Mobile recycling centers would become legal in San Francisco under legislation introduced by state Sen. Scott Wiener on Thursday.
Senate Bill 458 would allow mobile recycling centers to operate under a pilot program that's meant to relieve small businesses from having to accept recycling for redemption. Wiener said such businesses were especially burdened by having to redeem recycling efforts from customers after the closure of various San Francisco recycling centers in recent years.
"With our ambitious zero waste goals, San Francisco has long been a national leader in recycling and waste reduction efforts," Wiener said in a statement. “Yet, our dense urban environment has evolved over the decades since the Bottle Bill was passed, and we need to be more flexible in finding solutions to maximize our recycling efforts.
He added, "Mobile recycling will allow us to continue to promote smart and effective recycling policies, while relieving a burden on our business owners, particularly our small mom-and-pop corner stores that don't have the capacity or resources to meet the one-size-fits-all obligations of state law."
The legislation, he noted, is meant to alleviate that burden from small businesses.
Under what's known as the "Bottle Bill," the 1986 California Beverage Container Recycling and Litter Reduction Act, any beverage dealer, including supermarkets and corner stores, that aren't within a half-mile of a recycling center must redeem empty bottles and cans in-store or pay an in-lieu fee of $100-per-day.
There are currently seven recycling centers in San Francisco, compared to 35 in 1990.
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