Alley trash collection could end soon, based on recommendations by sanitation officials.

Once a week, homeowners in Dallas return to their yards to make the same trek with their rolling trash and recycle bins. Some push the bins to the back alley for pickup, some roll them out front to the curb. If city sanitation officials have their way, all trash will soon be collected at the street.

Sign up for our newsletter

* indicates required

Clifton Gillespie, director of the city’s sanitation department, made the proposal to Dallas’ Quality of Life, Arts and Culture Committee last week. Alley conditions vary widely across the city, he said, making alley collection inefficient and cost ineffective.

Alleys in Dallas’ southern sector are often unpaved, overgrown or have pavement so damaged as to be all-but-unnavigable. Most homes there rely on curbside pickup by necessity. On the north side of town, the majority of homes use alley pickup.

Alley pickup requires smaller trucks, which often cause damage as they navigate between fences and under utility lines. The specialized, 9-foot-wide, back-loading vehicles require more employees and cost nearly $7 million more per year to operate. Hundreds of property damage complaints are received each year from homeowners along the route, Council member Gay Donnell Willis shared at the meeting.

Street pickup has its issues all its own.

Cars parked along residential streets make pickup more difficult, and bins lifted higher into the air are more prone to leave litter blowing along the street. Toppled empty bins in the roadway are a blinking green invitation for burglars, indicating residents are away.

“This is the beginning of a long conversation about how we pick up trash in our city,” said Council member Paula Blackmon. “We’ve heard from customers that our sanitation costs have risen drastically, and staff is seeking efficiencies to stabilize costs along with keeping our workers and property safe. We look forward to working with our communities to deliver quality service at a reasonable cost in a safe manner for everyone.”

Gillispie plans to brief the full city council and solicit resident input before possible changes are made.

“We understand the significance of alley collection services to many Dallas residents and the strong sentiment surrounding the issue,” he wrote in an email to The Advocate. “However, we must also consider the complexities involved in balancing these valued services with the practical realities of our operations.”