Wednesday, March 04, 2026
44.0°F

Construction debris solutions available

JOEL MARTIN | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 5 months, 1 week AGO
by JOEL MARTIN
Joel Martin has been with the Columbia Basin Herald for more than 25 years in a variety of roles and is the most-tenured employee in the building. Martin is a married father of eight and enjoys spending time with his children and his wife, Christina. He is passionate about the paper’s mission of informing the people of the Columbia Basin because he knows it is important to record the history of the communities the publication serves. | September 26, 2025 3:00 AM

MOSES LAKE — There’s a lot of construction going on in the Basin right now, and sometimes it can get a little messy. A construction site generates a lot significant amount of trash, and when the wind picks up, sometimes it ends up in the neighbors’ yards. There’s a way to deal with that, said City of Moses Lake Building Inspector Will Mumma. 

“(People) could just walk by the job site and talk to the general (contractor) or the supervisor and (say) ‘Hey, look, I’m having an issue with some trash blowing onto my property’ or whatever the problem might be,” Mumma said. “I’m sure that they would be much more swift about getting it handled if it were a citizen from the community complaining than if it was myself.” 

Moses Lake Municipal Code 8.08.105 covers construction waste, but it’s not very detailed: “Construction and demolition waste may be removed by the person or his agent producing such waste or they may have the waste removed by the collector of refuse.” The collector of refuse is the company that contracts with the city for garbage pickup, in this case, Lakeside Disposal. 

“Ultimately, the responsibility of the cleanliness of the job site falls to the general contractor,” Mumma said. “Typically, their subcontractors are doing various work around the job site, and they leave the trash from shingle wrappers or insulation or whatever it may be. So if it gets to a point to where it's out of hand, blowing into the neighbor's yards (and) we're receiving complaints, then when we go on site to do an inspection. We will make note of it to the general contractor: ‘Hey, you need to clean up your job site and get your subs in line.’” 

That’s almost always sufficient to take care of the problem, Mumma said. If it doesn’t, then Code Enforcement gets involved. Code Enforcement is a part of the city’s Community Development Department, he explained. 

“Code enforcement would be out there looking for various things,” he said. “They'd be looking for the trash blowing all over the place, to make sure that everything with the Stormwater Pollution Prevention Plan was in order, where there's nothing getting into the city's storm drains, contaminating the water. And if code enforcement goes out, they can do anything from give them a warning to write them a civil infraction, and if they were not to heed the infraction or warning, then for every day subsequent to that, it could be a new infraction.” 

Almost always, the general contractor will respond to a concern from a neighbor about construction debris, Mumma said.  

If a resident runs into an issue where the general contractor won’t take care of the mess, they can contact the city’s Code Enforcement department by calling the city at 509-764-3753 and asking to speak with a Code Enforcement Officer.  

If a city inspector happens to see that the refuse is blowing off the site, they can also address it with the contractor and almost always it’s dealt with right away, he said. 

“If we’re on site and we tell them to get it cleaned up, they’ll just clean it up … They’re pretty on top of it,” he said. 


ARTICLES BY JOEL MARTIN

Space Burger booth open March 13-15
March 4, 2026 3 a.m.

Space Burger booth open March 13-15

MOSES LAKE — Those who can’t wait for the Grant County Fair can get their Space Burger fix next weekend, according to an announcement from the Lioness Club of Moses Lake. The iconic Grant County sandwiches will be available at the Grant County Fairgrounds March 13-15, according to the announcement. There is no admission fee to get into the fairgrounds that weekend.

SENIOR EVENTS: March 2026
March 4, 2026 3 a.m.

SENIOR EVENTS: March 2026

COLUMBIA BASIN — Plays, art shows, auctions and more await seniors in the Columbia Basin this month. Here are some opportunities to get out and about in March.

Valentine’s Day cards flood Brookdale Hearthstone with love
March 4, 2026 3 a.m.

Valentine’s Day cards flood Brookdale Hearthstone with love

MOSES LAKE — Residents at Brookdale Hearthstone Assisted Living in Moses Lake got Valentine’s Day greetings from across the country last month. “I believe that the only states we have not received (cards from) yet are Vermont and Maine,” Lifestyle Director Imelda Broyles said Feb. 24. “We keep receiving new cards every single day. They have not stopped. My residents are in awe with every single one of the cards that we’ve been receiving.” The Hearts Across America project started as a way for children in school classrooms to exchange Valentine’s Day cards with classes in other states or even countries, but the idea has expanded to senior living facilities, according to the project’s social media.