Most stores here recycle cardboard = there's good money in it.
There are just less than 400 liquor stores, gov't owned, in British Columbia.
About 2(?) years ago, the gov't decided to buy cardboard compactors from Sweden, one for every liquor store.
The capital cost of those machines was recovered from the cardboard crushed in the first 30 days.
Most stores still offer the thin plastic bags, some have a visible charge, some don't.
I've got into the habit of bringing cloth carry-bags. Disorganized heap in the back seat of my Suburban.
The village expects kitchen garbage to be adequately bagged. A box of 100 bin bags doesn't break my bank.
As I have mentioned, I heat my home with a wood pellet stove. Buying a ton (2,000lbs) at a time, they arrive
as 50 x 40lb heavy duty plastic bags, triple-wrapped in plastic shrouds and sitting on a brand new freight pallet.
By the time that I shut down the stove for the last time in spring, I am the proud owner of 5 pallets, 5 shrouds
and 250 heavy duty plastic bags.
Me and maybe 50 other pellet stove users in a village of maybe 200 homes. Hard to come up with novel
uses other than house rubbish. I put legs on the pallets for garden tables and benches but that's about to end.