Toronto Star

Owners of biggest trash bins to be hit with higher bills

Councillor­s vow to target wasteful residents who mix solid waste with recyclable­s

- DAVID RIDER CITY HALL BUREAU CHIEF

Toronto users of extra-large garbage bins should brace themselves for another steep rate hike, and maybe loss of those bins altogether.

Councillor­s at the city budget launch Friday fumed at a chart showing those trash bins are on average 77 per cent full of recyclable or compostabl­e material, compared with between 33 per cent and 48 per cent for the three smaller sizes.

That means the 9 per cent of Toronto homeowners paying an extra $126.39 this year for an extra-large bin are needlessly sending much more reusable material to a landfill already expected to be full by 2029.

Councillor Mike Layton called them “too lazy to recycle.” Colleague Shelley Carroll dubbed them “non-environmen­talists, libertaria­ns, that will pay any amount of money to just ignore all diversion rules.”

In the so-called rate-supported budget, city staff are recommendi­ng a 3-per-cent increase in current fees of $10.63 per year for small bins, $88.73 for medium, $247.39 for large and $343.60 for extra-large.

In the next budget phase, however, councillor­s will debate rebates that keep those hikes low. Several said they will target the wasteful big-bin owners who keep the city from reaching its diversion targets.

“They’ve been mixing solid waste with recyclable­s at a rate that’s just not acceptable,” said Councillor Janet Davis, adding she would like to scrap the mammoth receptacle­s.

City staff will try to forecast how that eliminatio­n, which would cost the city about $1 million in fees, would affect diversion rates.

Staff are also recommendi­ng an 8per-cent hike in water rates for 2016, followed by smaller hikes in subsequent years, to help pay for replacing and repairing infrastruc­ture, includ- ing pipes that date back as far as the 1880s.

Extreme weather in recent years has caused flooding and contribute­d to pipe and water-main breaks.

Toronto Water has a “state-of-good-repair” backlog of $1.6 billion. Big hikes in recent years have been aimed at getting that tab down to $200 million by 2025.

The city’s revenue from water bills, meanwhile, is dropping because Torontonia­ns are using significan­tly less water than they used to.

A usage decline of 1.6 per cent this year — 60 per cent more than expected — has blown a $17-million hole in this year’s budget that will be filled from reserves.

Lou Di Geronimo, Toronto Water general manager, said the city welcomes conservati­on but has to budget for it.

“People are fixing their homes, and it’s a hot real-estate market so they are increasing the value of their asset with low-flow toilets” and less-thirsty washing machines, he said. “People are using less because they are changing how they use water.”

Council will set the rate-supported budget in early December, and the operating and capital budgets in February.

 ??  ?? A report shows 77 per cent of waste in large garbage bins is recyclable or compostabl­e material.
A report shows 77 per cent of waste in large garbage bins is recyclable or compostabl­e material.

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