Saskatoon city council cancels plan to charge garbage collection user fees - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 05:26 PM | Calgary | -11.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Saskatoon

Saskatoon city council cancels plan to charge garbage collection user fees

Councillors narrowly voted 6-5 Monday night to reverse a previous decision to charge monthly for garbage collection based on three different bin sizes.

Councillors voted 6-5 in favour of rethinking a decision made only last month

Councillors narrowly voted 6-5 Monday night to reverse a previous decision to charge monthly for garbage collection based on three different bin sizes. (Guy Quenneville/CBC)

It's back to the drawing board for Saskatoon city hall workers.

In a close vote, city councillors voted 6-5 to reverse a recent decisionto have garbage collectionpaid for via a monthly utility. The utility would have been charged to people living in single-family homes, based on the size of one of three variably sized garbage carts.

Coun.Darren Hill called for the rescinding, with councillorsBev Dubois, Ann Iwanchuk, Troy Davies, Randy DonauerandZach Jeffries supporting the idea of a rethink.

"What a shame," said a member of the Saskatchewan Environmental Advisory Council as he rose up to leave.

All other councillors voted against Hill's motion.

"It's time to move on. I haven't heard something new today," said Mayor Charlie Clark.

Hill recently signalled he wanted to revisit the Nov. 19 vote on the Pay As You Throw funding model after having a "sober second thought" about it.

Among the reasons he cited Monday night was a concern that the monthly fees would not reflect how much garbage people actually have in their bins an argument made several times before in prior debates.

Monday's vote doesn't take the notion of charging for garbage as a utility off the table. It just means it would have to be considered among other options, a city staffer said.

Hill, despite his victory, wasn't even clear himself what funding option he would prefer as an alternative.

Organics collection will still be funded via property tax, despite an effort by Donaueron Monday night to reverse that recent decision, too.