Politics & Government

Legislature Hashing Out Update to Bottle Bill

Included as an amendment to a bigger jobs bill, the update would expand the bottle redemption law to include plastic bottles used for water and juice.

House and Senate leaders started debating Wednesday whether to include an expanded bottle deposit amendment in a bill designed to spur job creation. 

The bill was passed in the Senate Thursday and is now being hashed out in a conference committee comprised of member of both chambers. Gov. Deval Patrick has said that he supports it.

But the House has fought passage of an expanded bottle bill, which Speaker Robert DeLeo and others in the House view as a tax. But Sen. Robert Hedlund disputes this view, saying that taxes can't be redeemed. 

Find out what's happening in Newtonwith free, real-time updates from Patch.

The expansion to the 31-year-old law designed to promote recycling and reduce litter would add plastic bottles used for water, juices, iced tea and sports drinks to the list of containers subject to the 5-cent bottle deposit. Under the law, these types of containers carry a 5-cent redeemable deposit that can be collected when they are returned to the store. 

Opponents say the bill increases costs for businesses and consumers. Supporters say it encourages more recycling.

Find out what's happening in Newtonwith free, real-time updates from Patch.

Yesterday, Newton Rep. Ruth Balser posted a photo on Facebook showing her support for the updated bill. 

Earlier this month, , urging local officials to support the bill. 

 that would ban the sale of single water bottles if bottled water was not added to the Bottle Bill. That amendment was voted down. 

The governor has said that the state could collect up to $58 million a year on unredeemed bottles, and that the program cuts the cost to city of recycling the bottles. 

A finalized version of the bill will need to be sent through both chambers before going to the governor's desk by July 31. 

Newton Editor Melanie Graham contributed to this report.


Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.

We’ve removed the ability to reply as we work to make improvements. Learn more here