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Reasonable Cost Bands

Reasonable Cost Bands. Glenda Gies WDO Moderator. Blue Box Cost Containment. WDO’s Cost Containment Plan submitted to Minister on July 12, 2004 approved on December 30, 2004 Minister requested an accelerated timetable

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Reasonable Cost Bands

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  1. Reasonable Cost Bands Glenda Gies WDO Moderator

  2. Blue Box Cost Containment • WDO’s Cost Containment Plan • submitted to Minister on July 12, 2004 • approved on December 30, 2004 • Minister requested • an accelerated timetable • Reasonable Cost Bands implemented in 2006 rather than 2008 as proposed

  3. Blue Box Cost Containment • MIPC’s task • measure program performance • determine “reasonable” program performance • define Reasonable Cost Bands in relation to program performance • all to be completed by June 2006 • to apply Reasonable Cost Bands to 2004 net system cost • for calculating 2006 stewards fees

  4. Our Speakers for this Session • Guy Perry – E&E Factor • Technical Services, Stewardship Ontario • Stewardship Ontario representative on MIPC • Andy Campbell – Reasonable Cost Band Agreement • Director, Solid Waste Management, Region of York • municipal representative on MIPC • Question & Answer Session

  5. Efficiency & Effectiveness Factor Guy Perry Stewardship Ontario Member of MIPC’s Cost Containment Team

  6. Measuring Recycling Program Performance • Dual objectives of Blue Box Program defined by Minister • increasing diversion (60% target) • cost containment – reducing system cost or minimizing increase as diversion increases • Typical measures • cost ($/tonne or $/household) • gross cost, revenue, net cost • recovery (kilograms/household/year or tonnes/year or %) • Blue Box Program Plan (BBPP) identifies these measures • Cost containment plan • measure both cost & recovery • proposed efficiency & effectiveness

  7. Calculating Efficiency • Measured using net program cost per tonne of Blue Box materials recovered Net Cost/Tonne = Net Program Cost divided by Tonnes BB Material Recovered Net Program Cost = Gross Program Costs – Program Revenues • Lower net cost per tonne indicates higher efficiency Efficiency = program performance on cost

  8. Calculating Effectiveness • Measured using program recovery rate (% recovery) Recovery rate (%) = Recovery of BB material divided by Generation of BB material Recovery = Tonnes of material marketed as reported in annual WDO Datacall Generation = estimated materials generated based on historic province-wide waste audit data cross-checked with steward data • Higher recovery rate indicates higher effectiveness Effectiveness = program performance on diversion

  9. Calculating Generation Generation = estimated materials generated based on historic province-wide waste audit data cross-checked with steward data • Waste generation estimates are based on historic waste audits throughout province • audits in single-family (large & small urban & rural) & multi-residential • Cross-checked waste audit results with steward reports & for some materials, replaced waste audit figures • newsprint, LCBO glass, telephone directories, paint cans, aluminum foil

  10. Calculating Generation (2) • For each municipality, calculated generation based on households of each type • Extensive waste audit program underway to refine these generation estimates over time • more than 28 SF audits & 12 MF audits

  11. Combining Efficiency & Effectiveness • E&E Factor combines program efficiency & effectiveness for overall performance measurement • Better performers tend to have lower E&E factors • higher efficiency (lower cost) in numerator • higher effectiveness (higher % recovery) in denominator

  12. Example: 2004 E&E Factor

  13. Reasonable Cost Bands Agreement Andy Campbell Regional Municipality of York Member of MIPC’s Cost Containment Team

  14. Reasonable Cost Bands Agreement What are “reasonable” costs?

  15. MIPC’s Task • Given Minister’s request, identify options that would determine reasonable costs to achieve net system cost reduction • Negotiations took place in June 2005 • Compromise reached & approved by AMO, WDO & Stewardship Ontario boards

  16. Negotiated Options

  17. Reasonable Cost Principles • All programs have room for improvement • Reasonable costs are better than current costs • Effectiveness & Efficiency (E&E) Factor will be used to measure performance of better performing programs • existing eight municipal program groups used • Defined by a percentile • percentiles will be decreased for 2007 over 2006 so that cost bands in 2007 reflect better performance over 2006

  18. Reasonable Cost Definition • E&E factor calculated for each program in each “cost band” grouping • Reasonable Cost E&E factor calculated as mean plus one standard deviation of E&E factors for better 75% performing programs • Reasonable Cost E&E factor converted to Reasonable Costs for each affected program by multiplying by its recovery rate

  19. Municipal Cost Band Groupings

  20. How Reasonable Cost Was Applied

  21. The Negotiated Compromise • $24M reduction to overall net system cost over two years • $10M in year 2006 • $14M in year 2007

  22. Reasonable Cost Impact (2006)

  23. How is Program Funding Calculated? • Apply Municipal funding Allocation Model (MFAM) • Reduce funding for programs higher than the Reasonable Cost E&E Factor for each municipal grouping

  24. MFAM Elements & Factors • Factors • material density factor • population density factor • revenue discount factor • Municipal Elements • tonnage marketed by material by municipality • population per hectare based on 2001 census data

  25. MFAM & Reasonable Cost Municipal Datacall submission $5M funding reduced from poorer performing programs based on E&E factor MFAM Max & min threshold applied Adjustments made to correct for any reporting corrections from previous year 10% late submission penalty applied to applicable programs

  26. 2006 Impact

  27. “Best Practice” by 2008 • What does “Best Practice” mean for you? • identifying “Best Practice” • possible further reduction in funding • financial incentive to modify your program to align with “Best Practice” performance

  28. Summary • 2006 funding • $10M reduction applied to 2004 net Blue Box system cost • applied to poorer performing programs based on E&E factor • minimum threshold set at 23% • 2007 funding • $14M reduction will be applied to 2005 net system cost in the same way as for 2006 • 2008 funding • “Best Practice” costs

  29. Questions & Answers

  30. Break

  31. On-line ‘What-If’ Tool Glenda Gies WDO Moderator

  32. What-If Tool • Municipal Funding Allocation Model • four workshops in spring 2004 • municipal participants consistently requested • user-friendly model • so municipalities could run their own scenarios • MIPC responded by developing a • ‘What If’ tool

  33. What-If Tool • Designed to test how program changes would have affected funding, revenue & recovery rates • By modifying material recovery rates & households served in your last Datacall submission • Identifies what your funding would have been if the program changes had been implemented prior to that Datacall year • Cannot predict future funding as this is affected by • actual Blue Box system gross cost, revenue & net cost in future years • materials collected & tonnes marketed by all other Ontario Blue Box Programs in future years

  34. Our Speaker for This Session • Bob Argue – Demonstration of ‘What If’ Tool • President, REIC Perth • Executive Director of ecoPerth, (a non-profit, volunteer organization working on climate change) • consultant to IWDO on development of Municipal Funding Allocation Model (MFAM) • consultant to WDO on modifications to MFAM • retained to develop a user friendly ‘What If’ version of MFAM for municipal use

  35. Live Demonstration of the ‘What-If’ Tool Bob Argue REIC Perth

  36. Log-In

  37. 2004 Municipal What-If Tool

  38. Summary Funding

  39. Example of a High Recovery Scenario

  40. Table of Contents

  41. Household Equivalents

  42. Available Materials

  43. Table of Contents

  44. Build Your Own Scenario

  45. Example of Scenario Graph

  46. Questions & Answers

  47. Thank You! Waste Diversion Ontario, www.wdo.ca Stewardship Ontario, www.stewardshipontario.ca Association of Municipalities of Ontario, www.amo.on.ca

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