Speaking at his weekly press conference, Tomašević said bulky waste would be stored there for the next 75 days which, he added, should be enough time to first lease and then buy a shredder and meet the other technical requirements so that in future Waste Management (“Čistoća” in Croatian) would recover bulky waste instead of private companies.
Asked if he could vouch that bulky waste removal would no longer be suspended, the mayor said he hoped this was the last time it happened.
Tomašević said a complaint was lodged yesterday against a new public procurement procedure for bio-waste disposal and that “it’s definitely slowing down the process.”
He said five offers had been made for the purchase of two shredders, while the procedure for leasing them, estimated at HRK 200,000, is still under way.
Tomašević declined to comment on an ironic statement issued last week by the private C.I.O.S. Group, specialised in waste management, after he announced the cancellation of a tender for the removal of bulky waste in Zagreb after two valid bids had been submitted, one by Reoma Group and the other by the Ce-Za-r company, a member from the C.I.O.S. group.
The mayor annulled the tender which had been advertised by the previous city administration.
(€1 = HRK 7.5)
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