Illegal dumping fines can be costly, Halifax warns - Action News
Home WebMail Sunday, November 24, 2024, 04:30 AM | Calgary | -12.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Nova Scotia

Illegal dumping fines can be costly, Halifax warns

The Halifax Regional Municipality is warning residents they can be fined thousands of dollars for dumping garbage illegally after a pile of household waste was found on a popular walking trail.

Speakers, weed whacker, car seats found at Frog Pond Trail

Speakers, a weed whacker, pans and car seats were among the items found along the Frog Pond Trail off Purcells Cove Road. (CBC)

The Halifax Regional Municipality is warning residents they can be fined thousands of dollars for dumping garbage illegally after a pile of household waste was found on a popular walking trail.

Speakers, a weed whacker, pans and car seats were among the items found Tuesday morning along the Frog Pond Trail off Purcells Cove Road.

If you see illegal dumping:

In progress, call police at (902) 490-5020.

On HRM properties, call 1-800-835-6428.

On private properties, call 1-800-835-6428 to file a report. The city is not responsible for removing illegally dumped material from private properties.

"There are fairly substantial fines for these sorts of things so if it does go to court and it's proven that someone has illegally dumped somewhere, if it's a business it's up to a $100,000 fine," said Jennifer Stairs, a spokeswoman with the Halifax Regional Municipality.

"For individuals it can be up to as much as $10,000 under the Environment Act."

It took city workers three hours and two truckloads to clean up the household garbage at Frog Pond on Tuesday.

Workers have to clean up many sites after each weekend Stairs said the municipality got 199 reports of illegal dumping last year.

"So far this year we've had 42 calls. That wouldn't include any calls that went to Halifax Regional Police either, that would just be to our own enforcement officers," she said.

It's unclear how many cases of illegal dumping have been prosecuted. The Halifax Regional Municipality and the provincial Environment Department said the cases are difficult to prove and rarely go to court.

The Halifax Regional Municipality is holding a mobile drop-off this Saturday for household trash that isn't accepted in curbside collection, including paint, batteries and gas canisters.

The depot will be at the Metro X Park and Ride at 21 Inspiration Dr. in Porters Lake between 9 a.m. and 4 p.m.

Materials accepted at the household waste drop-off:

Batteries, leftover liquid paint, leftover corrosive cleaners, pesticides/herbicides, gasoline, fuel oil and used motor oil, solvents, thinners, pharmaceuticals and drugs, aerosol cans containing hazardous substances, barbecue propane tanksand small propane cylinders (for example, those used for camp stoves and propane torches).