Green bins could become mandatory in Ottawa apartment buildings - Action News
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Ottawa

Green bins could become mandatory in Ottawa apartment buildings

The city wants to improve what has been poor uptake on a voluntary program in place for nearly a decade.

One landlord says organic waste diversion isn't practical for his building

A room with a row of green bins and large blue recycling bins
Only 29 per cent of apartments and condo buildings in Ottawa have green bins. (Jean Delisle/CBC )

The City of Ottawa is considering making green bin programs mandatoryat multi-residentialdwellings to improve what has been poor uptake on a voluntary program in place for nearly a decade.

Since the city introduceda voluntary green bin program toapartment and condo buildings nine years ago, just 29 per cent or 500 of approximately 1,700 buildings have put in compost bins for organic materials, according to data compiled by city staff.

The city plans to come up with a multi-residential waste strategy as it develops its 30-year master plan for solid waste, according toKevin Wylie, the city's general manager of public works and environmental services, in a written response to an inquiry from River Coun. Riley Brockington.

Wylie said city staff will share options for the green bin program in multi-residential dwellings including the consideration of mandatory green bins in the fourth quarter of 2020.

Kevin Wylie is general manager of public works and environmental service for the City of Ottawa. (Kate Porter/CBC)

The city isfeeling added pressure to increase green bin diversion sincethe provincial government released itsFood and Organic Waste Framework last year, whichcouldpotentially impose a landfill ban onkitchen organics as early as 2022.

But landlords are hoping push won't come to shove as they work with the city trying to overcomechallenges of gettingkitchen scraps from highrise units into compostbins.

One challenge for the city and landlords is that many of the residential highrises in Ottawa were built long before recycling and composting programs existed.

Geoff Younghusband of Osgoode Properties says their Juliana apartment building on Bronson Avenue is too cramped to add green bins for tenants to compost. (Jean Delisle/CBC )

The age of the buildings means there isn't roomto accommodate green bins, according to Geoff Younghusband, senior vice-president of OsgoodeProperties.

Osgoode owns 15 apartment complexesin Ottawa, including the Juliana, a12-storey building on Bronson Avenue overlooking LeBreton Flats.

Tenants there drop their garbage into a chute that empties into a large openbin ina small, cramped main-floor room.

Large recycling containers for paper and plastics are easily accessible by elevator in the basement parking garage,but there are no green composting bins.

Geoff Younghusband says there is no room to add compost bins next to the recycling containers in the basement garage of the Juliana apartment. (Jean Delisle/CBC )

"It's a possibility but it creates issues of smell, the potential for pests, and no one wants to park their car beside an area where they have to deal with kitchen waste,"Younghusband said.

The superintendent hashis hands full keeping the garbage and recycling areas clean and odour free without adding green bins, he added.

To accommodate the recycling containers, Osgoode Properties gave up two parking spots, which each rented for $120 a month.

"If we take another spot away [for green bins] that obviouslytakes it off our revenue stream.Parking is at a premium and we want to keep spots from residents," he said.

Younghusband said he'snot aware of residents pushingfor a green bin program.

Condo residents push for green bins, but challenges remain

5 years ago
Duration 1:27
Residents of buildings with and without green bins say having the ability to compost is one of their top priorities. Geoff Younghusband, senior vice president with Osgoode Properties, says bigger buildings will need help introducing compost facilities.

"I think of an elderly person in the middle of February andif we're askingthem to walk across the parking lot to take their recyclingand separate it, in many cases they aren't going to do it," he said.

"It's much easier to walk down the hall and put it down the chute."

But tenant Marie Craig, who has lived at the Juliana for three years, would welcome a green bin program.

"I would love itbecause I was composting all this winter," she said. "I was putting it into big containers and freezing it on the balcony so that in the spring I could bring it to my friend's garden."

Craig isn't worried about the smell of green bins because collection happensevery week and there are ways to control the odour.

"I find it kind of sad we don't do it anymore and it should be everywhere could, would, should," she said, waving an apple she was eating. "All that vegetable and fruit waste should be nourishing our land instead of in the landfill."

Marie Craig, a tenant at the Juliana apartments, said she would love to see a green bin program in her building. (Jean Delisle/CBC )

Duncan Bury of Waste Watch Ottawaacknowledges space constraintsand designare challenges formulti-residential buildings, but added concerns about rodents and odour are "overstated issues."

"The city provides wastecollection to 1,600 of these properties with over 110,000 residents sothevery least these buildings can do is work with the city because I think they have obligations," he said.

"They are getting a service that is paid for collectively and they need to step up."

Bury believes the city will likely have to make green bin diversion mandatory.

Last year the city set up a working group with owners of apartment buildings and condominium boards to come up with ways to increase green bin participation.

Many condo buildings not set up for composting, councillor says

5 years ago
Duration 0:36
Coun. Catherine McKenney says the city faces several challenges in encouraging condo complexes to embrace composting.

Osgoode Properties is part of the working group.

Younghusbandsaid it has been constructive but added property owners don't want to be forced to provide green bin service.

"I think it would be unfortunate," he said. "We have an appetite to try and solve these issues but we don't want to be forced to solve them by ourselves."

The solid waste master plan, which will set out the direction and goals of how the city will handle the collection, processing and disposal of garbage, recyclablesand organic waste,is set to be discussed at next week's meeting of the environmental protection, water and waste management committee.