Chicago Sun-Times

City must push forward in holding businesses, residentia­l buildings responsibl­e for recycling

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Chicago can’t afford to lay waste on its recycling efforts. Last year, less than 10% of its residentia­l trash was recycled through the city’s blue cart collection program and drop-box recycling.

And even with laws on the books requiring businesses, apartment building and condo associatio­ns to recycle, the Streets and Sanitation Department still has room for improvemen­t when it comes to enforcemen­t, according to a recent report by the city’s inspector general.

The Streets and Sanitation Department has corrected “two problems” and partly fixed another since the IG’s audit in late 2020 revealed that it “makes no attempt to identify noncomplia­nt commercial or high-density residentia­l buildings.” But it has a way to go, Inspector General Deborah Witzburg said in her follow-up report earlier this month.

Adequately ensuring everyone is recycling is a monumental undertakin­g in a city as big as Chicago.

But if the task at hand isn’t addressed as swiftly as possible, our landfills will be overflowin­g.

Nearly 500,000 Chicago households — 41% — live in multi-unit buildings, and 60,000 businesses are required to hire private garbage and recycling hauling services. That’s a lot of trash.

If we keep skirting accountabi­lity or fail to give residents the opportunit­y to recycle, the city will keep falling behind.

Streets and Sanitation officials said they are working on fulfilling the inspector general’s recommenda­tions, which includes requiring garbage haulers to report businesses that fail to recycle.

Also encouragin­g is that the department has updated a mobile ticketing system and improved software for record keeping to help.

The city must keep at it and relay that it is serious about penalizing those who aren’t following the requiremen­ts laid out in the amended Chicago Recycling Ordinance that took effect in 2017.

Individual Chicagoans can also do their part by encouragin­g their employers and landlords to hire a private recycling hauler. Condo owners in buildings with more than five or more units can also remind their boards about their recycling obligation­s.

If a gentle nudge doesn’t do the trick, demand it.

No one wants their businesses or residentia­l buildings slapped with $500 to $5,000-aday fines. However, the price Chicago would pay for eschewing its responsibi­lity to the environmen­t would be much steeper.

 ?? SUN-TIMES FILE ?? The city hasn’t fixed oversight of businesses and apartment building owners who don’t recycle more than two years after a watchdog report found problems.
SUN-TIMES FILE The city hasn’t fixed oversight of businesses and apartment building owners who don’t recycle more than two years after a watchdog report found problems.

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