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Bill On Senate Calendar Would Prevent Funding Crisis In Recycling Program
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Legislation now on the Senate Calendar for action when it returns May 8-- Senate Bill 646 (Killion-R-Delaware)-- would prevent a funding crisis in the state’s Recycling Program by eliminating the expiration date for the Act 101 $2 per ton recycling fee on waste disposed in Pennsylvania.

DEP has already stopped accepting new applications for local recycling implementation grants until the fee issue is resolved by the General Assembly.  The fee was due to sunset on January 1, 2020.

The recycling grants are critical to supporting local and county curbside and drop-off recycling programs that provide 94 percent of the state’s population with access to recycling their household waste.

The $2/ton fee is projected to bring in about $38 million in FY 2016-17, however, the General Assembly used $9 million of that revenue to balance the state’s General Fund budget (page H69).

The Professional Recyclers of Pennsylvania, PA Resources Council, PA Environmental Council and many other groups are supporting reauthorization of the fee.

For more information on Act 101 and recycling in Pennsylvania, visit DEP’s Recycling In PA webpage.

NewsClips:

Pittsburgh Mills Mall Hard-To-Recycle Event Returns May 13

Pittsburgh To Spend $580K On Smart Garbage Can Technology

Proposed Fee Would Fund Blair Electronics/Household Hazardous Waste Collection

Cities Oppose Bill That Would Stop Them Curbing Use Of Plastic Bags

Sequoia Waste Solutions Is Crunching Numbers, Curbing Trash

CMU Chemist Finds Way To Break Down Meds That Pollute Water Supplies

Related Stories:

Sen. Killion To Introduce Bill To Eliminate Sunset Date On $2  Recycling Fee

Senate Bill Would Fill Funding Gap In DEP’s Underground Storage Tank Program

Growing Greener Coalition Holds Capitol Rally May 9 To Support Green Infrastructure Funding

EQB To Consider Safe Drinking Water Fee Increases At May 17 Meeting

EPA Still Concerned About DEP Drinking Water Program, Urges Temporary Funding To Hire Staff Sooner

EPA: DEP Lacks Resources To Enforce Minimum Federal Safe Drinking Water Regs

DEP Sends Plan To EPA, Clearing Safe Drinking Water Deficiencies Could Take Until 2020

Senate Budget Hearing: Historic Cuts To DEP Budget, Safe Drinking Water, Chesapeake Bay

House DEP Budget Hearing: Safe Drinking Water, Permitting, Pipelines, Chesapeake Bay

CBF Thanks Congress For Bipartisan Action To Protect 2017 Chesapeake Bay Funding

Proposed Trump Cuts To State Grants Will Cripple DEP, Cause Drastic Fee Increases

[Posted: May 4, 2017]


5/8/2017

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