Montreal bylaw on plastic bag ban passed - Action News
Home WebMail Monday, November 11, 2024, 04:25 AM | Calgary | -1.3°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Montreal

Montreal bylaw on plastic bag ban passed

The City of Montreal passed a bylaw that will prevent stores from selling single-use plastic bags on its territory, cementing a recommendation from the city's environmental committee.

Quebec branch of Retail Council of Canada demanding a moratorium on application of bylaw

The bylaw was passed less than than nine months after the city's environmental committee recommended it. (Ross William Hamilton, The Oregonian/AP)

The City of Montreal has passeda bylaw that will prevent storesfrom selling single-use plastic bags on its territory, cementing a recommendation from thecity's environmental committee.

The bylaw, passed Tuesday and in effect startingJan.1, 2018, applies to lightweight plastic shopping bags, specifically ones that are less than 50 microns (or0.05 millimetres) thick.

The ban also applies to all types ofoxo-degradable, oxo-fragmentable,oxo-biodegradable and biodegradable bags.

Certain bags,such as small plastic bags used for fresh vegetables or medication, will not be banned forhygienic reasons.

Individuals who fail to adhere to the bylaw will face fines ranging from $200 to $1,000 for a first infraction and $300 to $2,000 for anysubsequent ones.

For companies, those fines can be anywhere between $400 and $4,000.

Decision a disappointment

The decision comes as a disappointment to the Retail Council of Canada, which said in a statement the bylaw was approved too quickly.

It says the majority of Montrealers reuse the bags, and that banning them in some cities and not in others makes it complicated for consumers.

"We're moving towardsa regulatory patchworkthat's going to complicate everyone's lives, retailers and consumers alike," said Nathalie St-Pierre, thecouncil's vice president for Quebec.

The group is demanding a moratorium on the application of the bylaw until a report on plastic bags is released by the provincial environment ministry and Recyc-Qubec.

Montreal joins Deux-Montagnes,Huntingdonand Brossardin the list of Quebec municipalities who have moved to ban plastic bags.

With files from Kristy Snell