Vancouver's 25-cent cup fees being re-examined | CTV News

2022-03-12 06:32:22 By : Mr. Andy Luo

Vancouver city council has voted to re-examine its controversial disposable cup and paper bag fees, which came into effect less than a month ago.

Coun. Rebecca Bligh says the new fees disproportionally affect low-income residents and don't give drive-thru or delivery-app customers any other option but to pay the fee.

"The problem here is people feel they're charged a fee when they really don't have any other option but to pay the fee," Bligh told CTV News Vancouver. "That really is not effective and it's not actually achieving the outcome that we had intended to with the bylaw."

The bylaw was applied on Jan. 1 and requires businesses to charge 25 cents for disposal cups and 15 cents for paper bags. Plastic bags were banned altogether in the city.

For some businesses, the new bylaws didn't actually result in any changes. For example, JJ Bean Coffee Roasters says it has been encouraging waste reduction for years and says because of that it's already in compliance with the City of Vancouver's new cup fee rules.

"What they told us all to do is to make sure that to-go pricing is higher than for-here pricing but we've always had that," said John Neate, CEO of JJ Bean Coffee Roasters.

JJ Bean has one price for drinking from one of the store's mugs in-house, adding 25 cents more if you get a to-go cup and 25 cents off the regular price if you bring your own reusable mug.

Meanwhile, Starbucks is charging the extra fee for to-go cups but says it has been offering 10 cents off the regular price if you bring your own mug. While that option was paused during the pandemic, the coffee-shop chain says it's allowing customers to bring their own mugs again.

Customers who bring their own mugs are supposed to place them in a receptacle offered by Starbucks. That is to ensure employees don't have to touch the consumer's cup. Once the beverage is made, the consumer retrieves the cup from the receptacle.

Vancouver councillors voted this week to have city staff take another look at the bylaw to see how it can be improved.

The deadline for staff to report back is March 15. In the meantime, the fees remain in place.

With files from CTV News Vancouver's Nafeesa Karim and Ross McLaughlin 

Russia's richest businessman has warned the Kremlin against confiscating assets of companies that have fled in the wake of the invasion of Ukraine, saying such a step would set the country back more than 100 years.

The World Health Organization advised Ukraine to destroy high-threat pathogens housed in the country's public health laboratories to prevent 'any potential spills' that would spread disease among the population, the agency told Reuters.

The Canadian military has completed a two-week training exercise with NATO troops stationed in Latvia as concerns rise that Russian troops could target the country next.

The fate of a U.S. astronaut remains uncertain after the head of Russia’s space agency threatened to abandon him on the International Space Station.

Russia and Ukraine are among the world’s top wheat exporters, but with one ravaged by war and the other shackled by sanctions, there are fears the conflict will have a large impact on global food supply.

National Defence Minister Anita Anand says there is an urgent need to attract more Canadian Armed Forces (CAF) personnel amid a 'clear and present' danger to the rules based international order.

Marking two years since the World Health organization declared COVID-19 a global pandemic on March 11, 2020, experts say there is no going back to what was once considered normal before the virus appeared.

Blogger and activist Raif Badawi's family and friends were all smiles, tears and emotion on Friday in Sherbrooke, Que. as they celebrated his release after a decade in a Saudi prison.

When CTVNews.ca asked Canadians how they were being impacted by rising gas prices, many said they are adjusting their budgets and cutting spending elsewhere, such as on groceries or travel plans, to offset the pain at the pumps.

B.C. Premier John Horgan says he's confident Victoria police are prepared for potential protests after an organiser of the so-called "Freedom Convoy" that occupied Ottawa said there were plans to come to British Columbia's capital.

No deaths related to COVID-19 were identified in the Vancouver Island region Friday, according to a statement from the Ministry of Health.

From a small apartment in an undisclosed neighbourhood of Lviv, Ukraine, Mark Preston-Horin recounts the moment he entered into the war-torn nation.

Premier Jason Kenney says Alberta is the best choice to supply energy to the United States and wants to revive the Keystone XL pipeline.

It's been two years to the day since the World Health Organization declared COVID-19 a pandemic -- and as the province looks ahead, many health and science experts believe the worst is behind us.

Calgary police are investigating after residents living in the community of Braeside reported hearing shots fired on Friday afternoon.

The province reported 11 new deaths on Friday, pushing the total number of deaths up to 4,003.

The city hopes to lessen the impact single-use items like plastic bags and food containers have on Edmonton landfills.

A 27-year-old man faces several charges after a stabbing at the Central LRT Station platform on Wednesday evening.

A Canadian company is attracting attention for a new policy that began this month where they will pay candidates who are offered a job interview.

Thousands of kilometres from home, Ukrainian students studying in Ontario are facing financial hardship, as they worry about family and friends back home.

Premier Doug Ford has slammed Ontario school boards who are asking for more time before dropping the mask mandate saying they 'aren't medical experts' and are expected to follow the provincial directive.

As of Saturday, it will no longer be necessary to show a vaccination passport in Quebec to enter places that were covered by this measure since Sept. 1.

Blogger and activist Raif Badawi's family and friends were all smiles, tears and emotion on Friday in Sherbrooke, Que. as they celebrated his release after a decade in a Saudi prison.

Montrealer Robert Romeo has had his life turned upside down after being diagnosed with COVID-19 one year ago. He’s one of many people suffering from long COVID symptoms.

A Winnipeg man has become one of a growing number of gas theft victims in the city, after discovering someone had drilled a hole in his truck's gas tank.

A First Nations man says he has filed a complaint of alleged misconduct and racism within the Winnipeg Police Service after he was handcuffed and placed in a police car in what he believes is a case of racial profiling.

On top of the illness and death brought on by COVID-19, experts note there’s been a significant impact on people’s mental health.

A woman has been charged with impaired driving in a 9-year-old girl's death.

Members of the association representing police officers in Prince Albert have signalled their dissatisfaction with the current direction of the police service,

A Saskatoon condo board is suing a developer for a list of alleged defects in the high-rise.

On Monday, the City of Regina will release its proposed Energy & Sustainability Framework, highlighting a plan for the city to become 100 per cent renewable and achieve net-zero carbon emissions by 2050.

The Saskatchewan government is considering optional digital identification for residents of the province, with the goal of making government programs more accessible.

The daughter of former Camp Marjorie’s namesake wants more drug and addition strategies in the province.

A close relative of the man who disguised himself as a Mountie and fatally shot 22 people in Nova Scotia says the killer was a lifelong scammer and opportunist raised in a deeply dysfunctional family, newly released documents say.

The sudden death of her 65-year-old husband of a heart attack in January has been traumatic for Deborah MacDonald.

A rapidly strengthening low-pressure system will cross the Maritimes late Saturday before moving north towards Labrador.

A power struggle at the Thames Valley District School Board (TVDSB) threatens to inflame the urban-rural divide in the region.

Tears were flowing as emotional and powerful victim impact statements were heard at the sentencing hearing of Tyler Besterd, 24, of London, Ont.

The Thames Valley District School Board (TVDSB) has announced masks will no longer be mandated for staff and students effective March 21.

Despite Ontario passing its bill to scrap the bi-annual time change two years ago, Ontarians will yet again be setting their clocks forward this weekend.

A 24-year-old Toronto man was arrested at his home Tuesday morning for a triple shooting in the Timmins area last fall that left one man dead and two others injured, police say.

Sudbury police are investigating after a woman reported being pulled over by a man posing as a cop driving a black Dodge Charger with emergency lights.

The Ontario government told school boards they have to end mask mandates on March 21, but the Waterloo Region District School Board has not made a final decision on its plan.

A conflict between a rescheduled concert and a final exam had a Brock University student reaching out for some high profile help.

St. Patrick's Day decorations have started popping up across Waterloo Region, and preparations are underway for what's expected to be a large celebration.

© 2022 All rights reserved. Use of this Website assumes acceptance of Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy