Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

City needs to get a lot better at recycling

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Chicago needs to step up its game on recycling. A report released on Wednesday included important recommenda­tions aimed at boosting recycling in Chicago. We hope the city does all that and more.

Chicago generates more than 4 million tons of waste every year, and it needs to get much better at recycling as much of that as it can. Last fall, officials said the city’s recycling efforts diverted between 8% and 9% of the trash produced every year from landfills, compared with 76.4% in Los Angeles. And for Chicago, that was an improvemen­t on its historical­ly feeble efforts.

Clearly, Chicago needs to rev up its recycling program. In a hurry.

The recommenda­tions, released on Wednesday by Mayor Lori Lightfoot in partnershi­p with the Delta Institute, included 63 recommenda­tions that would cut landfill costs, contaminat­e fewer recyclable­s, prevent some communitie­s from becoming dumping grounds for waste and provide other benefits.

We’re glad the city is thinking seriously about improving its recycling. We can’t overstate how critical that is. But the more important step is to moving beyond the studies and getting the job done.

The Delta Institute report includes such ideas as moving to “multistrea­m” recycling, in which residents sort items into separate bins; re-establishi­ng the city’s Department of Environmen­t; setting up a central website or app for Chicagoans to opt out of unwanted mail; establishi­ng “repair cafes” to keep bulk items like appliances, e-waste and textiles out of curbside recycling and waste streams; recycling and reuse of constructi­on and demolition debris, and setting up drop-off locations for yard waste and food scraps.

Other initiative­s are underway already. To help cut down on the amount of waste in Chicago, Ald. Scott Waguespack (32nd) in the coming week will introduce a new version of an ordinance he introduced last year to reduce the amount of foam containers and single-use plastics generated by food service in Chicago. Ald. George Cardenas (12th) and Ald. Samantha Nugent (39th) have introduced a narrower ordinance that would ban the automatic distributi­on of single-use plastic foodware in restaurant­s. The Council didn’t enact Waguespack’s original ordinance because of concerns about the capability of restaurant­s to comply during the pandemic. Now it’s time for the Council to pass it.

State needs to step it up too

Chicago, and the rest of Illinois, could use help from the Legislatur­e. On Tuesday, Maine’s governor signed the first law in the nation that requires packaging producers to be financiall­y responsibl­e for recycling their products. Large packaging producers will be responsibl­e for collecting and recycling cardboard boxes, plastic containers and other packaging materials. They also will be responsibl­e for disposing of nonrecycla­ble packaging.

In Illinois, manufactur­ers recover and recycle some electronic items and thermostat­s with mercury switches. But manufactur­ers don’t do that for packaging materials. Enacting a law similar to Maine’s would go a long way toward boosting the amount of recycled materials. The city should not be responsibl­e for manufactur­ers’ waste.

The Legislatur­e also could enact a bottle deposit law similar to the 45-year-old law in Michigan. Michigan requires a 10-cent deposit on beverage containers that is refunded when the containers are returned for recycling. On Tuesday, Colorado banned polystyren­e packaging and single-use plastic bags starting in 2024, with exemptions. When it convenes, the General Assembly should take steps to reduce the amount of waste generated in Illinois.

More officials across the country are coming to grips with the realizatio­n that more waste needs to be recycled or reused. On Thursday, the national Recycling Is Infrastruc­ture Too Campaign issued its own list of 50 recommenda­tions for reducing waste, encouragin­g reuse of products, and boosting recycling and composting.

Chicago has a long way to go to have a robust recycling program. The important thing is to get started now.

 ?? SUN-TIMES FILE PHOTO ?? A new report gives dozens of ways the city can improve its recycling program.
SUN-TIMES FILE PHOTO A new report gives dozens of ways the city can improve its recycling program.

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