North

Curbside recycling still an option, says Whitehorse mayor

Mayor Dan Curtis is gently chastising city staff for getting ahead of themselves by suggesting a curbside recycling program would be too expensive for city residents, saying it's 'a bit premature' to make that call.

Dan Curtis says the city needs a plan to deal with its recyclables

The city is dealing with more and more recyclable waste, says mayor Dan Curtis. (Mead Gruver/AP file photo)

Whitehorse mayor Dan Curtis says city staff were out of line this week to suggest city residents can't afford a curbside recycling program

"To suggest it's too expensive may have been a bit premature, before council has had a chance to reach out to a community that really embraces recycling," Curtis said

"It was flawed, it was incorrect, it was inappropriate, and I wish they hadn't have done it, but we all make mistakes."

'We have to show some political will to find a solution. If not this one, then another one - but we have to do so quickly,' said Curtis. (Cheryl Kawaja/CBC)

City waste managers advised councillors at Monday's meeting to reject the $1.2 million plan for curbside recycling.

The city had solicited bids earlier this year, to determine what such a program might cost. The lowest bid came in at $16.75 per household, per month, or about $200 a year. That fee would be in addition to the $11 monthly garbage fees the 6,000 households in Whitehorse already pay. 

"The final price is higher than anticipated and the cost increase to utility rates may be too significant for residents to bear," a city staff report says.

Curtis believes officials "may have anticipated what council wanted" in recommending the plan be dropped, but he says it caught him by surprise.

"That really is the role of elected officials to determine, once they've had an opportunity to talk to the citizens."

'There is no magic bullet'

Curtis says the city is under pressure to come up with some kind of plan for dealing with recyclables, and dropping the blue box idea does not make the problem go away.

He says it will just put more pressure on the city's private recycling processors, who are already struggling to deal with ever-growing mountains of paper, cardboard, glass and plastic — things they don't make money off of.

Private processors such as Raven Recycling are 'at the breaking point', Curtis said. 'They can’t continue to take product that doesn’t have any value and process it and ship it down south for free.' (Philippe Morin/CBC)

"We are going to see our processors strained and not being able to carry on," he said.

"There is no magic bullet here. You can't just drop [your recyclables] off to a processor and think it doesn't cost you anything. You've actually been getting a free ride for a very long time."

Curtis says without a good waste diversion plan, the city's landfill will quickly reach capacity. Building a new landfill would cost an estimated $26 million, he says, and "we don't have $26 million in the bank to do that."

City council will vote next week on whether to accept the staff recommendation and reject the blue box contract.

With files from Vic Istchenko