Winnipeg puts off curbside organic-waste collection to 2019 at the earliest
City to conduct review of garbage and recycling, will also look at collecting kitchen scraps
Curbside organic-waste collection won't happen in Winnipeg until 2019 at the earliest.
City council voted 13-3 Wednesday afternoon to ask Winnipeg solid-waste officials to conduct a review of city garbage and recycling programs. The review would also look at the feasibility of curbside organic-waste collection.
This $200,000 study won't be finished until 2018. Since an organics program takes months to plan and tender, the earliest possible start to curbside collection will be 2019, after the next civic election.
The review replaces an organics-collection study ordered up by council in 2016, when some members balked at a projected $55 to $100-per-household annual cost for curbside organics collection.
Most other Canadian cities collect organic waste in some manner.
Couns. Jeff Browaty (North Kildonan), Russ Wyatt (Transcona) and Shawn Dobson (St. Charles) voted in opposition. Browaty said he opposed the spending on the solid-waste review.