Close X
Thursday, November 28, 2024
ADVT 
National

Victoria Ban On Single-Use Plastic Shopping Bags To Begin In July

The Canadian Press, 18 Dec, 2017 11:36 AM
    Victoria is the latest Canadian city to move ahead with a ban on single-use plastic shopping bags.
     
    Councillors have given third reading to a bylaw that would fine businesses $100 if they sold or provided plastic bags.
     
    Adoption of the bylaw is expected in early January and, if approved, it's to effect in July, with enforcement beginning in 2019.
     
    Businesses would be required to ask customers if they need a bag, and charge 15 cents for a paper bag, or $2 for a reusable one.
     
    Bags used for packing bulk foods, dry cleaning or prescriptions would still be provided.
     
    The Vancouver Island city of Nanaimo voted earlier this month to stop using plastic bags, but delayed further action while it determines if it has the authority to impose a ban.
     
    Montreal is banning single-use plastic bags on Jan.1, and a website using content from the Canadian Plastics Industry Association says three communities in Quebec, two in Manitoba and one in Alberta already prohibit their use.
     
    B.C.-based Greener Footprint Society, which focuses on waste reduction in Canada, says Canadians use between nine billion and 15 billion plastic bags every year, enough to circle the Earth more than 55 times.
     
    Fraser Work, Victoria's engineering and public works director, says the bag ban in the B.C. capital has broad support.
     
    "There's a lot of people in the city that are really excited about a move to rid ourselves of the millions of plastic bags that are going into the community and the hundreds of thousands of which are ending up in the landfill," he says.
     
    Victoria Coun. Jeremy Loveday says there are better options than single-use plastic.
     
    "We would be really encouraging the reusable bags that can handle up to 100 uses or more," says Loveday.
     
    Vancouver has not banned plastic bags, but as part of its 2040 Zero Waste Goal, it is drafting a strategy aimed at reducing or ending the use of single-use bags, coffee cups and takeout containers.
     
    A final report on the zero waste strategy is due before council in 2018.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. Conservation Officers Free Deer Of Hammock Tangled In Antlers

    B.C. Conservation Officers Free Deer Of Hammock Tangled In Antlers
    PRINCE RUPERT, B.C. — Hammy the deer is no longer wearing the latest in antler adornments after conservation officers in Prince Rupert, B.C., caught up with the animal on Thursday.

    B.C. Conservation Officers Free Deer Of Hammock Tangled In Antlers

    Pakistan-Born Former Straight-A Student Wanting To Join ISIS Is Jailed For Six Years

    Pakistan-Born Former Straight-A Student Wanting To Join ISIS Is Jailed For Six Years
    Mubashir Jamil was arrested in April, a few days before he planned to leave for Turkey, after messaging the officer on a mobile app in which he also revealed that he wanted to fight for the ISIS terror group in Syria.    

    Pakistan-Born Former Straight-A Student Wanting To Join ISIS Is Jailed For Six Years

    Oxford Dictionaries Sends Video Message To Victoria Boy Who Invented 'Levidrome'

    Oxford Dictionaries Sends Video Message To Victoria Boy Who Invented 'Levidrome'
    An editor at Oxford Dictionaries in the United Kingdom has sent an encouraging response to a six-year-old Victoria boy who created a buzz by inventing a word.

    Oxford Dictionaries Sends Video Message To Victoria Boy Who Invented 'Levidrome'

    B.C. New Democrats Invite Public Input On Electoral Reform; Liberals Cry Foul

    B.C. New Democrats Invite Public Input On Electoral Reform; Liberals Cry Foul
    British Columbians are invited to help shape a referendum planned for next fall that could reform the province's voting system in time for the next election in 2021.

    B.C. New Democrats Invite Public Input On Electoral Reform; Liberals Cry Foul

    BC Ferries Vehicle Traffic This Summer Is Best Ever

    The company says in a statement that revenues for the quarter ending Sept. 30 are also up 3.5 per cent from the same period in 2016.

    BC Ferries Vehicle Traffic This Summer Is Best Ever

    A Long Wait Ends: Justin Trudeau Apologizes To N.L. Residential School Students

    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has "humbly" apologized for abuse and cultural losses at residential schools in Newfoundland and Labrador, saying the gesture is part of recognizing "hard truths" Canada must confront as a society.

    A Long Wait Ends: Justin Trudeau Apologizes To N.L. Residential School Students