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1 <br /> Plan as part of the Corporate Safety Plan as well as the Corporate Environmental Protection Plan (EPP). HW <br /> will be placed and stored until instructed by the government as to its final disposition. <br /> DMS SITE MANAGEMENT <br /> DRC also has extensive experience managing staging and processing sites for all of the above materials. <br /> 1. Our most extensive experience in this regard came in our HHW contract with the City of Galveston, <br /> which was activated following Hurricane Ike. Adhering to the guidelines of FEMA 325, DRC <br /> established a secure Debris Management Site at 9228 Seawall Blvd. The process of separation for <br /> recycling was focused on the separation and recycling of metals, wood waste, tires, concrete, white <br /> goods, HHW, recyclable oils and fluids and electronics. DRC 's extensive collection and recycling <br /> program for these various waste streams, included over 1.7 million pounds of HHW, 3,073 units of <br /> electronic waste, 45,566 units of white goods and 40,378 cubic yards of concrete. The remaining debris <br /> was reduced by compaction for a reduction of 3 to 1, and loaded for final disposal at Allied Waste <br /> Services 5301 Brookglen Dr.,Houston,TX. <br /> 2. In 2004, following Hurricanes Jeanne, Francis and Ivan, DRC simultaneously operated more than ten <br /> debris management sites in Florida. <br /> 1 3. In 2005,following Hurricane Wilma, DRC simultaneously operated five debris management sites in <br /> Louisiana, processing debris for the Louisiana DOTD. <br /> 4. Also in 2005, DRC simultaneously operated six debris management sites for the Louisiana DOTD in <br /> two districts following Hurricane Katrina. <br /> 5. In 2008 following Hurricane Ike, DRC simultaneously operated seven debris management sites <br /> handling 11,000,000 CY of debris,recycling materials out of the waste stream in two of those facilities. <br /> 6. In 2012, DRC simultaneously operated six debris management sites in Louisiana following Hurricane <br /> Isaac <br /> 7. In 2014, following Ice Storm Pax, DRC managed and operated over fifteen debris management sites <br /> and recycling over 1.5 million cubic yards of debris <br /> 8. In 2016 following the Louisiana Severe Flooding DR4277,two debris management sites were opened and <br /> operated in East Baton Rouge to compact and recycle C&D debris prior to haul out for final disposal. These <br /> sites operated with such efficiency that FEMA and the USACE filmed the operation to use in training sessions. <br /> 1 9. In 2017 following Hurricanes Harvey and Irma, DRC was activated in 43 jurisdictions <br /> simultaneously while managing twenty-nine debris management sites. <br /> ENVIRONMENTAL COMPLIANCE WILDLIFE SENSITIVE ENVIRONMENTS <br /> DRC has a twenty -seven year history of outstanding environmental compliance and involvement. The most <br /> vivid example of our understanding of working within a wildlife sensitive environment was our work in <br /> Florida and Louisiana following the BP oil spill in 2010. DRC was tasked with designing coastal protective <br /> systems and unique collection programs along more than one-hundred miles of estuaries in SW Louisiana. <br /> The programs involved intensive employee training relative to identification and protection of wildlife nesting <br /> and reproduction areas. DRC also played a role in setting up wildlife recovery and cleaning stations in <br /> Plaquemines Parish Louisiana where employees volunteered to help conduct rehabilitation and release <br /> programs. DRC has performed on many other occasions in environmentally sensitive environments such as <br /> I DRC Emergency Services,LLC 23 <br /> RFP No.18-04-02 <br />