Originally Posted by
JoeT
It was an incentive to recycle initially.
In 1982, Massachusetts passed the bottle bill. The retailer pays the money to the bottler, and the consumer pays the retailer. when they are returned the consumer gets their $.05 and the retailer gets their $.05 plus an additional $.0225 for handling the containers. so there is an incentive for the retailer to take them back (as well as they were mandated by law.
The state has a stake in it too. The way the law was written, not all consumers redeem their containers for the deposit. In Massachusetts, distributors and bottlers are required to turn over unclaimed deposits to the state. These funds used to go to the state’s Clean Environment Fund, which supported local and statewide recycling efforts. They now go into the state's General Fund instead.
So, as I said, initially it was a recycle program...bottle get picked up and returned, so less trash. The containers are then in theory recycled so there is less glass and plastic being made, so we'd use less fossil fuels in the production of the containers.
Fast forward 30 years, and although still good for the environment it's really just another tax. Every time you see a broken bottle, or for every plastic bottle or can that is shot at a gun range, the state is ultimately paid that $.05 from the distributor/bottler and that money is put into the general fund (read: support lazy fat asses that don't work and suck off the tit of the government.)
I would assume that other states follow a similar program....I am only aware of this because I have a friend that is a "big wig" at a family owned beverage company in Mass. and it is a pet peeve of his that he has to pay the state for a product that he doesn't get the benefit of actually recycling (he's against bottle bills for a number of economic reasons, but this one bothers him the most)