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September
28, 2001
Recyclables to be
sent south on planes
Citys much-anticipated
recycling program may begin next month
MIRIAM HILL
Nunatsiaq News
IQALUIT The City of Iqaluit is gearing up to launch its
new recycling program, but some residents wonder how well it will
fly.
City officials hope the recycling program will reduce waste in
the citys landfill, which is expected to be full by Oct.
31.
They also think recycling will help rid Iqaluits air of
the toxins produced when substances like plastics and metal are
burned. No official launch date for the program has been announced,
but it is expected to kick off in late October.
Matthew Hough, the director of the citys engineering and
public works department, said the recyclable material will be
baled and used as ballast aboard Canadian North flights returning
south.
At the Ottawa airport, the bales will be picked up by a sanitation
company and brought to its recycling plant. The process will cost
the city very little.
"This is how we can actually run this program," Hough
said. "We found while doing the research for the program
that storing the material and shipping it out all at once in the
summer would have been so cost-prohibitive we wouldnt have
been able to run the program."
Iqalungmiut already have a place to bring their recyclables.
Several sea crates have been sitting along the dump road for two
months, serving as temporary repositories for plastics and metal.
Unmarked crates
But almost no one knows what the crates are for. Inside the doors
of one of them are piled several bags, some of them broken open
and spewing their contents.
Matthew Hough said few people have used the crates as a drop-off
for their plastic and metal. That may be because there arent
signs explaining what the crates are for.
The signs have been ready for some time, Hough said, but staff
shortages mean they havent yet been hung. A city official
said the signs would be up this week.
Marcel Mason, a member of the group Citizens for a Clean Iqaluit,
says he brings his plastics and metals to the sea crates but laments
that few others do the same.
He said a random survey of Iqalungmiut would reveal that few
people even know the crates are there.
"Even if you go by there, if you dont know what those
trailers are for, its just a bunch of containers sitting
out there. Its also in a mud hole, which is not good. The
whole thing is just not set up to be user-friendly," he said.
And the location means only those with a vehicle can go to the
site.
"Anything is better than nothing," he admitted. "At
least now I have a place where I can take what I know should not
be burned."
Mason said he doesnt think people will voluntarily start
separating their garbage into recyclables and non-recyclables,
even after a public education campaign is launched.
"Unless the municipality is willing to back it with legislation,
were not going to see change," he warned.
Cheri Kemp-Kinnear, Iqaluits economic development officer,
said while commercial establishments take part in a paper recycling
program, there is no legislation on the books requiring the recycling
of anything.
"The recycling program has all kinds of ideas and one of
the ideas that is done in Southern jurisdictions is this deterrent,
which is you fine people for not doing things," she said.
"Theres no way we can do that at this point. Were
just way too early into the game. Weve got to get it working
first."
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