Nova Scotia

CBRM to consider asking province for recycling funds

A CBRM councillor is urging colleagues to back a call for Nova Scotia to enact extended producer responsibility legislation that would help municipalities access waste handling fees.

Councillor says some manufacturers already pay waste fees, but new law needed to provide access

CBRM Coun. Amanda McDougall wants the province to enact legislation on extended producer responsibility, which would free up waste and recycling handling fees. (Joan Weeks/CBC)

The high cost of garbage and recycling are on the agenda for Tuesday's regular meeting of the Cape Breton Regional Municipality.

Coun. Amanda McDougall plans to ask council to pass a resolution urging the Nova Scotia government to enact legislation on extended producer responsibility, also known as EPR.

Extended producer responsibility is the idea of having manufacturers pay a fee to municipalities and recyclers that handle the companies' packaging waste.

"We need EPR specifically for that printed packaging," McDougall said. "It includes the clamshells that your strawberries come in, … it can be plastic bags, it can be various types of printed papers as well."

Municipalities, businesses consulted

Nova Scotia is considering extended producer responsibility legislation, McDougall said, but the province is waiting to find out what municipalities and small businesses want.

Municipal solid waste chairs and the Nova Scotia Federation of Municipalities, formerly the Union of Nova Scotia Municipalities, are working with those groups on a report for this fall.

Environment Minister Iain Rankin said in a statement the province is considering all options to reduce waste and improve recycling.

"We are open to working with municipalities, industry and others to reduce the use of plastics bags and other plastic film," he said. "We've had several good discussions with our municipal colleagues as well as industry over the past several months, and our work is ongoing.

"We are committed to finding a more permanent solution, and all options are on the table at this point. Staff are doing research, and that work will consider opportunities as well as implications. No decisions have been made at this point."

Scotia Recycling says too many blue bags in the Western waste management region are contaminated with disgusting garbage. (Colleen Connors/CBC)

McDougall, who also sits on the provincial solid waste resource management committee, said many manufacturers already pay a waste handling fee, but Nova Scotia needs extended producer responsibility legislation so municipalities can access those funds and cut their waste handling costs.

The money could also spur new business.

"This is an option going forward that I'm hoping will lead to more creative ways of dealing with this type of waste," McDougall said. "It could actually inspire new industry, perhaps, on Cape Breton Island or in the province, that would start looking at different ways of dealing with this type of waste."

No change for consumers

McDougall said consumers likely wouldn't see any change, even if extended producer responsibility becomes law. 

"You're not going to see anything happen necessarily, you know, at the end of your driveway any time soon," she said.

"This is just a step to say OK, now municipalities across the province support the implementation of this program."

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Tom Ayers

Reporter/Editor

Tom Ayers has been a reporter and editor for 38 years. He has spent the last 20 covering Cape Breton and Nova Scotia stories. You can reach him at tom.ayers@cbc.ca.