First charge laid under Cape Breton illegal dumping bylaw - Action News
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Nova Scotia

First charge laid under Cape Breton illegal dumping bylaw

A resident of the Cape Breton Regional Municipality has been charged with two offences under a new illegal dumping bylaw that came into force in February.

CBRM resident faces up to $1,400 in fines if found guilty

Piles of trash are seen in the woods near the New Waterford water supply in this 2017 file photo. A CBRM resident is facing two charges under the municipality's new illegal dumping bylaw. (Gary Mansfield/CBC)

A Cape Breton Regional Municipality official saysa man who refused to reveal whoused his vehicle to dump garbageis the first to be charged under municipality's new illegal dumping bylaw.

The bylaw, which came into effect in February, imposes fines of $697.50 on people who are caught dumping garbage where they shouldn't.

Francis Campbell, the CBRM's manager of solid waste, said the man was charged after someone saw a vehicle going off-road near Sydney with a load of trash.

Officers tracked down the owner of the vehicleby the licence plate number.

"The owner of the vehicle said that someone else had his vehicleand was responsible for it," said Campbell. "And so, under our bylaw, there's a duty for him to name the person responsible. He didn't do that.

"So he was charged under that section of the bylaw, as well as doing the illegal dumping himself."

Campbell said the case is still before the courts.

CBRM solid waste manager Francis Campbell says if the first person charged under the new bylaw is found guilty on both charges he could be fined close to $1,400. (George Mortimer/CBC)

The bylaw is so new, it is not yet fully registered with the province.

Once that happens, Campbell said, the municipality will be able to issue summary offence tickets, much like parking tickets. At that point, people will only go to courtif they decide to contest the charges.

But until then, he said the illegal dumping charges must proceed through the court system.

If found guilty on both charges, the man, a resident of the municipality, could be fined close to $1,400, Campbell said.

Illegal dumping has long been a problem in the CBRM.

The Cape Breton Regional Police Service has assigned one officerto investigate the matter on a full-time basis.

A pile of illegally dumped trash sits in the woods near Port Morien in this 2016 file photo. (Submitted by Jeff McNeil)

Between Oct.1, 2017, and March 31, 2018, the CBRM'swaste management hotline received 86 complaints about illegal dumpinginvolving 69 different sites.

But until the new bylaw came into effect, Campbell said police had fewer tools to crack down on people dumping trash, relying instead on provincial regulations such as the Crown Lands Act.

He hopes the hefty fines will make people think twice.

"People will know that there's a consequence for these actions," Campbell said.