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Plastic Bag Bans Spreading Across The United States

Plastic Bags

Posted: 12/01/11 01:18 PM ET

WASHINGTON -- Across the country, cities and counties are instituting fees on plastic bags, or even banning them outright, in an effort to prevent pollution and raise revenue for cash-strapped local governments.

Four cities in Oregon -- Eugene, Corvallis, Newport and Ashland -- are considering banning plastic bags at retail stores. The towns would join at least 10 other U.S. cities and counties that have prohibited plastic bags since 2008.

"There is no reason a product we use for a few minutes should float in our oceans for a few hundred years," said Dave Mathews, a preservation associate for Environment Oregon.

Not all voters embrace the idea. In 2009, Seattle residents voted down a proposed plastic bag fee and Philadelphia voters rejected a ban. But since 2009, the National Conference of State Legislatures reports, 12 states have proposed bans on plastic bags while three have proposed taxes.

Environmental activists emphasize the conservation benefits of discouraging the use of plastic bags.

"Plastics, especially once they get into the marine environment, are pervasive. They have dramatic effects on marine life," said Julie Lawson, chair of the Washington, D.C., chapter of the Surfrider Foundation, a group that seeks to preserve coastal areas.

"A lot of Surfrider volunteers get started by attending a beach or river cleanup," she continued. What they learn is that "we could be cleaning up for the rest of our lives, and it will still show up. Addressing it at the source through a bag ban or a fee is really the most sustainable way of addressing this trash problem."

The trend toward plastic bag bans is not limited to the United States. China enacted a plastic bag ban in 2008, and since then the country has saved more than 1.6 million barrels of oil and reduced plastic bag usage by 66 percent.

Opponents of such bans say that replacing disposable bags with reusable ones may seem like a laudable goal, but the reality can be quite different.

Shari Jackson, director of Progressive Bag Affiliates, an organization that actively lobbied against a plastic bag ban enacted in several California cities, told HuffPost that the ban itself is just not effective.

"Bans have not been shown to reduce litter, which is always the stated intent," said Jackson. "Instead, experience has shown that when grocers and retailers are no longer permitted to use plastic bags, consumers turn to paper bags, which create more greenhouse gas emissions and use more energy to manufacture."

Jackson noted that bans can have unintended effects on employment opportunities as well. "Bans erode consumer choice, threaten well-paying manufacturing jobs and harm growing recycling programs for plastic bags and wraps," she said.

Plastic bag bans also impose a new burden on consumers. Edmundo Arizpe of Brownsville, Texas, said that when he needs to buy a lot of groceries he goes to a nearby city that allows plastic bags. "I'm doing worse to the climate [by driving]," Arizpe told The New York Times in May.

The environment is not the only concern driving cities and counties to plastic bag bans. The other is tax dollars. With state tax revenues at an all-time low, a levy such as the 5 cent fee per bag that the District of Columbia implemented in 2010 can help replenish the coffers.

During the first year the bag fee went into effect, D.C. collected an additional $2 million in tax revenue.

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WASHINGTON -- Across the country, cities and counties are instituting fees on plastic bags, or even banning them outright, in an effort to prevent pollution and raise revenue for cash-strapped local g...
WASHINGTON -- Across the country, cities and counties are instituting fees on plastic bags, or even banning them outright, in an effort to prevent pollution and raise revenue for cash-strapped local g...
 
 
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03:24 AM on 01/16/2012
HuffPost, you noted that Seattle voted down the plastic bag ban in 2009, which is correct, but you didn't mention that the Seattle City Council voted to pass the ban just last month! It will go into effect July of this year.
04:55 AM on 12/13/2011
Thank you for sharing this information.
It will really helpful to solve my confusion

Process $ Chemical Engineering
06:49 PM on 12/07/2011
Lets put a tax on everything bad for the environment, which is basically everything, people could not afford to buy as much, production would go down, jobs would be lost and we would reduce emissions for all those people not going to work or to the store to shop!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Paul Burke
Author of Journey Home
11:44 AM on 12/06/2011
"There is no reason a product we use for a few minutes should float in our oceans for a few hundred years," said Dave Mathews, a preservation associate for Environment Oregon. ...Amen brother...amen!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
graceonline
10:43 AM on 12/06/2011
Of course the plastic bag industry will do everything it can to keep us using their bags. If they're so adamant that we need them, how about requiring them to clean up the mess, in our cities, in our wild lands, and especially in our oceans.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
WhyBeadNormal
I live by the Golden Rule...
09:35 AM on 12/05/2011
Banning plastic bags is not the answer. Educating consumers about the negative effects they have on the environment is a step in the right direction but there will always be disagreement about any "climate change" topic. I would suggest that instead of being negative in our response by penalizing those who DO use plastic bags, we should reward those of use who DON'T use them and bring in our reusable bags to all stores. Pay us the 5 cents as an incentive instead of charging the others 5 cents as a penalty. Positive reinforcement always works better. I know this solution does not put money in the city government coffers but they will just have to find another way to collect taxes. Perhaps all Congress members could take a reduction in pay or maybe "opt out" of the lifetime of health insurance after only serving one term. This would save taxpayers millions and "we the people" have been taking pay cuts and doing without health insurance for a few years now because we simply cannot afford it.
02:09 PM on 06/13/2012
Great argument.

No seriously, you can see how many people stopped driving low mileage trucks because they learned about global warming. Right?
06:52 PM on 12/04/2011
I support these bans. Plastic bags are stupid, plain and simple. When are get rid of this American entitlement BS?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
justanothergrandma
finding my way
03:56 AM on 12/04/2011
It makes me very sad to read all these comments. This seems like a simple thing, but causes such complete disagreement. How can we ever solve anything in this country. There's an expression from the 60's NIMBY that came to mind. It's not an exact fit, but those old enough to remember will know what I'm saying.
07:07 PM on 12/03/2011
Reusable bags are a sensible alternative to plastic but they should be used sensibly as well. Canvas and woven plastic reusable bags are an ideal breeding ground for bacteria. If you use this kind of bag for meat or produce, especially "organic" produce, you should wash the bag well with chorine bleach. Reusing a bag that carried meat or produce without washing the bag multiplies the risk of e.coli, listeria, botulism, salmonella and other pathogens every time it is reused.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
eastfernstreet
Too micro to be seen . . .
04:51 PM on 12/03/2011
If they ban plastic bags at grocery stores, I'll just have to start buying new ones to pick up my dog's poop. So, instead of the double-use that the bags from the grocery store get, the new ones will only get single use.

Way to go "green", huh?
01:31 PM on 12/04/2011
Hi East,
Suggestion:
I reuse the plastic bags that my morning newspaper comes in (ugh this is something else that needs to go).
Also, if you do need to buy a bag for your dogs...business; then try out the bio-degradable ones.
Just a thought
T.T.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
11:48 AM on 12/05/2011
You weren't required to have a dog in the first place. Having a dog isn't green, either.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
eastfernstreet
Too micro to be seen . . .
12:49 PM on 12/05/2011
. . . and by extension, being alive is neither required nor green. Is there a point in there?
12:30 PM on 12/03/2011
Every time I hear stories like this it makes me realize how outstanding American sense of entitlement is. The guy who drives longer distances to another city just to use plastic bags? What is wrong with you? Firstly canvas reusable grocery bags are incredibly strong and can fit the merchandise equivalent of 5-6 plastic bags! Government should simply outright ban these bags, however some Tea Party 'git yer hands off my groceries' jackass candidate would probably win the presidential election. Get over yourselves Americans, there are more important things than your own self entitlements.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
eastfernstreet
Too micro to be seen . . .
05:02 PM on 12/03/2011
Aren't people who think they're entitled to impose their priorities on others with the force of law just so annoying?
11:46 AM on 12/03/2011
As an American, I have to agree with many of our International friends that single use plastic bags are pretty stupid. We Americans are always late to adopt something practical like banning plastic bags usually because it means not thinking about ourselves. The article states that jobs would be lost if bans are inacted, so the arguement is companies are paying employees to pollute their own and other's landfills. China saw what we are doing and made a change, we can't?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
nelore
10:07 AM on 12/03/2011
They have been banned in Brazil already.
09:57 AM on 12/03/2011
This is a no-brainer. Plastic bags should have been outlawed years ago, except for the biodegradable kind. Paper, too. Everyone should use re-usable bags, which should be sold at cost to customers. Some stores already give them away.
05:15 AM on 12/03/2011
There's a levy on plastic bags in Ireland, it's 22c per bag. It was brought in in 2002 and at first, like the smoking ban, we thought there would be uproar and lots of inconvenience. Instead, it became normal practise to just bring canvas bags/bags for life with you instead and there is a noticeable decrease in the amount of plastic bags you see as litter. We don't even think about it now. I think it's a good idea, if only to get people using better quality bags.The standard plastic bags are such poor quality it doesn't make sense to use them.