NEW tree protection laws, a ban on heavyweight and boutique plastic bags and reforms for the hospitality sector to improve the night-time economy will take effect in the ACT from January 1.
Plastic bags
All single-use shopping bags that are made fully or partially of plastic are banned. This includes soft plastic bags greater than 35 microns in thickness, and bags made from plastic-laminated paper or cardboard.
The ACT government says it will monitor exemptions which will apply for certain plastic bags:
- bags without handles
- unsealed bags used to package perishable food such as fruit or cooked poultry
- shopping bags made of nylon, polyester or woven polypropylene
- non-woven polypropylene bags with a minimum weight of 90g/m² with sewn seams.
Tree protection
The Urban Forest Act 2023 will take effect from January 1 to provide a stronger legal framework to protect, grow and manage Canberra’s trees.
The government says the new laws will make the city more resilient to a changing climate by reducing the urban heat-island effect.
The new laws protect more trees by:
- classifying all public trees as protected
- reducing the size requirements for protected trees on private land from 12 metres to 8 metres in height or canopy width
- classifying dead native trees with a circumference of 1.88m or more as protected to provide essential habitat elements for local fauna
- Encouraging existing trees to be retained, including introducing new requirements to ensure trees that have to be approved to be removed are replaced or, where new planting is not possible, a financial contribution to support tree planting elsewhere
- introducing a tree bond system to ensure trees are not damaged during construction work as our city continues to grow
- expanding the ACT Tree Register which celebrates and protects our most significant trees.
- improving compliance provisions, for example, the introduction of penalties for people caught damaging a tree or breaching a tree protection plan or direction.
If a protected tree is eligible and approved for removal, the applicant will be required to enter into a canopy contribution agreement with the ACT government.
The agreement sets out:
- how many replacement trees are to be planted on the block to replace those removed, and
- if some or all of the trees cannot be planted, what financial contribution is required to grow and enhance the urban forest.
Night-time economy
From January 1, the ACT government will:
- automatically allow smaller licensed restaurants and cafes to trade until 2am
- reduce liquor licensing fees for smaller restaurants, cafes, bars and general licences
- remove the requirement for general licensed businesses to have separate areas for the sale of liquor for on-premises and off-premises consumption.
These changes aim to reduce costs and the administrative burden on businesses, encourage extended trading hours and foster innovative business models.
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