Coffee cup cleanup: Corner Brook offers incentive to pick up litter - Action News
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Coffee cup cleanup: Corner Brook offers incentive to pick up litter

Corner Brook is offering residents five cents for every disposable coffee cup they bring to the curling club on May 27, in an effort to clean up the city.

Bring in littered coffee cup May 27, get five cents or win $100

Tony Buckle, Corner Brook city councillor, is a spokesperson for the Cash for Cups campaign. (Brian McHugh/CBC)

Coffee cups have been piling up in Corner Brook, and the city wants to do something about it.

"We're hoping the citizens of Corner Brook and throughout the region will be picking up disposable beverage containers throughout the city ... because it's a total mess around," Coun. Tony Buckletold CBC Radio's Corner Brook Morning Show.

The Cash for Cups campaign gives five cents for every littered disposable coffee cup brought into the Corner Brook Civic Centre on May 27. (City of Corner Brook)

Buckle is a spokesperson forCash for Cups, a new campaign aimed atencouragingpeople to pick up litter that's being launched during the city's clean-up month.

We're just hoping people will clean up this beautiful city we live in.- Tony Buckle

At the end of May, people can exchange littered coffee cups at the Corner Brook Civic Centre in return for five cents just like recycling aluminum cans or plastic bottles.

While the city will recycle all cups it can, Buckle said not all disposable containers are recyclable.

"We have to get the people to pick up this litterbecause, if you look around, it's on every street in Corner Brook," he said.

Coffee cups litter the ground in Steady Brook, where snow is melting to reveal a season of litter. (CBC)

To up the ante, the city is scatteringfour "surprise cups" around the area, worth $100 each.

The drop-off will take place from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. on May 27.

Buckle is hoping future programs will expand beyondthe month of May.

"I think if we keep this program on the go in the years to come, we'll see a big difference around this city,because people will say, 'I can't throw out that cup, it's worth five cents,'" he said.

"We're just hoping people will clean up this beautiful city we live in."

With files from the Corner Brook Morning Show