This case can be traced attempt Liberal government of Ontario, Canada, to introduce charges for recycling a wide range of household goods, as part of a larger program of the provincial government for waste management. The Ministry of Environment was created industry-funded, non-profit organization called the Ontario Stewardship oversight regulation and collection of recycling fees in the province. In 2008, the trustees of Ontario began to charge for processing on a limited number of products for the home, the fees that manufacturers and retailers are passed to the consumer at the time of the transaction. Ontario consumers seem to accept these fees as part of the cost of doing business in the province, who was trying to become greener and less wasteful place to live. However, in 2010 the trustees of Ontario changed the fee structure for household appliances of the product is based on the material on the basis of the structure: the products is now estimated to vary depending on the type and extent of the material (chemical, metal, plastic) in the product. This change has greatly expanded the number of products on which the disposal fee may be assessed, and it is greatly complicated fee structure for both producer and consumer. Consumers at this time pay attention to new tariffs and objecting loudly in new fees and lack of transparency of the fee structure, they appealed to the Minister of Environment to scrap the program or at least to explain it clearly. "Hide
by Michael Sider Source: Richard Ivey School of Business Foundation 3 pages. Publication Date: November 1, 2010. Prod. #: 910M95-PDF-ENG