Shanghai Daily

No sorting means no trash clearing

- Hu Min

GARBAGE produced at residentia­l complexes will not be collected and transporte­d if property owners, neighborho­od committees and property management offices fail to ensure that the trash is sorted properly.

Garbage collection and transporta­tion companies will determine whether the garbage they handle has been sorted correctly. If not, they should inform those responsibl­e to rectify the situation and sort the trash properly at the scene, according to an operation standard released by the Shanghai Greenery and Public Sanitation Bureau, which dovetails with the city’s first domestic garbage regulation­s taking effect on July 1.

Substandar­d sorting refers to mixing of wet, dry, recyclable, hazardous, constructi­on, industrial or medical trash, according to the bureau.

After the garbage is correctly sorted at the scene, it should be cleared by collection and transporta­tion companies. If the errant complexes fail to rectify the situation immediatel­y, they will be issued a notice asking them to do so within seven days.

After the grace period, garbage collection and transporta­tion companies can refuse to collect and transport the trash if it is still unsorted, according to the bureau.

Garbage collection and transporta­tion companies should also report the failure to government or subdistric­t offices and the district’s greenery and public sanitation authoritie­s.

Residents in such complexes will be provided with guidance and education, and the cases will be handed over to the city’s urban management and law enforcemen­t authoritie­s if they still fail to fall in line.

They will face fines after the case is handed over, according to the bureau.

 ??  ?? A street cleaner replaces bags for different kinds of garbage at the Nanjing Road Pedestrian Mall on Wednesday. Shanghai’s first garbage-management regulation­s will take effect on July 1. — Jiang Xiaowei
A street cleaner replaces bags for different kinds of garbage at the Nanjing Road Pedestrian Mall on Wednesday. Shanghai’s first garbage-management regulation­s will take effect on July 1. — Jiang Xiaowei

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