Close X
Thursday, November 28, 2024
ADVT 
National

Victoria Disappointed By High Court Refusal To Hear Plastic Bag Bylaw Appeal

The Canadian Press, 23 Jan, 2020 09:18 PM

    VICTORIA - The mayor of Victoria says she's disappointed Canada's highest court won't reconsider a lower-court ruling that stopped her city from regulating single-use plastic bags.

     

    However, Lisa Helps says there are other ways to eliminate the items.

     

    The high court didn't issue reasons for refusing to review a B.C. Court of Appeal decision that overturned Victoria's plastic bag ban on the grounds the city lacks provincial approval.

     

    The Canadian Plastic Bag Association, which challenged the original bylaw, says it welcomes the decision which requires B.C. municipalities to "follow the law and respect the limits placed on their authority when addressing environmental issues."

     

    When the bylaw was struck down last July, Helps vowed to move forward, saying the ruling didn't "undermine the soundness" of the regulation but only dealt with the process for its adoption.

     

    Helps says in a statement Thursday that the city will look for every opportunity to reduce plastic waste.

     

    She says her city's original checkout bag bylaw kept more than 17 million plastic bags out of the landfill over the year it was in place and the "community continues to avoid plastic bags despite these setbacks."

     

    Victoria has launched a zero-waste strategy which Helps says is designed to cut the 25,000 single-use items discarded in the city every day.

     

    "We're confident we will see bold leadership from the provincial government in its Plastics Action Plan," Helps says, referring to initiatives by the B.C. and federal governments to develop shared waste reduction standards.

     

    The Plastic Bag Association says in its statement that bylaws like the one implemented by Victoria can have unintended consequences.

     

    "Plastic bags typically outperform paper bags and, from an environmental perspective, are in many ways the best packaging option, given that they can be recycled, unlike reusable bags, and are less carbon intensive and emit less GHGs than paper bags."

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Volkswagen Pleads Guilty To All Canadian Charges In Emissions-Cheating Scandal

    The German automaker and the Crown submitted an agreed statement of facts in a Toronto court, acknowledging the company imported 128,000 Volkswagen and Audi vehicles, along with 2,000 Porsches, that violated the standards.    

    Volkswagen Pleads Guilty To All Canadian Charges In Emissions-Cheating Scandal

    Feds, Ontario Sign Funding Deal For French-language University In Toronto

    An agreement signed today says the two will spend $126 million on the project over eight years.

    Feds, Ontario Sign Funding Deal For French-language University In Toronto

    One Dead, Five French Tourists Missing After Snowmobiles Break Through Ice In Quebec

    One Dead, Five French Tourists Missing After Snowmobiles Break Through Ice In Quebec
    Police say the victim — a 42-year-old Quebec man who was serving as a guide to a group of eight tourists from France — died several hours after being admitted to hospital.

    One Dead, Five French Tourists Missing After Snowmobiles Break Through Ice In Quebec

    Incompetent Ontario Doctor Who Twice Sent Dying Infant Home Loses Licence

    Incompetent Ontario Doctor Who Twice Sent Dying Infant Home Loses Licence
    A family doctor who sent a dying infant home with instructions to give him water and juice with vitamin C and who failed to report criminal driving convictions has been stripped of his medical licence.

    Incompetent Ontario Doctor Who Twice Sent Dying Infant Home Loses Licence

    Rookie Ontario MP Derek Sloan Says He's Running For Conservative Leadership

    OTTAWA - A rookie MP from Ontario says he's going to enter the Conservative leadership race.

    Rookie Ontario MP Derek Sloan Says He's Running For Conservative Leadership

    B.C. Health Officials Prepare Coronavirus Diagnostic Test, Screen At Airports

    Minister Adrian Dix and Dr. Bonnie Henry say in a joint statement there have been no cases of illness caused by the coronavirus in Canada and the risk to British Columbians is considered low.

    B.C. Health Officials Prepare Coronavirus Diagnostic Test, Screen At Airports