Piles of uncollected recycling frustrate Vancouverites - Action News
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Piles of uncollected recycling frustrate Vancouverites

After consecutive missed pick ups, curbside recycling is piling up in some parts of Vancouver.

'The back of our house essentially looks like a garbage dump' says resident

Recycling is littering the back laneways of many Vancouver streets as recycling contractor Smithrite falls far behind on pickup schedule due to winter weather. (Jacy Schindel/CBC)

Vancouver resident Jason Lyle says he isfed up waiting for his household recycling to be collected.

"We've had three missed pickups now and as you can see,with Christmas and all the gifts, garbage and packaging, the back of our house essentially looks like a garbage dump," said Lyle, waving at astack of blue boxes more than a metre high and other recyclables.

Vancouver resident Jason Lyle says the back of his house looks like a garbage dump after three weeks of missed recycling pick up. (Jacy Schindel/CBC)

Lyle isn't the only unhappy Vancouverite. Especially in the northeast part of the city, laneways and streets are becoming increasingly clogged with soggy and stinking recycling awaiting collection that never seems to come.

According toMulti MaterialB.C., the non-profit entity that took over Vancouver's curbside recycling program in October, snow and icy roadsare to blame.

Uncollected recycling lines King Edward Street near Main Street. (Lisa Christiansen/CBC)

"It's been really tough," says managing director Allen Langdon. "We're almost a month in where there's been delays in different parts of the city.

"We're really trying to balance the equation of making sure to get to everyone's house as quickly as we can withoutputting our contractor and their workers, as well as the public at risk by having trucks going down streets that are unsafe."

Smithrite, the company now responsible for curbside collection, has put extra trucks on the road the last two Saturdays in a fruitless effort to catch up, according to Langdon.

Drop in service?

"People are frustrated and we continue to ask for their patience," he said, noting that Smithrite hopes to be back to its regular schedule sometime this week.

Langdon claims there hasn't been an increase in complaints since Multi MaterialB.C. and Smithrite took over the program, but Lyle says he's noticed a big drop in service.

Animals are starting to get into the soggy and stinking recycling that has not been collected in weeks. (Jacy Schindel/CBC)

"We seem to miss [a pick up]every second or third week," he said. "When it was the City of Vancouver doing it, there was never any problem."

Langdon wants people tounderstand that the new curbside recycling system is actually saving taxpayers money.

Not taxpayer funded

"A lot of people express concern about their taxpayer dollars, but part of the shift to the Multi Material B.C. programis that the companies that make packaging pay for the service.

"So it isn't tax dollars that are funding the program."

He said anyone with concerns iswelcome to emailSmithriteatcustomerservice@smithrite.com, or contact his organization at info@multimaterialbc.

Numerous requests for comment from theCity of Vancouver went unreturned. A city spokesman told CBC News that Vancouver City Hall was closed this week.

More snow is forecasted to fall in Vancouver this weekend.