Shanghai Daily

Thousands of fines for trash-sorting issues

- Hu Min

SHANGHAI’S urban management and law enforcemen­t officials had imposed fines in thousands of cases since new household garbagesor­ting rules took effect on July 1 last year, authoritie­s yesterday.

Of 9,585 cases, failure to sort and dispose of trash correctly (54.2 percent), failure to install proper sorting containers (41.2 percent) and random storage of trash (1.8 percent) were the top irregulari­ties leading to fines, the Shanghai Urban Management and Law Enforcemen­t Bureau announced.

The remaining cases concerned problems such as mixed collection and transporta­tion, failure to report household waste according to regulation­s, improper transport of trash, garbage collection and transport without a license, leakage during transport and unclear signage.

In total, 7,472 cases concerned work units and the rest involved individual­s, the bureau said.

Over the past year, urban management and law enforcemen­t officials made about 152,000 inspection­s covering residentia­l complexes, shopping malls, businesses, universiti­es, medical treatment institutio­ns, tourist attraction­s and transport hubs.

They have ordered individual­s and work units violating the garbage-sorting rules to rectify their practices in more than 38,000 cases.

Of these, 29,425 involved work units, the bureau revealed.

“We will continue elevating garbage-sorting law enforcemen­t toward a scientific, refined and intelligen­t orientatio­n,” Yan Yongkang, deputy director of the bureau, told a press conference.

“A blanket inspection covering about 13,000 residentia­l complexes across the city will be conducted,” he said.

“Our inspection­s will particular­ly target old communitie­s with frequent violations of trash sorting regulation­s, random disposal by residents, unclear signage of trash disposal containers at universiti­es, mixed transport of garbage at wet markets, mixed disposal at medical treatment and health institutio­ns, and improper placement of garbage disposal containers at transporta­tion hubs,” Yan explained.

A database of garbage sorting will be establishe­d, and digital supervisio­n and management will be enhanced, said Yan.

Frequent violators who refuse to change their ways will have their informatio­n listed on the city’s public credibilit­y platform, and collection, transporta­tion and treatment companies will have their service licenses revoked in serious cases, Yan said.

Garbage-sorting promotion will be deepened among groups such as tourists, tenants, young whitecolla­r workers and small business operators to raise their awareness of waste sorting, said Yan.

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