An illustration of pretty and green garbage trucks and a semi with warehouse buildings with blue roofs and some minor landscaping and afternoon shade.

A legacy of long-term planning and investment

Roseville is a full-service city offering a comprehensive range of essential utilities and services, such as public safety, parks, trails, recreation, libraries, museums, transit, electricity, water, wastewater, sewer services, trash, and recycling.

Our Environmental Utilities is dedicated to efficiently delivering water treatment, wastewater collection and treatment, and waste management. We take pride in our proactive approach to infrastructure development and service design, ensuring we meet the needs of our growing community while maintaining exceptional service levels for our residents.

The Draft Environmental Impact Report evaluates potential impacts and ways to reduce them. The study evaluates topics such as traffic and transportation, noise, air quality, biological resources, land use, and surrounding environmental conditions. Where impacts are found, mitigation measures are proposed to address them.

Review the draft environmental document here

  • Notice of Preparation: June 21, 2024
  • Scoping Period: June 21, 2024, through July 22, 2024
  • Public Draft Environmental Impact Report (EIR): May 2026
  • Final EIR: September 2026
  • Project Decision: October 2026
For more information about this project, please contact Keith Schmidt at kjschmidt@roseville.ca.us.
We are strategically preparing for the future of Environmental Utilities operations to meet rising demands and enhance local control. This planning will enable us to innovate in waste diversion and management, meet state mandates, and improve our waste operations. Early planning allows us to make solid investments for the future.

Roseville will conduct a comprehensive environmental study of city-owned property within the northwestern city limit to support this initiative. This site has the potential to house a new utility operations center, and will include:
  • An administration building and maintenance shop to house Environmental Utilities divisions.
  • Fleet parking for garbage trucks and support vehicles, all equipped for zero-emission conversion.

  • A recycling, recovery, and transfer operation to recover recyclables, meet regulatory compliance, generate revenue, and transfer waste to trucks for shipping to other facilities (this is not a landfill operation).

Our current corporation yard near the railyards faces space constraints, limiting our staff and vehicle capacity and hindering our ability to meet future needs. The upcoming environmental analysis will help us determine and mitigate any potential impacts.