Nebraska Residents Fought for New Recycling Plan at Three-hour Public Hearing
In the three-hour public hearing, residents and business owners debated the pros and cons of the proposed recycling plan.
On Monday night, residents of Lincoln, Neb., teamed up to back a proposed recycling plan that would ban corrugated cardboard from the city landfill beginning in April 2017, newspapers in 2018 and all other paper products in 2019. In the three-hour public hearing, residents and business owners debated the pros and cons of the proposed recycling plan.
Lincoln Journal Star has more details on the proposed recycling plan:
A recycling plan to eventually ban all paper products from the city landfill got passionate support from dozens of Lincolnites who believe recycling is an important moral imperative that will promote a more liveable planet, during a three-hour public hearing Monday night.
But the plan, which will require trash haulers to offer recycling service, got equally passionate opposition from business owners who said it will raise housing costs for poor people and create a nightmare for landlords.
And the misdemeanor criminal penalties in the city ordinance created contentious confusion during the evening, with landlords fearing they could be arrested and fined $500 if their tenants don’t recycle appropriately and city officials suggesting no one has ever faced criminal penalties for other landfill ban violations and would not in the future.
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