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CITY OF ST PAUL <br />PART II - LEGISLATIVE CODE <br />Title XXIII -PUBLIC HEALTH, SAFETY AND WELFARE <br />Chapter 236. Environmental Preservation: Plastic Packaging <br />Chapter 236. Environmental Preservation: Plastic Packaging' <br />Sec. 236.01. Legislative purpose. <br />(a) The council finds that discarded packaging from foods and beverages constitutes a significant and growing <br />portion of the waste in Saint Paul's waste stream. Regulation of food and beverage packaging, therefore, is a <br />necessary part of any effort to encourage a recyclable and compostable waste stream, thereby reducing the <br />disposal of solid waste and the economic and environmental costs of waste management for the citizens of <br />Saint Paul and others working or doing business in Saint Paul. <br />(b) The council further finds that plastic packaging is rapidly replacing other packaging material and that most <br />plastic packaging used for foods and beverages is non-compostable, nonreturnable and nonrecyclable. <br />(c) The council also finds that the two (2) main processes used to dispose of discarded non-com postable, <br />nonreturnable and nonrecyclable plastic foods and beverage packaging are land filling and incineration, both <br />of which should be minimized for environmental reasons. <br />(d) Chemicals hazardous to human health and to the safety of the environment are present in the composition <br />of plastic packaging and have been found to escape into the air when this packaging is burned in incinerators <br />and contribute to environmental problems associated with ash residue resulting from the incineration <br />process. <br />(e) The council, therefore, finds that the minimization of non-com postable, nonreturnable and nonrecyclable <br />food and beverage packaging originating at retail food establishments within the City of Saint Paul is <br />necessary and desirable in order to reduce the city's waste stream, so as to reduce the volume of landfilled <br />waste, to minimize toxic by-products of incineration, to make the waste stream less damaging to the <br />environment, and to make our city and neighboring communities more environmentally sound places to live. <br />(f) The council finds that the plastic packaging used for foods and beverages contributes significantly to litter <br />and the disposal of litter, is more difficult to collect, and lasts indefinitely until picked up or cleaned up. <br />(g) The council has also been made aware of the facts recited in the addendum to the ordinance from which this <br />chapter was derived, which facts have been weighed and considered as part of the record supporting its <br />passage. <br />(Ord 17-29, § 1, 3-6-19, eff. 1-1-22) <br />Sec. 236.02. Definitions. <br />As used in this chapter, the following terms and phrases shall have the meanings as defined in this section: <br />'Editor's note(s)—Ord 17-29, §§ 1-10, adopted March 6, 2019 and effective January 1, 2022, in effect, repealed <br />ch. 236 §§ 236.01-236-10 and enacted a new ch. 236 as set out herein. Former ch. 236 pertained to similar <br />subject matter and derived from Ord. No. 17650, § 1, adopted April 27, 1989; Ord 17719, §§ 1, 3, 4, 7, <br />adopted April 12, 1990; and C.F. No. 07-149, § 59, adopted March 28, 2007. <br />St. Paul, Minnesota, Code of Ordinances <br />(Supp. No. 121, Update 2) <br />Created: 2022-08-01 14:33:23 [EST] <br />Page 1 of 4 <br />