New York announces next waste zones, but pressure for a timeline remains
Javier Lojan, acting commissioner of the New York City Department of Sanitation, testifies during a city council oversight hearing on commercial waste zones on April 23, 2025. · Waste Dive · Retrieved from <a href="#" target="_blank">New York City Council</a>.

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The New York City Department of Sanitation will switch the borough of the Bronx to the city’s commercial waste zone system in October, marking the first expansion of the program since it was implemented in one zone in Queens last year.

The department also committed to implementing the commercial waste zone system across all 20 city zones by the end of 2027. City council members acknowledged that DSNY is making progress in implementing the system citywide, but joined outside voices in calling for a speedier timeline and hard dates for the rollout.

"We’re encouraged to see a clear commitment to full implementation, but we recognize that many advocates and stakeholders were hopeful for a faster rollout,” Council Member Shaun Abreu, chair of the Committee on Sanitation and Solid Waste Management, said in a statement following the hearing. "While this timeline is a step forward, communities are still waiting for firm dates across all zones."

Commercial haulers would be able to prepare for the change better if they had more details about DSNY's planned implementation timeline, Lew Dubuque, vice president of the Northeast region for the National Waste & Recycling Association, said during public comments Wednesday. He also called for a commercial waste zone working group in which members could share feedback about the implementation process.

"Over one year has passed and one zone has been implemented. To avoid further financial and operational burdens ... we strongly urge DSNY to share a roadmap for program implementation and elevate a partnership with awardees moving forward," Dubuque said.

The commercial waste zone system was created through the passage of Local Law 199 in 2019. It required the city to develop 20 zones with three haulers each across the five boroughs. In January 2024, the city announced 65 contracts with various haulers throughout the system, as well as five contracts for citywide container service. The new system went into effect in the first zone, Queens Central, on Jan. 3 of this year.

Waste Connections' acquisition of Royal Waste Services last year created two gaps in the system where zones had two haulers instead of three. Officials said during Wednesday’s hearing that they would begin the process of filling those gaps later this year by returning to the list of companies that initially applied for the zones through the request for proposals process.