The removal from a public sidewalk, way or any usual point of
residential rubbish pickup of any material specifically set apart
from ordinary household rubbish for the purpose of being recycled,
under the recycling program of the Town, by any persons other than
those properly authorized to pick up such material, is hereby expressly
prohibited.
[Added 5-16-2023 ATM by Art. 14]
A. Purpose and intent. The purpose of this bylaw is to promote the use
of reusable bags by regulating the use of single-use plastic checkout
bags in the Town. The manufacture and use of single-use checkout bags
has a significant detrimental impact on the environment, including,
but not limited to: contributing to pollution of land, waterways,
and oceans; contributing to the death of land and marine animals through
ingestion and entanglement; creating a burden to solid waste collection
and recycling facilities; clogging storm drainage systems; and requiring
the use of millions of barrels of crude oil. Plastic bags also affect
human health by adding pollutants to the air breathed during the process
of extracting oil from the ground, when they are disposed of by incineration,
and when they break down into microplastics (pieces less than 5 mm)
adding toxic elements to the air, groundwater and seawater. Plastic
never fully biodegrades; microplastics are ingested by fish, crustaceans,
bivalves and other ocean life, moving up the food chain to ultimately
disrupt human health. Plastic bags are rarely recycled and are not
biodegradable. The reduction of plastic bags demonstrates the Town's
concern for the Town, its citizens and the planet.
B. Definitions.
CHECKOUT BAG
A carryout bag provided by a store to a customer at the point
of sale. Bags used to bring loose produce or products to the point
of sale are not considered checkout bags.
FOOD ESTABLISHMENT
An operation with more than 3,000 square feet of finished
floor area that stores, prepares, packages, serves, vends or otherwise
provides food for human or animal consumption. However, the term "food
establishment" does not include bazaars or festivals operated by nonprofit
organizations or religious institutions as defined by MGL c. 12 or
public or private schools.
RECYCLABLE PAPER BAG
A paper bag that:
(1)
100% recyclable including, if present, the handles;
(2)
Contains at least 40% post-consumer recycled paper content;
and,
(3)
Displays the words "recyclable" and "made from 40% post-consumer
recycled content" (or other applicable amount) in a visible manner
on the outside of the bag.
REUSABLE CHECKOUT BAG
A bag that:
(1)
If it has handles, the handles are stitched and not heat fused;
and
(2)
Is made of either.
(a)
Natural fibers (such as cotton, hemp, linen or other woven or
non-woven fibers); or
(b)
Plastic that is durable, nontoxic, and generally considered
a food-grade material that is more than four mils thick and that is
not polyethylene (including but not limited to HDPE and LDPE), polyethylene
terephthalate (PETE), or polyvinyl chloride.
C. Regulation.
(1) If any food establishment as defined in Subsection
B provides a checkout bag to customers, the bag shall comply with the requirements of being either a recyclable paper bag or a reusable checkout bag.
D. Enforcement and penalties.
(1) This bylaw shall be enforced by the Health Department, or its designated agent, and may be enforced by any lawful means in law or in equity including, but not limited to, a noncriminal disposition as provided by MGL c. 40, § 21D and the Town of North Andover General Bylaw Chapter
1, Article
II, §
1-2A.
(2) Any food establishment that violates any provision of this section
shall be subject to the following penalties:
(a)
Upon the first violation, the Health Department or its designated
agent shall provide the violator with written notice of such violation.
The violator will then be entitled to 30 days after receipt of such
notice to cure the violation before imposition of the fine.
(b)
After the thirty-day period, if the violation has not been cured,
a fine of $100 per day will apply until the violation is cured.
(c)
Additional violations after a cure will result in a fine of
$100 per day without a thirty-day grace period.
E. Effective date.
(1) This bylaw shall take effect January 1, 2024, to allow time for food
establishments to use their existing inventory of noncompliant checkout
bags and to convert to alternative packaging materials.
(2) Each section of this bylaw shall be construed as separate to the
end that if any section, sentence, clause or phrase thereof shall
be invalid for any reason, the remainder of this bylaw shall continue
in force
F. This Inclusionary Housing Bylaw applies to any proposed residential
or mixed-use developments, including a conventional subdivision of
land under MGL c. 41, §§ 81K through 81GG, in any zoning
district containing more than seven rental or ownership housing units
on any parcel or contiguous parcel(s) comprising a proposed site.