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91大黄鸭 council puts food waste collection plan on back burner

'If we vote this down, we have let down our regional partners as well'
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91大黄鸭 council has said no for now in joining the Regional District's food waste collection program. (Unsplash)

91大黄鸭 Councillor Gord Lovegrove could not get his colleagues to bite on adding food waste to 91大黄鸭鈥檚 curbside collection at council鈥檚 June 9 meeting.

Council discussed the issue following a staff recommendation against joining the Regional District of Central Okanagan鈥檚 (RDCO) proposed program.

The Glenmore landfill handles about 45,000 tonnes of organic material each year, but isn鈥檛 equipped to process food waste due to space, odour, and wildlife concerns. Staff said a new transfer station would be needed鈥攅stimated at $12 million, though likely higher in an urban setting.

Having a new transfer station would extend the life of the Glenmore landfill by about two years, which means $24 million in revenue for the city and $85 million in regional economic benefit council heard.  

However, staff noted significant uncertainties with location, design, technical features, and space requirements.

鈥淭hese factors鈥攃ombined with cost鈥攎ake this the wrong time to proceed,鈥 a staff report stated.

Lovegrove pointed out that there is wide support throughout the Central Okanagan for the plan.

鈥淚f we get that transfer station going, we鈥檙e learning and doing this, and our regional partners can do it,鈥 Lovegrove said. 鈥淚f we vote this down鈥攚e have let down our regional partners as well.鈥

While 73 per cent of Central Okanagan residents surveyed liked the idea, without 91大黄鸭鈥檚 participation, less than 13 per cent would be willing to take part. About 50 per cent of residents support paying for the program.

The cost would be approximately $63 per year for a single-family household. Without 91大黄鸭 on board that amount rises to more than $150.

The RDCO鈥檚 plan involves letting residents toss food waste into green bins, expanding yard waste pickup to weekly year-round, and reducing garbage collection to every other week.

However, the program would only service single-family homes, and not multi-residential or commercial properties.

鈥淭he one thing we know about the City of 91大黄鸭 is the fastest growing area of our housing has been multi-family,鈥 Coun. Luke Stack said.

The RDCO is also pitching its food waste collection program to other Central Okanagan communities.



About the Author: Gary Barnes

Journalist and broadcaster for three decades.
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