A feasibility study must provide an evaluation of alternatives that:
- (1) identifies current solid waste management practices and costs;
- (2) analyzes the waste stream and its availability by composition and quantity;
- (3) identifies potential markets and obtains statements of interest for recovered materials and energy;
- (4) identifies and evaluates alternative solid waste management systems;
- (5) provides an assessment of potential effects of alternatives in terms of their public health, physical, social, economic, fiscal, environmental, and aesthetic implications;
- (6) conducts and evaluates results of public hearings or surveys of local citizens' opinions; and
- (7) makes recommendations on alternatives for further consideration.
Acts 1989, 71st Leg., ch. 678, Sec. 1, eff. Sept. 1, 1989.