Sample Topic of Container Deposit Legislation

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Presentation transcript:

Sample Topic of Container Deposit Legislation Operation Graduation Sample Topic of Container Deposit Legislation

Container deposit legislation Government Action identified: laws passed by city, state, provincial, or national governments that require that a deposit on carbonated, water or alcoholic beverage containers be collected when the beverage is sold.

Container deposit legislation Identification of the significant number of people affected. consumers retailers/stores businesses that make the bottles/cans businesses that recycle the bottles/cans

Newman figures out a way to benefit financially from recycling used pop bottles and cans, in episode 7-21, 'The Bottle Deposit, Part 1', of Seinfeld.

Container deposit legislation Identification of significant people and/or groups Anti- Law U.S. beverage container industry the corporate owners of grocery stores, and convenience stores consumers

Container deposit legislation Identification of significant people and/or groups For the law Environmentalists Doctors consumers

Container deposit legislation Background Political Development popularly called bottle bills after the Oregon Bottle Bill, the first container deposit legislation passed in the U.S. 39 States currently do not have any laws

Container deposit legislation Background According to 2004 U.S. Census Bureau statistics, approximately 30% of the U.S. population currently reside in states or territories with existing container deposit laws: California (5 cents; 10 cents for bottles 24 fl oz or greater), implemented in 1987 and increased 25% in 2007 Connecticut (5 cents), 1980 Delaware (5 cents), 1982 Hawaii (5 cents), 2005 Iowa (5 cents), 1979 (also applies to wine bottles) Maine (5 cents, 15 cents for some wine bottles), 1978 Massachusetts (5 cents), 1983 Michigan (10 cents), 1978 (beer bottles were 5 cents until the 1980s) New York (5 cents), 1982 Oregon (5 cents), 1972 Vermont (5 cents), 1973

Container deposit legislation Economic to specifically reduce beverage container litter along highways, in lakes and rivers, and on other public or private properties (where beverage container litter occurs, a nominal deposit provides an economic incentive to clean it up this is in fact a significant source of income to some homeless individuals and non-profit civic organizations)

Container deposit legislation Economic Deposits that are not redeemed are oftentimes used by the governmental entity involved to fund environmental programs sometimes they are used to cover the costs of processing returned containers.

Container deposit legislation Social to encourage recycling and complement existing curbside recycling programs to extend the usable lifetime of taxpayer- supported community or regional landfills to protect children by effectively reducing the incidence of glass lacerations in childhood.

Container deposit legislation Social Studies show that beverage container legislation has reduced total roadside litter by between 30% and 64% in the states with bottle bills The US beverage container recycling rate was 39.4% in 2001. States with bottle bills recycle approximately 78% while states lacking bottle bill legislation only recycle approximately 23%

Container deposit legislation Kramer and Newman: Nine thousand, nine hundred and ninety-nine bottle and cans in the trunk, nine thousand, nine hundred and ninety- nine bottles and cans. At ten cents a bottle and ten cents a can, we're pulling in five hundred dollars a man. Nine thousand, nine hundred and ninety-eight bottle and cans in the trunk, nine thousand, nine hundred and ninety-eight bottles and cans. We fill up with gas, we count up our cash!!... Seinfeld Episode Number: 132    Season Num: 7    First Aired: Thursday May 2, 1996    Prod Code: 722

Kramer and Newman swing into action in recycling used pop bottles and cans

Seinfeld trivia Michigan Law prohibits the return of out of state bottle returns. In addition any bottle returns made cannot be in excess of $25. According to Newman and Kramer they had a total of $1000 in bottle returns, which came to $500 for each of them. If completed it would have taken 40 individual trips to stores to make the returns in order to complete their goal

Container deposit legislation