The Star Malaysia

Return your trays and clear your litter from June 1

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IT will be mandatory for diners to return their trays and clear their table litter from June 1, the National Environmen­t Agency (NEA) said.

Table litter includes used tissues, wet wipes, straws, canned drinks, plastic bottles and food remnants.

As part of an effort to help diners adjust, no enforcemen­t action will be taken until after Aug 31. During the three months, they will only be advised to follow the rule.

From Sept 1, enforcemen­t will be taken against those who do not comply with advice to clean up after themselves in public dining places.

First-time offenders will be given a written warning. Second-time offenders will face a S$300 (RM930) compositio­n fine, and subsequent offenders may face court fines, which can go up to S$2,000 (RM6,194) for the first conviction.

The Singapore Food Agency will also work with NEA to roll out enforcemen­t progressiv­ely at coffee shops and foodcourts in the fourth quarter of this year.

NEA said the move, which comes amid a public health crisis, followed years of extensive educationa­l efforts to change behaviour and mindsets of diners in public places.

NEA deputy chief executive of public health and director-general of public health Chew Ming Fai said: “We’ve been talking about these clean tables since 2013, and there’s been a lot of education effort that has been put out over the years.”

One example is the Clean Tables Campaign launched in February this year.

“Following that exercise, we’ve seen a small uptick in terms of tray return rates from 33% to 35%, but unfortunat­ely, I don’t think that is significan­t enough,” Chew said.

NEA will be setting up more tray return infrastruc­ture across the hawker centres. Currently, there are about 900 tray return racks installed across 111 hawker centres.

During the advisory period, safe distancing ambassador­s, SG Clean ambassador­s, community volunteers and NEA officers being deployed at hawker centres will continue to remind diners to clear their dirty trays, crockery and litter. — The Straits Times/ANN

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