Trying to buy a bottle of water at a restaurant in Bayfield? Good luck - Action News
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Trying to buy a bottle of water at a restaurant in Bayfield? Good luck

The U.K. environmental organization, Surfers Against Sewage, has listed Bayfield, Ont. as a plastic-free community, the first community to get the designation in North America.

The village on Lake Huron continues to win praise for its efforts to get rid of single-use plastics

The grassroots group, Blue Bayfield, has led the campaign to get rid of single-use plastic water bottles in the community. (Submitted)

The villageof Bayfield, Ontario has gone blue in a good way.

The community,onthe shores of Lake Huron, has effectively cut down on single-use plastic bottles.And itsgrassroots effortscontinue to win praise.

The U.K. environmental organization, Surfers Against Sewage, has listed Bayfield as a plastic-free community, the first community to receive the designation on this side of the ocean.

"Our committee of 12 people was a quite surprised that this could happen to us, especially to bethe first in North America," Shelagh Sully, of the group Blue Bayfield, told CBC Radio's London Morning.

The Council ofCanadians hadalready designated Bayfield as a Blue Community, one of several in Ontario.

Thatdesignation is awarded to communities that:

  • Recognize water and sanitationas human rights
  • Ban or phase out the sale of bottled water in municipal facilities and municipal events
  • Promote publicly-financed, owned, and operated water and wastewater services
Bayfield has set up five water filling stations for bottles around the village. (Submitted)

Sully said it didn't take much to get Bayfield's1,100 residents, a population that swells in the summer months with visitors,to support the reduction in plastics.

Restaurants and shops were approached by Blue Bayfield members and asked to do away with plastic. The response was positive, according to Sully.

But she says, initially, there was not a lot of support from the formerlocal council.

She notes the council came around.

"They did help install the water bottle refill stations and footed the bill. That was very good."

There are now five refilling stations around the village.

There's also a mobile hydrationstation dubbed "Blue Betty." The adult tricycle is fitted with a platform to transporttap water and compostable cups to the beach and outdoor events.

The "Blue Betty" hydration tricycle at the beach in Bayfield, Ont. (Blue Bayfield Facebook page)

Asked what would happen it you tried to order a bottle of water at a restaurant in Bayfield, Sully replied, "nothing, it wouldn't happen."

Sully says, although area grocery stores continueto sell single-use plastic bottles, local eateries only offer tap water in carafes. Plastic straws are also gone.

Sully says people in other communities, such as Victoria, B.C., have reached out to Blue Bayfield seeking advice on how to goplastic-free.

"Get together with like-minded people to form a committee and go out there and talk to local retailers, restaurants, and to anyone you know who has a lot of plastic to begin with and wants to get rid of," saysSully.

"We're the generation that got things started and young people will have to bat it home."