XPost: alt.retail.grocery, alt.california, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh
XPost: talk.politics.guns, sac.politics
Roughly 10 years after California tried and failed to ban plastic bags at grocery stores, state lawmakers have passed a law that they say will
forever end the choice of "paper or plastic" in checkout lanes.
“Instead of being asked do you want paper or plastic at checkout,
consumers will simply be asked if they want a paper bag,” said state Sen. Catherine Blakespear (D-Encinitas). “This easy change eliminates plastic
bags from the point of sale and helps California significantly reduce the plastic waste that is contaminating our environment and waters.”
Blakespear and Assemblymember Rebecca Bauer-Kahan (D-Orinda) had
introduced identical legislation — Assembly Bill 2236 and Senate Bill 1053
— that sought to close the loophole that allows grocery stores to offer "reusable" plastic bags at the checkout line for a small fee. The
legislation was approved Wednesday and now goes to Gov. Gavin Newsom's
desk for signing.
Earlier this year, the consumer advocacy group CALPIRG released a report showing that 157,385 tons of plastic bag waste was discarded in California
in 2014, and that by 2021, the tonnage of discarded plastic bags had skyrocketed to 231,072 — a 47% jump. Even accounting for an increase in population, the number rose from 4.08 tons per 1,000 people in 2014 to
5.89 tons per 1,000 people in 2021.
The reason for the increase, experts say, is that a 2014 law that aimed to
ban plastic bag use allowed grocers to offer customers thick, heavier
plastic bags that could theoretically be reused after purchase. In
reality, however, those bags found little use after customers unloaded
their groceries at home.
Read more: California's war on plastic bag use seems to have backfired. Lawmakers are trying again
"So on average, people use a plastic bag for 12 minutes to take their
groceries home, and then it remains in our environment for hundreds of
years, breaking down into microplastics and polluting our soils and our waterways and our own human body," Blakespear said at a news conference
this week.
The new legislation was backed both by environmental groups and the
California Grocers' Assn. — an uncommon alliance, but one that likely
helped the bill sail through the Legislature.
"We've been involved in this policy," Louis Brown, the trade group's representative, said at the same news conference. "We've seen our
businesses transition to be more environmentally sustainable. We've seen
our customers transition and so we believe come Jan. 26, when only paper
is available at the point of sale, our members will support it. Our
customers will support it."
Indeed, most Californians say that plastics and marine debris are a
problem, according to polling by the Public Policy Institute of
California.
The new law, if signed by the governor, will go into effect on Jan. 1,
2026. The law focuses on checkout bags — not bags used to hold produce or
wrap food that could cause contamination, such as meat. In addition,
beginning Jan. 1, 2028, the definition of a recycled paper bag would
change from one made from 40% recycled material, to one with more than 50% recycled material.
Read more: Biden administration seeks to eliminate single-use plastics in federal government by 2035
Other plastic- and waste-related bills were also passed this week,
including one that would ban the use of various "sell by" labels on food, instead requiring that the language and meaning be standardized so
consumers understand what it means.
“Phrases like ‘enjoy by,’ ‘expires on,’ ‘sell by’ — and even, at times,
just a random date with no label at all — offer little insight to
consumers on the quality or safety of the food that they are eating,” Assemblymember Jacqui Irwin (D-Thousand Oaks), the author of one of the
bills, AB 660, said at a news conference Monday.
The other bill, AB 2214, would require state agencies to begin crafting guidance and language to tackle the growing issue of microplastic
pollution.
Petroleum based plastics do not decompose. Instead, they break down over
time into smaller and smaller pieces, which researchers have now
identified in environments across the globe, as well in the tissues and
fluids of animals and humans.
The "goal of it is to strengthen California's leadership on
microplastics," said Alison Waliszewski, of 5 Gyres, an antiplastic
advocacy group, by "empowering" state agencies such as the Ocean
Protection Council and give "them more teeth to be able to implement and strategies and make recommendations in a more expedited fashion."
https://www.latimes.com/environment/story/2024-08-30/california-tries- again-to-ban-plastic-grocery-bags
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