Civic IQ
Public UpdatesEnvironmental ServicesDetected Jun 4, 2026

The June 4, 2026 Environmental Advisory Committee agenda includes a staff update on a Waste Diversion Study, indicating an ongoing effort to assess how the City of Laramie and Albany County can reduce landfill-bound waste. While the agenda does not provide details, such studies typically evaluate recycling, organics diversion, construction and demolition waste handling, and related infrastructure or program changes. Because this is framed as an update, the study phase appears to be in progress and has not yet been translated into specific procurements for new services, facilities, or technology. Vendors in solid waste planning, diversion program design, data analytics, and recycling/organics processing should track this effort, as recommendations from the study could lead to RFPs for new diversion programs, collection changes, or processing infrastructure once the findings are presented and adopted.

This is at the study-update stage; no specific procurement or vendor is referenced yet.

Laramie Regional Airport Joint Powers BoardLaramie waste diversion study updates and potential implementation

Why this matters for vendors

Early signals like this typically surface 6–18 months before a formal RFP is posted. Vendors who engage during the planning window help shape requirements, build relationships with decision-makers, and position ahead of the competition before the solicitation goes public.

Environmental Services

Where this sits in the buying cycle

Now

Capital plan & early discussion

Next 1–2 Q

Scoping & vendor outreach window

6–18 mo

RFP / solicitation posted

Later

Award & contract

Related

Similar signals forming now

Opportunities from other agencies that match this category and scope.

Pre-RFP

The agenda schedules a continued Notice of Intent hearing for 31 Hill Road (Vettese) concerning a dock. This indicates a waterfront improvement project that must meet local and state wetland and waterway regulations before construction begins. Although the document does not mention cost or contractors, dock projects in regulated areas typically require environmental permitting support, design, and specialized marine or waterfront construction services. Vendors experienced in dock design, permitting, and shoreline stabilization could connect with the applicant or provide services to ensure the project meets conservation requirements and any mitigation conditions.

Single-site waterfront project; scale is smaller but still requires compliance with wetlands and wat...

Town of Westminster
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Pre-RFP

The FY27–FY28 budget highlights a new challenge from invasive golden mussels affecting Contra Costa Water District’s untreated water system. The district plans to complete a Golden Mussel Vulnerability Assessment and Invasive Species Control Plan in FY27 and has budgeted approximately $422,600 as a new capital study under Operations & Maintenance, with intent to integrate findings into operations, maintenance, and capital plans. No vendor has been named for this assessment and planning effort. This opens the door for firms specializing in aquatic invasive species, biofouling control, pipeline and intake protection, and related monitoring and treatment technologies to support the study and position for follow‑on implementation work (e.g., retrofit design, physical/chemical control systems, monitoring programs).

The study is framed as a precursor to future changes in maintenance, operations, and capital project...

Contra Costa Water District
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Contract Award

The FY27–FY28 capital program allocates $4.0M in FY27 to purchase mitigation credits to comply with Contra Costa Water District’s 2024 Incidental Take Permit for Delta operations. This is a discrete environmental compliance purchase managed under the Water Resources division, and the budget notes a sharp spike in FY27 followed by no additional credit purchases in FY28. While the main credit provider(s) may already be identified, the scale of this environmental obligation and the new permit signal ongoing habitat mitigation, monitoring, and reporting needs tied to Delta intake and conveyance operations. Environmental consultants, mitigation bankers, and monitoring technology vendors can use this as a wedge to discuss longer‑term compliance strategies, adaptive management, and potential future projects that go beyond this one‑time credit buy.

This is a regulatory‑driven purchase; while the credits themselves may be sourced from one or more b...

Contra Costa Water District
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