In the News: Imagine Surrey will have year-round free waste drop-off and new ‘clean streets force’

Surrey mayoral candidate Mike Starchuk and Imagine Surrey on Wednesday released a plan to clean up Surrey. The centrepiece: year-round free waste drop-off for every Surrey household — replacing the City’s current limited-time windows with permanent access, so families have an easy, legal way to get rid of bulky waste, construction scrap, electronics, and yard debris without paying twice for a service they already fund through their taxes.

Paired with that, Imagine Surrey will stand up a new Clean Streets Rapid Response Force of dedicated street cleaners and city-owned street sweepers, with a 48-hour response standard for graffiti, illegal dumping, debris, and abandoned vehicles — and full cost recovery from the dumpers who break the rules.

“If we want clean streets, we have to make it easier to do the right thing and harder to do wrong,” said Starchuk, a 32-year veteran of the Surrey Fire Service. “Life in Surrey is getting expensive, and families shouldn’t have to navigate complicated rules or pay private operators to get rid of a load of yard waste or a bag of drywall. We are going to give residents a service they can count on — year-round — and we are going to make the people who dump junk in our alleys pay the full cost of cleaning it up.”

The Imagine Surrey ‘Clean Streets’ Plan will:

  • Make free waste drop-off year-round. Surrey’s current model squeezes residents into a single short window. Imagine Surrey will make drop-off available every month of the year — multiplying Surrey’s disposal capacity and removing any excuse for illegal dumping.
  • Stand up a Clean Streets Rapid Response Force with dedicated street cleaners and city-owned street sweepers — a permanent rapid-response capability the City has never had.
  • Set a 48-hour response standard for graffiti, illegal dumping, debris, and abandoned vehicles, with priority at transit hubs, schools, parks, and business districts. Reporting available by phone and online.
  • Make illegal dumpers pay the full cost — not taxpayers. When the City can identify who is responsible — the same evidence standard already required to issue a fine — Imagine Surrey will recover the full cost of cleanup (crew time, vehicles, equipment, hauling) on top of the fine, charging whichever is greater. Combined with targeted enforcement against repeat offenders and Surrey’s growing camera network, this turns illegal dumping from a free externality into an expensive mistake.

“In my fire service career, we developed cost-recovery models for fires at vacant properties,” Starchuk said. “Every staff hour, every vehicle on scene, charged back to whoever was responsible. We are going to apply that same logic to illegal dumping. If you push a load of drywall into an alley and you get caught on camera, you are not paying a small fine — you are paying for the crew, the truck, and the hauling. That changes the math fast.”

“Champion cities are clean cities,” Starchuk said. “We are going to make it easier for families to do the right thing, while we sweat the small stuff and deliver the big things. That is what a City of Champions looks like. That is change that works for you. Let’s end the mess on October 17.”

SOURCE: INDO CANADIAN VOICE ONLINE

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