Calgary Doesn’t Have a Blue Box Program?
A friend of mine recently told me this, and I didn’t believe that Calgary doesn’t have a curbside recycling program. She also said that her apartment building didn’t have a recycling program.
I visited the city of Calgary’s website, and read the following:
Calgary’s recycling program works through a system of 48 Neighbourhood Recycling Depots where residents can drop off their mixed paper, cardboard, newspaper, magazines, clear or colored glass, metal, milk cartons or jugs and plastic bags for recycling.
They’ve apparently had this program since “the early 1990s”. That’s a bit sad–I can remember dropping off stuff at Vancouver’s depots with my Dad in the early 1980s. And I believe we got our blue boxes in the early nineties.
There’s apparently a private recycling service to which you can subscribe, but surely the richest city in the country can afford to spend some cash on enabling their citizens to recycle at the curb?
After all, Calgary isn’t pulling its own weight. From the city of Calgary’s website:
In 2003 alone, an amazing 29 million kilograms of material was successfully recycled.
That’s 29 kg for every citizen. I checked out Vancouver’s program (PDF), and Vancouver residents recycled 266,606 tons. That works out to about 125 kg per citizen. Clearly Calgary needs to suck it up.
I was reminded of this topic by a self-described Recycling Bitch Sarah. She’s running a poll about mandatory recycling on Change Everything. Given CE’s audience, the results are pretty predictable.