An Ohio city is preparing to adopt tough new restrictions on scrap metal sales aimed at curbing theft problems.
Cincinnati city council could vote as soon as Wednesday afternoon’s meeting on proposed rules that legislative experts say would be among the nation’s strictest. They would require frequent sellers to obtain licenses, pass criminal background checks and wait two days to get paid.
City officials say they are trying to deter would-be thieves. High prices for copper and other metals, combined with a struggling economy, have spurred metal thefts locally and globally.
Opponents say the move is an overreaction that will hurt honest metal vendors and dealers, send legitimate sales outside the city, and undermine recycling efforts. Some people say they depend on legal “scrapping” to support their families.
Was this article valuable?
Here are more articles you may enjoy.
Google Adds Mental Health Tools to Gemini Chatbot After Lawsuit
California’s Surplus Lines HO Market’s New Phase Driven by Access, Not Wildfire Risk
Secret Codes and Yuan Fees Get Ships Through Iran’s Hormuz Tollbooth
LaGuardia Crash Bolsters Case for Using AI in Air Control Towers