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Calgary businesses, schools and hospitals may have to recycle more

It looks as if private businesses and large institutions in Calgary will be next ones asked to cut the amount of recyclables going into city landfills.

A council committee has approved a plan that will ultimately ban recyclables from city dumps.

Watch the video above for more on the story from CBC's Colleen Underwood

It's part of the city's goal of diverting 80 per cent of garbage from its landfills by the year 2020.

Spencer Kennedy, who works with private recycling firm Urban Impact, told councillors this morning he knows from his own trips to the dump that companies still throw away recyclables.

"It has surprised me in Calgary that one can go to the tipping face at a landfill and unload a truck full of cardboard boxes," he said.

The city is only halfway to its 2020 goal, so now it plans to target the sectors behind one-third of all garbage — industry, the retail sector, schools and hospitals.

Coun. Brian Pincott says tipping fees will be raised and — after a few years of education — paper, cardboard and compostables will ultimately be banned from city landfills.

"It is shocking how much is actually still going to our landfill, but I do understand that it does take time to educate people on how they can do it, especially for businesses," he said.

The plan will go for final approval at an upcoming city council meeting.