“At the end of the day, every resident of Colorado would have recycling available to them for free,” said Cutter.
Stephen Gould, owner of Golden Moon Distillery, is among those opposing it. He was planning a big expansion of his business after it was named distillery of the year in 2019. Then the pandemic hit and, Gould says, revenue plummeted almost 30%. He had just started to find his financial footing again when he heard about the bill and was floored.The bill calls for a study to determine what it would cost to make recycling free to every Coloradan.
She says dues would likely be fractions of a penny per pound based on a similar program in Canada. Businesses with annual revenue of less than $5 million would be exempt along with restaurants, businesses that ship medical products or devices, and businesses like marijuana dispensaries that have products that contaminate the packaging material.
“And if you don’t pay dues, the CDPHE can come in and take your business license or fine you, which to me starts to sound like a government operation and it also sounds like the government delegated their taxing authority to a non-profit entity, which now sounds like enterprise,” said Soper.
Stop externalizing costs, socializing burden and privatizing profit. Put total cost in co's bottom line. That's what real 'conservative' should want.Subsidizing costs of product fails and takes money from the public--product user or not--to put in private pockets. copolitics
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