Sunday, April 28, 2024
ADVT 
National

Montreal To Fully Ban Plastic Bags By End Of 2020, Mayor Announces

The Canadian Press, 05 Feb, 2020 08:43 PM

    MONTREAL - Given the urgent need to reduce the city's environmental footprint, Montreal will move to fully ban the distribution of plastic bags by the end of 2020, Mayor Valerie Plante said Wednesday.

     

    Plante told a council meeting that the current measures that limit retailers to selling thicker bags haven't worked to reduce plastic waste.

     

    "We have to reduce at the source, and that happens with behaviour changes," Plante said.

     

    In 2018, Montreal implemented a bylaw that banned merchants from giving out lightweight plastic bags with a thickness of less than 50 microns as well as biodegradable bags, which contain an additive that causes them to decompose in heat and light.

     

    The hope was that offering only thicker bags would encourage people to reuse them, but Plante said that hasn't happened.

     

    She tasked the city's director general to begin working to modify the existing bylaw in order to fully ban plastic bags by the end of the year.

     

    "2020 is the last year of plastic bags in Montreal," the mayor said Wednesday.

     

    The announcement comes as the province attempts to navigate a waste-management crisis with four Montreal-area recycling plants shutting their doors.

     

    Plante said the recycling troubles were an "alarm" for the city that it needed to act.

     

    "We have to develop what to do with that plastic, but to think that before we sent it to Asia and closed our eyes, saying, 'I recycled' ... That doesn't hold up any more," she said.

     

    Montreal became the first major Canadian city to ban plastic bags when its measures went into effect on Jan. 1, 2018.

     

    Last year, Plante announced the city would also seek to ban single-use plastics and forbid grocery chains and other stores from throwing out edible food and useful clothing, as part of its five-year plan to significantly reduce waste.

     

    On Wednesday, she said the bag ban was an idea whose time has come, pointing out that major retail chains such as IGA are already phasing out plastic bags.

     

    "We can't wait another 1,000 years to make decisions," Plante wrote on her Twitter account.

     

    She also encouraged other Quebec municipalities to follow suit and implement similar bans.

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Crosswinds Hold Up Chartered Flight Taking Canadians From Wuhan

    Crosswinds Hold Up Chartered Flight Taking Canadians From Wuhan
    More than 200 Canadians due to be evacuated from the Chinese city of Wuhan should continue making their way to the airport if they are already on their way, even though their flight out of the centre of the new coronavirus outbreak

    Crosswinds Hold Up Chartered Flight Taking Canadians From Wuhan

    251 Canadians On-Board Cruise Ship Quarantined After Coronavirus Outbreak

    251 Canadians On-Board Cruise Ship Quarantined After Coronavirus Outbreak
    A cruise ship carrying 251 Canadians has been quarantined off the coast of Japan following a confirmed outbreak of the new coronavirus.    

    251 Canadians On-Board Cruise Ship Quarantined After Coronavirus Outbreak

    Talks With Wet'suwet'en Over Pipeline 'Not Successful,' Province Says

    Wet'suwet'en hereditary chiefs proposed seven days of discussions to de-escalate the dispute over the construction of the Coastal GasLink pipeline through the First Nation's traditional territory near Houston.

    Talks With Wet'suwet'en Over Pipeline 'Not Successful,' Province Says

    Husband Of Iran Plane Crash Victim Seeks Answers, Justice From Investigation

    OTTAWA - The husband of one of the victims who died when a Ukrainian jetliner was shot down by the Iranian military last month wants the people he says are responsible for his wife's death to be charged and tried at the International Criminal Court.

    Husband Of Iran Plane Crash Victim Seeks Answers, Justice From Investigation

    Opponents To Ramp Up Protests Against Trans Mountain Pipeline Expansion In B.C.

    VANCOUVER - Opponents of the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion say they will do whatever it takes to stop the project after suffering a devastating legal blow at the Federal Court of Appeal.

    Opponents To Ramp Up Protests Against Trans Mountain Pipeline Expansion In B.C.

    No End In Sight For B.C. Forestry Strike As Mediators Withdraw Services

    No End In Sight For B.C. Forestry Strike As Mediators Withdraw Services
    VANCOUVER - Efforts to end a bitter, seven-month strike by forestry workers on Vancouver Island hit another impasse as two mediators have pulled out.    

    No End In Sight For B.C. Forestry Strike As Mediators Withdraw Services

    PrevNext