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 »  Home  »  Blogs  »  California plastic bag ban
California plastic bag ban
By Green Living Tips | Published  06/4/2010
California may be the first US state to implement a ban on single use plastic shopping bags after the state Senate approved a related bill today.
 
A bill by Assemblywoman Julia Brownley to ban the bags received the "unprecedented support" of stakeholders; including the California Grocers Association and the United Food and Commercial Workers. 
 
The bill, AB 1998, bans all single-use bags sold in supermarkets, drug, convenience and liquor stores. However, if shoppers forget to bring their re-useable shopping bags (something I was prone to do until recently) they will have access to recycled paper bags - at a cost; a minimum of 5 cents a pop.

The ban will start with larger stores on Jan. 1, 2012, expanding to smaller retailers starting July 1, 2013.
 
A press release from Julia Brownley's office says it costs the state of California $25 million a year to collect and bury single use plastic shopping bags in landfills.
 
An additional problem is that not all plastic bags wind up in landfill - many enter marine ecosystems where they continue to cause havoc to aquatic organisms. These single use plastic bags are a common feature in the Great Pacific Garbage Patch.
 
Dan Jacobson, legislative director for Environment California, commenting on the proposed ban summed it up nicely: "Nothing that we use for 5 minutes should pollute the ocean for 500 years"
 
AB 1998 was approved by the Assembly Appropriations Committee on May 28 and was passed by the Senate on June 4.
 
A plastic bag ban was introduced in my state (South Australia) just over a year ago and the difference it's made has to be seen to be believed... well, not seen.The bags that use to litter the roadsides simply aren't there any more and thankfully that trash hasn't been replaced with reusable bags. While there was a bit of grumbling about the ban, overall South Australians adapted pretty quickly. 
 
The ban also helped people like me not to forget my reusable bags. Sometimes lawmakers get it right :).
 
Related:
 
Choosing reusable shopping bags



Michael Bloch
Green Living Tips.com
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Archived/old comments

  • Comment #1 (Posted by amanda)

    I think there should b a worldwide ban, come on people, we should all just take that leap.....I hate it when you go into a store and you have a handful of things and the cashier tries to force a bag on you.......in the world we live in today, you should have to beg for that bag, it shouldn't come so easy. Maybe if they started to make you have to ask for bags, people would be more inclined to bring their own.
     
  • Comment #2 (Posted by Cheapskate)

    I've noticed many people using reusable shopping bags but then these same people purchase plastic bags for their garbage or sandwiches. The garbage bag companies must be thrilled with the shopping bag ban. I would like to see ALL plastc bags banned. Garbage can go straight into the can without a plastic garbage bag. (This is how it was done, as I recall, until the 70's.) Sandwiches can do into reusable containers.
    http://savemoneyyoucheapskate.blogspot.com
     
  • Comment #3 (Posted by franki)

    I live in norcal and have used cloth bags for about 2 years. But I am at a loss at what to use when I need to donate or even leave something on a neighbor's porch. There aren't enough boxes to go around and I've only seen paper bags at one store in the last year.
    I hope the situation resolves itself or we come up with a new protocol of dropping things off. Maybe charitable venues will have bins we can empty into from our reusable bags and everyone will have a box they keep on the porch?
     
  • Comment #4 (Posted by Mavis Wood)

    I've been using reusable shopping bags for more than 20 years (Yes, the same bags. I have two). It took me a long time to remember to take them into the store, so many times I made a special trip back to the care to retrieve it. One incentive we have is that our grocer gives us 5 cents for a bag brought in. But I insist on using my own bag even if the store doesn't do that. I have a nylon bag that folds up and goes into my purse. That one is also very old, but is still in good condition.

    Just remember, if you reuse shopping bags, WASH THEM every once in a while. Especially after transporting meat.
     
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