Toronto council upholds controversial plastic bag ban - Action News
Home WebMail Tuesday, November 12, 2024, 02:45 AM | Calgary | 6.7°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Toronto

Toronto council upholds controversial plastic bag ban

Toronto's ban on plastic bags will go ahead as planned in the New Year.

City council voted not to reopen debate

Toronto bag ban upheld

12 years ago
Duration 2:27
An effort to reopen debate on Torontos bag ban was quashed Wednesday.

Torontos ban on plastic bags will go ahead as planned in the New Year.

A motion was introduced to reopen debate on Torontos pending plastic bag ban, which will come into effect on Jan. 1.

Toronto retailers will be barred from providing plastic bags to customers when a ban comes into effect in January. (CBC)

But the motion failed to net the two-thirds of council votes necessary to reopen the debate on Wednesday afternoon.

A total of 27councillors voted in favour of reopening debate, while 18 councillors voted against the motion. Thirty votes were needed to reach the required two-thirds threshold to resume the debate.

Ahead of Wednesdays vote, Coun. Denzil Minnan-Wong had predicted the motion to reopen debate would be a tough measure to achieve.

"Its going to be a tight vote," he said.

Surprise motion led to ban

The decision to ban plastic bags occurred earlier this year,when council voted on a surprise motion that Coun. David Shiner introduced in June.

As of Jan. 1, retailers will be prohibited from giving customers "single-use plastic carryout [shopping] bags, including those advertised as compostable, biodegradable, photodegradable, or similar," according to the text of the ban that council passed four months ago.

The move was controversial, with critics suggesting that it could haveproblematic consequences if it comes into effect.

Mayor Rob Ford voted in favour of reopening the debate on the plastic bag ban, though the motion wound up being defeated. (CBC)

Some industry stakeholders have threatened legal action if the ban goes ahead as scheduled.

Coun. Giorgio Mammoliti, who voted in favour of reopening debate, told CBC News that councillors "understand that this thing, if its taken to court, we have the potential to lose this thing."

Following the vote, Coun. John Parker suggested the vote that scuttled further debate was even more surprising than the vote that prompted the ban in the first place.

"What is harder to fathom: voting to ban plastic bags without taking advice, or taking advice and voting not to reconsider the ban," Parker said on his Twitter account.

Parker was also one of the 27 council members who voted in favour of reopening debate on the bag ban.

With a report from the CBC's Steven D'Souza