The committee received detailed briefings on mattress-collection and the broader problem of illegal mattress dumping.
DPW staff said the Mattress Depot collected 9,381 mattresses in 2025 and recycled 9,080 of those, and that so far in 2026 the depot has taken in 2,208 mattresses and recycled 2,157. "The depot is a really good asset because if the mattress is clean, dry...we can recycle it," a DPW official said.
Staff told the committee the depot reduces landfill costs but may also draw mattresses from nearby communities; the department requires proof of residency at intake but acknowledged it is difficult to restrict transfers if people present false information. DPW and police described a suite of tactics used and under consideration: targeted camera surveillance, using neighborhood and business camera footage, prosecution in coordination with the attorney general's office, licensing consequences for businesses that facilitate dumping, social-media public-information campaigns and neighborhood cleanup events.
A police sergeant described an anti-crime community-response unit that has worked on illegal dumping and other issues and said enforcement is one part of a multidisciplinary response that also includes environmental inspectors and prosecution where applicable.
The committee voted to approve the mattress-related resolution and directed staff and police to continue coordination on enforcement, public outreach and depot operations.