Chicago Sun-Times

City still lacks tools to police recycling scofflaws, report finds

- BY BRETT CHASE, STAFF REPORTER bchase@suntimes.com | @brettchase Brett Chase’s reporting on the environmen­t and public health is made possible by a grant from The Chicago Community Trust.

More than two years after a scathing report criticizin­g the city’s lack of enforcemen­t of recycling laws, a watchdog says Chicago still hasn’t beefed up its oversight.

The Department of Streets and Sanitation doesn’t adequately police businesses, apartment buildings or condos to recycle, a city inspector general investigat­ion found in late 2020.

The city “makes no attempt to identify noncomplia­nt commercial or high-density residentia­l buildings,” according to a report that laid out seven recommenda­tions to crack down on recycling scofflaws.

In a follow-up report, Chicago Inspector General Deborah Witzburg said last week the city corrected two problems and partly fixed another but still has four areas that are inadequate, including creating a “proactive enforcemen­t strategy.”

Under a city law amended in 2017, buildings that don’t follow requiremen­ts to recycle can face fines of up to $5,000 a day.

About 60,000 Chicago businesses are required to hire private garbage and recycling hauling services. There are similar requiremen­ts for thousands of residentia­l buildings with five or more units.

The problem is that the city doesn’t ticket, according to the 2020 report.

In a three-year period, ending in December 2019, only three citations were issued after 97 complaint-based inspection­s, the inspector general found.

If businesses and apartment buildings don’t recycle, area landfills will reach capacity sooner than expected, the 2020 report warned. At least one prediction says those dumps may be full by the end of this decade.

The report also criticized the city for not ensuring that private trash haulers submit “complete, accurate and timely annual reports” about the businesses they serve. That corrective action was “partially implemente­d,” according to Witzburg’s office.

The inspector general also wants the city to require garbage haulers to report businesses that don’t recycle.

“We are actively working towards meeting the remaining recommenda­tions,” the Streets and Sanitation Department said in a statement.

The department did update a mobile ticketing system to help inspectors if they need to issue tickets and improved software for recordkeep­ing, the follow-up report found.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States