Suozzi
Joins Environmental and Civic Groups to Urge State to Pass ‘Bigger
Better Bottle Bill’
Nassau
County Executive Tom Suozzi and the New York League of
Conservation Voters joined other environmental and civic
groups to call on the State Legislature
to pass the "Bigger Better Bottle Bill," an update to the state's 26-year-old
bottle bill.
The new legislation would add a five-cent deposit on
non-carbonated beverage bottles such as water, iced
tea and sports drinks - which barely existed in 1982
when the state passed the original bill. (The 1982 bill included a five-cent
deposit on carbonated-beverage containers.) The legislation also requires beverage
companies to turn
over unclaimed nickel deposits to the state, which would generate more than
$100 million - and perhaps up to $200 million - a year in new funding for the
New
York State Environmental Protection Fund (EPF).
Today, non-carbonated drinks make up 27% of the beverage
market, and so non-carbonated beverage bottles make
up an increasingly large percentage of the waste
stream.
Only 10% of these non-biodegradable plastic bottles are recycled, and more
than 30 million every day end up in our streets, landfills and waterways.
In fact,
non-deposit, non-carbonated bottles comprise 60% of litter along shorelines.
Recycling all of the water bottles used in New York State would save more
than 3.3 million barrels of oil and prevent 280,000
tons of greenhouse gas emissions
each year.
"Our 26-year old bottle bill has been a phenomenal success at keeping billions
of containers out of our landfills and off our streets in the form of roadside
litter," said Governor David A. Paterson. "However, the bottle bill
can be made even better if we update it to include categories of containers -
like bottled waters, sports drinks and fruit juices - that barely existed in
the marketplace when the law was enacted in 1982. We are all indebted to Tom
Suozzi for continuing to be a strong advocate for this important, common-sense
measure."
The Environmental Protection Fund supports a wide range
of environmental programs, including open space protection,
smart-growth initiatives, funding
for recycling
and landfill closure and farmland preservation.