San Francisco residents are due for some payback after embattled refuse collector Recology admitted that it incorrectly calculated its rates and would have overcharged city customers by some $24 million.
This came about, the company says, due to accounting errors that led to the rate being set too high in Rate Year 2024, which ran from Oct. 1, 2023 to Sept. 30, 2024.
This discrepancy came to light at the Sept. 30 meeting of the little-known Refuse Rate Board, a body created after 71 percent of voters approved Proposition F in June 2022.
San Francisco residents will see a credit on their November bills, with an average benefit of $18 per year for two years, according to Jay Liao, the city’s refuse rates administrator.
“In the wake of the public corruption scandal between Mohammed Nuru and Recology and the Parks Alliance, I brought all the parties together and crafted Proposition F, which Recology opposed but the voters saw fit to pass,” said Board President Aaron Peskin. “While they went kicking and screaming, I’m delighted that we now have a rate administrator and a rate board that is scrutinizing all of Recology’s costs and expenses and ensuring that ratepayers are not being cheated.”
Last year, former Recology vice president John Porter was sentenced to three years’ probation and former community relations manager Paul Giusti was sentenced to six months of home confinement for their roles in a bribery scheme. Nuru, who used Recology money deposited in a Parks Alliance account as a slush fund, was sentenced to seven years in federal prison in 2022.
At the Sept. 30 hearing, Jon Braslaw, Recology’s director of business process improvement, said “This is one that, quite honestly, we missed, and I missed.” Braslaw revealed that Recology discovered two “material” mistakes in its projections resulting in Recology overcharging customers for one full year.
“This is the first time since 1932 that the oversight structure was finally changed. It’s something that’s benefitting all San Franciscans and we should be proud of,” said Peskin. “It shows that we can crack down on corruption and hold Recology to account.”
Braslaw said that vehicle lease costs that should have been terminated were “inadvertently extended,” and revenue calculations did not “fully consider” a significant 8 percent cost of living adjustment for salaries and operating costs. He said that, upon discovering the errors, Recology proactively contacted the city attorney’s office and the refuse rates administrator, a position created by Prop. F: “We did this in an effort to be proactive, fair, and transparent.”
The office of the refuse rates administrator, led by Liao, conducts quarterly discrepancy checks of Recology reporting. “The good news is that the additional rate monitoring and reporting is working,” Liao said at the Sept. 30 meeting.
Ed Harrington, San Francisco’s former longtime city controller, agreed: “In the old days, before Prop. F, Recology would come in, there would be some scrutiny, but nothing really happened,” he said. “Then three years later they’d ask for more money. So clearly this is important.”
This is not the first time in recent memory that city residents will get rebates from Recology. Ratepayers received checks in 2021 following Recology’s $94.5 million settlement deal. That followed a lawsuit from then-City Attorney Dennis Herrera regarding the company’s collusion with Nuru to hike rates. In 2022, Recology reached a further $25 million settlement with the city after the company earned more than its agreed-upon profit margin.
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