Saint John residents forced to use pop-up want permanent recycling solution - Action News
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New Brunswick

Saint John residents forced to use pop-up want permanent recycling solution

The Fundy Region Solid Waste Commission has been running a pop-up on Sunday afternoons to address the recycling needs of the south end.

The Fundy Region Solid Waste Commission has been running a pop-up over the summer to mixed success

Lisa Morris is an avid recycler. She lives in the South End and would ultimately like to see the neighbourhood serviced with curbside recycling pickup. (Brian Chisholm/CBC)

Lisa Morris is an avid recycler but, living in the South end of Saint John without a car, she finds it hard to get to the blue bins.

"The biggest, I think, challenge I find is transportation or accessibility," she said.

And it's only gotten harder since the land where the blue bin depot was located was sold earlier this year.

The Fundy Region Solid Waste Commission has been running a pop-up collection depot on Sundays in the parking lot at the corner of Carmarthen and Queen streets from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. to address the recycling needs of the south end.

A Fundy Region Solid Waste Commission truck sits at the corner of Carmarthen and Queen streets for four hours on Sundays, so residents of the south end can deposit their recyclables. (Facebook/Fundy Region Solid Waste Commission)

But the service ends this weekend and there's no word on whether it will be extended. Residents of the south end are calling for a more accessible, and permanent, recycling solution.

Morris herself finds it difficult to visit the pop-up Sunday afternoons because she normally works.

"Unfortunately, I work until 4:30 on Sunday, so I just don't have the window to still continue to recycle," she said.

On a rare Sunday off, however, she hasfilled her wagon with, well, a wagon-load of recycling.

"It's been my trusty wagon for a number of years," she said. "I fill it up with my recycling and and bring it down."

There is no curbside pickup recycling anywhere inSaint John, and residents have to drive to blue bin depots located inparking lots of various grocery stores. But a lot of residents in the south end don't have cars.

Pop-up recycling location just not enough for Saint Johns south end

5 years ago
Duration 0:53
The Fundy Solid Waste Commission has been running a pop-up recycling location in Saint Johns south end after the nearby recycling depot was removed. The pop-up has been running since mid-July, but residents want a long-term solution.

The pop-up was set up as a six-weekpilot project while the commission looked for a more permanent solution.

At 1 p.m. on Sunday,a Fundy Region Solid Waste Commission truck parks for four hours waiting for people to bring their recyclables. Residents can sort them into two categories, plastic or paper. A driver sits with the truck the whole time.

"It's basically a little trial we've been running," said Brenda MacCallum, public relations and program development officer with the commission.

Lisa Morris took her recycling down to the pop-up a couple of Sundays ago in her wagon, but she normally works on Sunday, the only day the service is available. (Submitted by Lisa Morris)

It has seen mixed results. This past weekend was one of the busiest yet with 30 people dropping off around 70 kilograms of recycling but many weekends have been quiet.

"It's hard to judge ... what is the number that we should be getting to call this a success," MacCallum said.

Mary LeSage lives in the south end and is also the part-time operations manager of the community group People United in the Lower South End, or PULSE. She has made a big effort to promote the pop-up and even goes herself.

But she acknowledges that it may not be convenient for everyone.

We need a more permanent solution that's there 24/7.- Mary LeSage

"Summer months, people are away," she said. "They don't want to be tied down to a certain time. And I get that I've, you know, I've made the point of being around for those for an hour or so just so I can get myself there."

PULSE runs a bagged-lunch program and saves up all its recycling to bring to the depot to promote it in the south end.

But LeSage acknowledges "we need a more permanent solution that's there 24/7."

The challenge, MacCallum said, is that recycling depots require a large amount of space and there aren't a lot of vacancies in the south end.

"We need a spot that is accessible for residents that our trucks can easily manoeuvre and get around," she said.

If residents can't make it to the pop-up on Sundays there are other binsin the city. The closest one is on Rothesay Avenue, which for Lisa Morris is about a half-hour walk from her south end home.

Residents who can't make it to the Sunday recycling pop-up can bring their recyclables to bins like these on Rothesay Avenue. (Sarah Kester/CBC)

For Morris, the perfect solution would be curbside pickup. She thinks her neighbours would recycle more and believes it's something that could bring the community together.

"I guess for a lot of walkers they just don't really see the purpose of recycling because it seems to be really hard," she said.

Curbside pickup falls under the jurisdiction of the City of Saint John.

In an emailed statement, the city said transportation and environment services staff are looking into the solid waste collection in Saint John and are hoping to present a report to city council by the end of the summer.