The Province

Recycling organizati­on and city setting up stations to collect reusable cups, recycle disposable ones

- TIFFANY CRAWFORD — with files from Susan Lazaruk ticrawford@postmedia.com

Vancouver Mayor Kennedy Stewart and the recycling organizati­on Return-It are set to launch collection stations Wednesday around the city in a bid to reduce single-use cup waste.

Stations will be installed in public and commercial spaces to collect and clean reusable cups and recycle disposable cups. Companies participat­ing in the program are Tim Hortons, Starbucks, A&W and McDonald's.

In addition to single-use cups for hot and cold beverages, the pilot will also introduce a reusable cup program. Customers can sign up to use reusable cups that will be washed, sanitized and returned to retail locations.

The launch on Wednesday is taking place in the park adjacent to the Vancouver Club at 915 West Hastings St.

Vancouver's ban on plastic bags began Jan. 1, meaning businesses are no longer allowed to offer plastic bags, and they are required to charge fees for paper bags and single-use cups.

The ban includes plastic shopping bags made from fossil fuels, plastic bags labelled or described as compostabl­e or degradable, and plastic bags made from plants or other biological materials.

Businesses are also required to charge a minimum of 15 cents for a paper shopping bag, 25 cents for a single-use cup, and $1 for a new reusable shopping bag.

Vancouver is the first city in Canada to bring in a policy where city restaurant­s and cafés have to charge 25 cents for every throwaway cup they distribute, however, some U.S. cities, such as Berkeley, Calif., have a similar policy.

The companies keep the fees, but are encouraged to use the extra money to comply with new environmen­tal laws or invest in renewable alternativ­es. Restaurant­s that participat­e in reusable cupshare programs will be exempt from reporting to the city the number of disposable cups they distribute each year when they renew their business licences.

McDonald's has yet to bring back a policy allowing customers to use their own reusable mugs, however, the restaurant chain does allow reusable mugs in Vancouver because of the fee. The company said reintroduc­ing the reusable travel mug program nationally will be handled in a phased approach.

Tim Hortons and Starbucks brought back allowing reusable cups last month after suspending use due to COVID, while Starbucks is working on a plan to phase out disposable cups. In 2020, it began testing compostabl­e cups with biodegrada­ble lining called BioPBS to prevent leaking.

Many other cities have adopted plastic-bag bans, including Surrey, Nanaimo, Rossland, Esquimalt, Victoria, Richmond, Saanich, Tofino and Ucluelet.

 ?? — GETTY IMAGES ?? A pilot program will allow reusable cups to be properly sanitized and returned to retail locations.
— GETTY IMAGES A pilot program will allow reusable cups to be properly sanitized and returned to retail locations.

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