pleasanton specific education materials such as bill <br /> inserts, social media posts, direct mailers, videos, and workshops. <br /> 7. Reporting and Recordkeeping. SB 1383 contains three primary reporting <br /> mechanisms: an initial Jurisdiction Compliance Report due April 1, 2022, an Annual <br /> Report due on October 1 annually, and an ongoing Implementation Record. The City <br /> must maintain records demonstrating their compliance with SB 1383 in a central <br /> location that can be readily accessed by CalRecycle within ten (10) business days of a <br /> request. Required records include. but are not limited to: ordinances, contracts, <br /> franchise agreements, a written description of the jurisdiction's inspection and <br /> enforcement program, organic waste collection service records, contamination <br /> Page 7 of 9 <br />