are other factors that might make the proâ€" ject less attractive to the city than it once However Coun. Bruce Alexander, counâ€" cil‘s specialist on environment and garbage, said Monday that if council does decide to go ahead with the pilot project, City will run "I guess the implications are that it would require more staff work on behalf of the city," MacDonald said. _ garbage Ccollect1o _ Reaction is split in Linedin Willage and Colonial Acres about mtmmmofuv*py' yean "ueerpe p‘? collection program â€"_. In a recent 10â€"person survey conducted by the Waterloo Chtor \lage and Colonial Actes, finr people were in favor of the "user i four were against and Iwo wen td . ‘\:)"When I see people Mklbhave eight beige out each week, 1 this . said Grace Jutzi of Daihikgin Drive. "I think it (userâ€"pay collec . SATC ~orace JULH oL LIMeSamn UTV * ! poster. "I don‘t want to gay for (garbage collection) for somebody else." cially because it was just being conducted in one specific area of the city and not : cityâ€"wide: She also said she believed residents would still have to pay twice for <‘garbage collection if user fees were implemented. * * "i we‘re paying for stickers and/or special bags plus pick up fees, it looks like douâ€" ble taxation to me," she said. ho. #t e s P ARDAVIIL»A s LV NKAG L Twelveâ€"yearâ€"old Michael Nickeo is this week‘s Waterioo Chronicle "carrier of the week". He delivers in the Beechwood West area. Michael is in grad@i#even this year.His favorite school subjects oo earene oi cmves He is a member of a‘ tro: iub. He enjoys track and field, soccer, riding bi playing Gasme Boy. His favorite trip wailiifligiMarineland @sthis favorite movie is Jungle CARRIER OF THE WEEK in the future, For all his hard I w»mmcam.wwn receive a gift ce rtiliee KW Chicken. ‘The following six Waterloo Chronicle subscribers have won a $50.00 gift certificate from Café Bon Choix D. Witson Old Abby Rd. Jonathan Whitby h . . fln If you areâ€"interested in afibute or know anyone who is please call the office at 886â€"2830 w Michael Nickeo the project as now proposed would not involve more staff time. In fact, Alexander wants the city to hire the city‘s current recycling coordinator, Vivian De Giovanni, under a fullâ€"time conâ€" tract to run the pilot project as well as perâ€" "It‘s a positive step for us because we have more control over exactly how we (set up) the userâ€"pay demonstration proâ€" (Continued from page 3) oo oty en e Earn extra money delivering the Waterloo Chronicle after school an WEDNESDAYS. Paper carriers are needed in the following areas . . . 250 â€" 300 KEATS WAY BLUE SPRINGS DRIVE 137 & 139 UNIVERSITY AVE. MOORE / RODGER / WATERLOO GRAHAM / MOORE / WATERLOO HIGH STREET ERB ST. E. / DEVITT AVE. ELGIN CR. / NOECKER / WEBER GEORGE ST. WILLOW ST. BEECHWOOD DR. / BEECHWOOD PL. SUNNYDALE PL. Erb St. E. form other duties in the new year. De Gioâ€" vanni‘s current contract with the city runs out at the end of this year. â€" According to MacDonald, the average Waterloo homeowner currently pays about $30 a year for garbage pickup and about another $50 a year for garbage disâ€" As for the project itself, Janet Robbins, a representative for Resource Integration Systems, said in an interview in November that if council approves the pilot project, residents involved would not have to pay user fees for their garbage collection and disposal on top of what they already pay for those services in their municipal taxes. In terms of having to pay user fees on top of municipal taxes, Robins said the project could adopt a partial userâ€"pay sysâ€" tem or a full userâ€"pay system. Under the partial userâ€"pay system, resiâ€" dents in the project area will continue to pay part of their municipal taxes for garbage to pay for recycling and compostâ€" ing programs, Robins said. "But also, what it will do, it will allow you one, two, three containers free to put out," she said. "And then it‘s the additional stuff that you pay for, recognizing that that covers the (citys) tipping fees." If the project adopts a full userâ€"pay sys tem, Robins said, residents in the study area will pay for every bag of garbage they put out. They will then have the garbage component of their tax bill refunded to them either before or after completion of the program, she said. The city could save an estimated $300,000 a year or possibly more if it ever adopted a cityâ€"wide userâ€"pay garbage colâ€" lection system, Turnbull has said. 849|