CASE STUDIES

Operational Review

When the new management team of this Council on the Victorian metro/regional fringe wanted to understand what they didn’t know about their own facilities, they called Resource Hub. What started as an operational review across two sites — a major landfill and a smaller regional transfer station grew into an ongoing partnership that has transformed how the council manages its data, reporting, and regulatory obligations. 

Note: This case study as been anonymised.

If It’s Always Working, What Don’t We Know?

The Council came to Resource Hub with a particular kind of question — not ‘we have a problem’ but ‘we want to know if we have a problem.’ Incoming management had inherited operations that by all appearances were running fine. The question was whether ‘fine’ was actually ‘good,’ and whether there was something sitting underneath the surface that nobody had thought to look for. 

Resource Hub went to site across two facilities, and what they found was a council already operating at a relatively high standard — good signage, some strong traffic systems, and a team enthusiastic about improvement. 

But in the data, and in the systems behind the data, there was work to be do.

Finding What the System Couldn’t Tell Tem

The operational review identified that while the facilities ran well operationally, the transactional systems weren’t set up to capture the right information in the right way. Movements between facilities weren’t being consistently recorded. Vehicle records were incomplete.

And because the data going in wasn’t structured correctly, the data coming out  for reporting, invoicing, and regulatory submissions  required significant manual effort to produce. 

There was also a more unusual finding. As part of the review process, Resource Hub cross-referenced what the council said its services were against what was publicly available online. 

Neighbouring local government websites identified their major landfill as their nearest disposal option – without Council having a process to identify or charge for out-of-region loads. Council was at risk of subsidising the waste disposal of neighbouring ratepayers. 

That finding prompted conversations with the neighbouring councils and a review of how loads are accepted and categorised at the facility. It’s the kind of thing that is essentially impossible to find without an independent set of eyes that goes looking! 

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From Review to Ongoing Partnership

Following the review, Resource Hub supported Council through a transition to a new transactional platform — managing the data upload process and testing directly with the software provider to ensure a clean go-live. Once the new system was in place, the improved data structure made it straightforward to build reliable, consistent reporting routines. 

The outcomes of the engagement have compounded over time: 

  • Quarterly reporting and waste levy submissions are now managed by Resource Hub on an ongoing basis — freeing up internal resource for the small council team 
  • A suite of waste and recycling policies have been developed and are now publicly available 
  • A formal, documented approach to waste levy compliance has replaced the informal workarounds that had been in place for many years 
  • The risk register delivered in January 2025 has been actively worked through by council since then, with lower-priority items still being systematically resolved more than a year later 
  • The data structure and reporting routines have been built to be transferable — easy to bring back in-house if the council ever needs to, and easy to hand to third parties like engineers when information is required 

A Second Set of Eyes on a Good Operation

This Council wasn’t in crisis when they called Resource Hub. They were a well-run council with a capable team and a management team committed to continuous improvement. The value of the engagement wasn’t finding a problem — it was finding the things that were invisible precisely because everything appeared to be working. 

The neighbour landfill finding, the data structure gaps, the reporting inefficiencies — none of these were obvious from the inside. They became visible only when someone went looking from the outside. That’s the role an operational review plays, and it’s why councils who are already doing well often benefit from it as much as those who know they’re struggling.