Jump to content

Massachusetts Bottle Bill

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Whywhenwhohow (talk | contribs) at 06:45, 29 November 2016 (Tagging 5 dead links using Checklinks). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Massachusetts Bottle Bill
Massachusetts
  • Beverage Container Recovery Law
Passed1982
Commenced1983
Bill citationMass. Bills H.2943/S.1588
Status: In force

The Massachusetts Bottle Bill (Mass. Bills H.2943/S.1588) is a container-deposit legislation dealing with recycling in the United States that originally passed in the U.S. state of Massachusetts in 1982 as the Beverage Container Recovery Law. Implemented in 1983, the law requires containers of carbonated beverages to be returnable with a minimum return value of $0.05. The bottle bill does not cover containers of non-carbonated beverages like water, tea, or sports drinks. The law also establishes the handling fee paid by distributors to redemption centers, $0.0325 per unit as of July 5, 2013, and to retailers $0.0225 per unit. As the number of non-deposit beverage containers (water, tea, sports beverages, etc.) has increased to represent over one-third of beverage containers sold, the Bottle Bill has no influence on these non-deposit containers, with the result that these containers are three times more likely to be found as litter in Massachusetts communities. Additional studies[citation needed] indicate that beverage containers covered by the state's container deposit system are redeemed at approximately 70% and another 9% are recycled via curbside programs. Conversely, containers that are not covered, such as bottled water, juices, and sports drinks, are recycled at approximately 25%[citation needed]

Background

Since the original Bottle Deposit Law was enacted, there has been tremendous growth in the consumption of beverages exempted. Since 2000, consumption of non-carbonated beverages has demonstrated near double-digit growth and now represents over 30% of beverages sold in Massachusetts.[1] However, as these beverage containers do not require a deposit, only 23% are recycled, compared with a recycling rate of 80% for containers requiring a deposit in the 2010 fiscal year.

While the proposed expansion of the bottle bill includes provisions for both deposits paid by consumers as well as handling fees paid by industry, a portion of deposits paid are expected to remain unredeemed. These forfeited deposits are paid into the Commonwealth's General Fund. Revenue from unclaimed deposits has been estimated to be around $34 million per year, prompting Governor Patrick to propose dedicating $6.5 million of this new revenue to the state's Department of Environmental Protection recycling and solid waste program.[2] Under the proposed ballot initiative, the forfeited deposits would be directed to environmental programs.

Benefits

Beverage containers make up around 15% of the waste stream in Massachusetts.[3] According to the Massachusetts Executive Office of Energy and Environmental Affairs, updating the deposit law to expand the scope of coverage to include water, coffee-based drinks, juices and sports drinks is expected to increase the number of bottles recycled annually from 600 million (40%) to 1.2 billion (80%).[4]

A Massachusetts Department of Environmental Protection (MassDEP) analysis of the impacts of an expanded Bottle Deposit Law for municipalities found that such an expansion would save municipalities between $4.2 and $6.9 million annually in litter abatement and avoided collection, disposal and recycling costs.[1]

A 2011 study by Jeffrey Morris, Ph.D., and Clarissa Morawski for the Container Recycling Institute found that expansion of the Bottle Deposit Law would result in net gains in domestic jobs.[5]

Criticism

In order to address cost concerns by opponents to a proposed amendment, MassDEP conducted a survey in July 2011, to assess whether amendments to the existing Bottle Deposit Law (BDL) might lead to negative impacts on consumer prices, choice and retailer costs. The results of this survey suggest that the BDL results in no difference in beverage prices for consumers; no difference in consumer choice; and that sufficient infrastructure and capacity exists to handle the anticipated increase in the volume of beverage containers processed should the law be expanded.[6]

Proposed changes

Bills proposing updates for the state's bottle bill have been underway since 2001, but without success. In 2011, an update passed the Massachusetts Senate as a provision to the so-called "Jobs Bill." In 2013, an update passed the Massachusetts Senate as part of the state budget. Neither time was the bottle bill update taken up, or passed by the Massachusetts House of Representatives.

A referendum on the ballot in November 2014, concerned whether to expand the bill to cover containers for some non-carbonated beverages. This would address growing concern over the nearly 1.4 billion containers not covered by existing legislation that are found in litter and landfill waste.[4] The goal of the initiative petition that placed the measure on the ballot was to broaden the scope of beverage types requiring a deposit in order to be more responsive to consumer preferences as well as establishing a mechanism for stabilizing the recycling industry by tying the handling fees paid to redemption centers to the Consumer Price Index.[7] Opponents argued that the change would increase costs and red tape for the beverage industry.[8]

The measure was supported by environmental organizations, notably the Sierra Club's Massachusetts Chapter and the Massachusetts Public Interest Research Group, along with 209 of the state's 351 municipalities.[8] It was opposed by the American Beverage Association and several grocery store chains, which raised nearly $8 million to campaign against it.[9] The proposed expansion was defeated, with more than 70 percent of the voters voting against it.[10]

References

  1. ^ a b "Municipal Benefits of an Expanded Bottle Bill". Massachusetts Executive Office of Energy and Environmental Affairs.[dead link]
  2. ^ "Expanding the Bottle Bill". Massachusetts Executive Office of Energy and Environmental Affairs.[dead link]
  3. ^ "An analysis of the Massachusetts Waste Characterization Studies as reported by the Massachusetts Department of Environmental Protection" (PDF). Massachusetts Sierra Club.
  4. ^ a b "Update the Bottle Bill". Massachusetts Coalition to Update the Bottle Bill.
  5. ^ Jeffrey Morris, Ph.D. and Clarissa Morawski. "Returning to Work" (PDF). Container Recycling Institute.
  6. ^ "Comparison of Beverage Pricing, Consumer Choice and Redemption System Performance in Massachusetts and Neighboring States" (PDF). Massachusetts Executive Office of Energy and Environmental Affairs.
  7. ^ "Initiative Petition Information Sheet" (PDF). Commonwealth of Massachusetts Office of the Attorney General.
  8. ^ a b Faulkner, Tim (October 20, 2014). "Big Money, False Claims Cloud Bottle Bill Question". ecoRI News. Retrieved 2014-11-30.[dead link]
  9. ^ Schoenberg, Shira (October 14, 2014). "Massachusetts bottle bill fight seen through dueling TV ads". MassLive.com. Retrieved 2014-11-30.[dead link]
  10. ^ Dorfan, Jessica; Tajuddin, Inaara (November 5, 2014), "Mass. activists groups respond to results of ballot questions", The Daily Free Press, retrieved 2014-11-30

"Comparison of beverage pricing, consumer choice and redemption system performance in Massachusetts and neighboring states Massachusetts." Dept. of Environmental Protection. 2011.[1]