Prevent Fires: Keep Household Hazardous Waste Out of the Landfill - Capital Regional District - Environmental Services

Prevent Fires: Keep Household Hazardous Waste Out of the Landfill

If you are doing some clean-up around your home and yard, ensure that you are doing it safely and disposing of household hazardous waste properly. Old chemicals, cleaners or other hazardous products don’t belong in the garbage, where they can create serious problems and potentially spark landfill fires. While most of these fires are quickly contained by staff, there’s always potential for a fire to grow to an unmanageable level, especially in the dry summer and early fall, before winter rains arrive.

In the capital region, the majority of landfill fires are caused by these items:

Household batteries – These contain heavy metals like lead, cadmium, zinc, manganese and lithium that can be re-used if they’re recycled properly. Drop your batteries off for free at one of more than 50 locations across the region that collect these items for recycling – visit Call2Recycle.ca to find the location nearest you.

Household electronics – Electronics that contain most of these batteries are also easily recyclable – both at the Hartland Landfill recycling depot and at various other community sites.

Hot tub and pool chemicals – The only safe place for pool chemicals is in your pool or hot tub. Unused or expired chemicals can be dropped off at Hartland Landfill for free, keeping them out of the landfill and away from potential fire sources. 

If you have an item that you are unsure of, simply bring it to the Hartland public drop-off where staff have experience safely identifying and dealing with potentially hazardous items.

To learn where you can drop off these items and many others, visit www.myrecyclopedia.ca. To learn more about household hazardous waste visit crd.bc.ca/hhw.

Convert Your Yard This Summer - Capital Regional District - Environmental Services

Be Water Wise & Convert Your Yard This Summer

In the dry summer months, water use in the region nearly doubles due to outdoor watering of lawns and gardens. As the most common residential landscape, lawns are the thirsty culprit, accounting for the most excess water use. Unfortunately, about 50% of outdoor water is wasted due to evaporation, improper irrigation design and over watering. 

Water wise lawn alternatives like native plant and vegetable gardens can save you time and money, on top of your water savings. Forget mowing and costly lawn treatments. Native plants are adapted to our local climate and wildlife, requiring little to no watering once established and no herbicides or pesticides. They can also create an oasis for local birds, pollinators and beneficial insects. 

Vegetable gardens with efficient irrigation use up to 66% less water compared to traditional lawns and provide fresh and delicious food on your doorstep. They also save the energy that’s required to transport produce to the grocery store, and then to your home.

Convert areas of your lawn into garden with this quick and easy no dig method:

  1. Add a layer of light excluding mulch material such as brown cardboard or three layers of newspaper on to your desired piece of yard. Make sure the cardboard or newspaper overlaps by several centimeters as weeds can sneak through any gap.

  2. Water the cardboard/newspaper layer to help kill the grass and weeds. 

  3. Add a 10 cm layer of lightly patted down compost. Leave an edge of cardboard surrounding your new garden bed to prevent grass and weeds from growing back in. 

Now you’re ready to plant! Vegetables and herbs like kale, chard and parsley can be planted in the summer for fall and winter harvest. Native plant seeds can be planted in the fall for a spring bloom. Contact your community association for FREE vegetable or native plant seeds from the Capital Regional District.

Extend water wise practices to your lawn and go golden. Lawns naturally go dormant in the summer and will bounce back to green with the fall rains. To stay green, lawns only need an inch (2.5 cm) of water per week, even in the driest conditions. 

The Sooke Lake Reservoir, our primary water source in the capital region, supplies over 418,000 people with clean and protected drinking water. The reservoir also provides protection against wildfire events and droughts and supports a vital habitat for many endangered species. Be water wise and convert your yard this summer. 

Thank you for your continued water conservation efforts in the capital region.

SAVE THE OWLS ! - Ban Rat Poison

Hello Owl Lovers,

Great news!   Saanich Councillors Ned Taylor and Colin Plant submitted a notice of Motion to Saanich council to ban anticoagulant rodenticides (rat poison) in all Saanich owned properties. They want Council to urge the Province to consider BC-wide prohibition of anticoagulant rodenticides due to the threat it poses to local wildlife and pets. See links to our media campaign below for your reference regarding the recent owl deaths.

Saanich Council will vote on this motion on July 13th, and they need letters of support from you and your community.

 

The motion reads as follows:

1. That Council provide direction to staff to implement a ban of anticoagulant rodenticides in the District of Saanich.

2. That Council request that the Mayor write, on behalf of council, to the Premier of British Columbia, appropriate ministers, copying MLAs in the Capital Region, requesting that the Province of British Columbia ban anticoagulant rodenticides. 

3. That Council directs staff to communicate to residents and businesses in the District of Saanich council’s direction on this matter, the harmful impacts of anticoagulant rodenticides, and better alternatives that are available.

4. That Council share this report with all other local governments in the Province of British Columbia. 

 You may copy and paste this letter below or write your own to the Mayor and Council of Saanich (emails below). Please include stories of how the owl deaths have impacted you and what you have seen. Also, please give a big thank you to Mayor Haynes for his support of this initiative. 

 And share this campaign far and wide!!!

Follow Owl Watch BC Facebook Page for updates  https://www.facebook.com/owlwatchbc/

If comfortable doing so, can you bcc us on your letter you submit please.

 Thank you,

Deanna Pfeifer and Rob Vanzella

Members of Owl Watch BC

 Template Letter

Dear Mayor Fred Haynes and Council,

I am writing in support of  Councilor Ned Taylor’s and Councillor Colin Plant’s Agenda item on July 13th regarding banning AntiCoagulant Rodenticides.

 Owls are perishing across the Province and the Nation due to secondary poisoning from highly toxic Second Generation Anticoagulants (SGAR's).  Rat poison moves through the food chain after  a rodent ingests it.

 164 owls in western Canada were analyzed in a lab, where scientists found that 70% had residues of at least one rodenticide in their livers. Researchers found that at least half of those owls had multiple rodenticides in their system.(See google drive link below for owl study from 2009).

 The necropsy from the Great Horned Owl found in Saanich had 3 different types of Commercial grade anticoagulant rodenticides in its system and 2 of them are so potent they are not to be used outdoors. (See necropsy in google drive link).

 Other wildlife and domestic animals are also at risk of secondary poisoning and many of them go undetected and  under reported as testing is problematic. As well as the owls in Kings Community Nature Space, we have had anecdotal reports of several otherwise healthy dogs who live in the area or visit the area daily become very ill with vomiting and diarrhea. Dead or poisoned rats are easy prey for curious pets. BCSPCA and College of Vets are aware of the owl necropsy reports.

 We know there are safer alternatives such as Contrapest and automatic traps (goodnature.ca).The District of North Vancouver did an extensive investigative report on the subject of secondary poisoning of wildlife due to rodenticides and voted unanimously this month to ban rodenticides in municipal owned facilities. (See attached report in google drive link below)

 The report highlights how using other methods to control rats instead of rodenticides is cheaper in the long run. Owls eat 1000 rats a year. They help keep the rodent population in balance naturally and are FREE of charge.

 I fully support Councillors Ned Taylor and Colin Plant’s motion and applaud them for taking action on this serious issue in our community.

Thank you,