Search Results for: plastic grocery bags ban

Vote coming on California bill that puts recycling onus on plastic manufacturers

Plastic bottles piled on the floor at the Recology recycling center in San Francisco on Sept.6, 2019.  (Lindsey Moore/KQED)

Kevin Stark reports for KQED

As soon as this week, California lawmakers could vote on legislation aimed at dramatically reducing plastic pollution from common manufactured goods like utensils, packaging and beverage lids.

The proposed legislation, companion bills AB 1080 and SB 54, is a first-in-the-nation attempt at requiring plastic manufacturers to take responsibility for the fate of their single-use products, many of which end up in landfills and oceans. ‘The plastics industry is going to go down swinging, for sure. ‘Jennie Romer, Surfrider Foundation

The rules could have dramatic implications for the plastic industry. If the legislation passes as written, companies would need to ensure that their products are recyclable or else face having them potentially banned.

The bill is being fiercely opposed by industry groups, which see a threat to their bottom line. The industry is arguing that complying with the legislation would be unfeasible and end up as an added cost to consumers.

The proposed rules set a deadline of 2030 for several new requirements on manufacturers. First, all of California’s plastic forks, bowls and other utensils that are routinely used once and discarded must be recyclable or compostable; companies must reduce waste from plastic packaging by 75%, and single-use products made from unrecyclable material will be banned.

With recycling centers closing across the state and China no longer accepting soiled plastic from the U.S., the bill signals a growing recognition from lawmakers that California faces a recycling crisis and pervasive plastic pollution. The Legislature is also considering another plastics bill, AB 792, that would establish a minimum recycled content level in plastic bottles.

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Julia Stein, a supervising attorney with UCLA’s environmental law clinic, said AB 1080 and SB 54 are attempts to comprehensively address plastic pollution, and that industry groups are concerned California could be a bellwether. “That’s what is spurring the industry opposition to this bill,” Stein said.

Business lobbying has already resulted in changes. Two of the bills’ authors, Assemblymember Lorena Gonzalez, D-San Diego, and  Sen. Ben Allen, D-Santa Monica, released amendments last week meant to appease critics and reluctant lawmakers who worried the state’s recycling infrastructure could not support the additional materials resulting from the new rules, and who were concerned about a shortage of food-safe plastic.

Originally, the bill automatically banned a product if a company couldn’t show that the material met the recycling requirements. Now, CalRecycle, the state agency that will administer the new rules, must initiate a review process before a product is disallowed. The agency can also issue a penalty of up to $50,000 per day, but can give a company as long as two years to meet the regulations.

Mark Murray, executive director of the environmental advocacy organization Californians Against Waste, which lobbied for the bill, acknowledged the changes were necessary to secure votes.

“We feel really feel good about the current administration and the current department, but it does add an additional step, which will add time,” Murray said.

Plenty of Opposition

After the bills’ authors amended the legislation, the California Grocers Association dropped its opposition, the Los Angeles Times reported Friday.

Recently, a separate organization, the Grocery Manufacturers Association, signaled it was open to a compromise.

Harder plastics like milk and detergent containers are sorted, crushed and separated into bales at the Recology recycling center in San Francisco. Photo from Sept. 6, 2019 (Lindsey Moore/KQED)

The group supports recycling goals, Gruber said, “but there needs to be more discussion of California’s broken recycling system, and that needs to be fixed.”

The bill is drawing a lot of attention from outside the state, says Jennie Romer, an attorney with the Surfrider Foundation’s Plastic Pollution Initiative.

“The whole country is looking at California to see whether this is going to pass, and there’s a lot riding on it right now,”  she said. “The plastic industry is going to go down swinging, for sure.”

July analysis of the Assembly bill by a legislative committee on the environment listed opposition from the Western Plastics AssociationWestern States Petroleum AssociationPlastics Industry AssociationInternational Bottled Water AssociationHousehold and Commercial Products Association, among dozens of other groups, many of which lobbied on the legislation, according to financial activity records filed with the state.

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But Mike Gruber, vice president of government affairs for the group, said it’s unhappy with the recent changes and opposes the bill. “The size and the scope of the bill have dramatically increased,” he said. “We have major concerns about the state’s ability to implement it.”

The list of the bill’s supporters includes Sierra Club California, Natural Resources Defense Council, SEIU, Ocean Conservancy, and many other public advocacy groups, as well as city agencies and governmental bodies like the San Francisco Department of the Environment and the Los Angeles City Council.

Supporters say the plastic industry isn’t always arguing in good faith, and that some groups are being deceptive.

Murray, of Californians Against Waste, called out one industry-backed organization with a disingenuous name as an example.

In recent months, Californians for Recycling and the Environment has circulated social media posts with links to a web page promoting the idea that the legislation “threatens to negatively impact the availability, affordability, and quality of many products California families rely on for our health and well-being.” The web page includes graphics of baby and pet food.

“That’s a bridge too far,” Murray said. “In terms of trying to make an argument. Were we unsafe before we didn’t have all this plastic packaging?”

The group’s state lobbying records names its president as Philip Rozenski, who is also the vice president of public affairs for Novolex, a U.S. manufacturer of plastic packaging.

Rozenski also served as the policy lead for another industry-backed group with a name connoting sustainability. The American Progressive Bag Alliance raised $6.1 million in an unsuccessful fight against a California ban on plastic bags in 2016, according to the Sacramento Bee.

An email request to Novolex to speak with Rozenski was answered by a spokesperson for Californians for Recycling and the Environment. Micah Grant said the bill’s recycling targets are “simply infeasible” and that the Legislature should “hit the pause button.”

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Grant also referred KQED to a member of the group, William Smart, president of the Southern California Chapter of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference.

Smart said lawmakers should “slow down” and examine the impacts of the regulations on communities of color.

“African Americans use a lot of these products, and we want to make sure good alternatives are in place,” he said.

Eric Potashner, director of strategic affairs for Recology, a San Francisco-based waste management company, which lobbied for the legislation, said the plastics industry was “throwing a lot of spaghetti at the wall and seeing what sticks.”

Plastic Pollution

The plastic problem extends well beyond the state. Right now, 335 million tons — that’s 670 billion pounds — of plastic are produced each year, and only about 9% is recycled, according to sources compiled in the bill.

A UC Santa Barbara study conducted in 2017 found that half of all the plastic ever produced was manufactured in the previous 13 years.

Plastic is an incredibly durable material. A plastic fork, for example, that makes its way into the ocean will break down over time into bits of confetti-sized-or-smaller scraps of plastic. This microplastic can eventually make its way into the food chain.

More than a million seabirds and 100,000 dolphins, seals and other marine mammals are killed every year due to plastic debris in the ocean, according to the United Nations.

This year, researchers found Monterey Bay, long considered to be an environmental success story, full of microplastic. Researchers also found scraps of the stuff in Lake Tahoe.

And according to one study, the average person in the U.S. consumes between 74,000 and 121,000 particles of plastic contained in food and beverages every year.

Related news stories:
Recycling industry split on California plastic bills
Tired of plastic junk? California’s recycling bills propose dramatic new rules

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Palo Alto becomes first Bay Area city to ban plastic produce bags

Plastic straws, utensils and stirrers banned from restaurants.

Working for Specialty Produce of San Juan Bautista, Alex Mendoza bags sweet peas for a customer as the Downtown San Jose Farmers’ Market opens for its 25th season Friday, May 5, 2017, in San Jose, Calif. (Jim Gensheimer/Bay Area News Group)

By MAGGIE ANGST | Bay Area News Group

Although Palo Alto adopted one of the strictest plastic bans in the Bay Area Monday night, some residents and city leaders contend that the measure doesn’t go far enough.

Palo Alto City Council unanimously voted Monday night to prohibit the distribution of plastic straws, utensils and stirrers in all food service establishments starting in January as well as ban produce and meat bags in grocery stores and farmers markets starting in July 2020.

The proposed bans are part of a larger city effort — called its Zero Waste Plan — to divert 95 percent of its waste from landfills and reduce 80 percent of its greenhouse gases by 2030.

The plan calls for phasing in the ban, which many residents, environmentalists and at least one city council member strongly opposed.

The bans passed Monday night represent phase one of the Zero Waste Plan.

Phase two, which the city plans to put into effect in 2021, would require all food service establishments to charge for non-reusable cups and containers, provide reusable foodware items to all dine-in customers and install dishwashers. The last phase, planned for 2025, would require food service establishments to provide reusable foodware for all takeout orders.

Councilwoman Alison Cormack asked the council Monday to consider adding the phase two requirement that food establishments charge for nonreusable cups and containers to the initial ordinance.

City staff, however, informed her that developing a system for those charges would be too difficult to put in place within six months — when the ordinance goes into effect.

After hearing the staff input, Cormack withdrew her request but said that she was “not happy about it.”

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Bayonne will vote on plastic bag ban, as Jersey City’s set to take effect

By Corey W. McDonald | The Jersey Journal

Grocery store patrons may soon see a big difference in these two Hudson County cities in the coming months.

An ordinance up for approval on June 17 by the Bayonne City Council would ban most single-use plastic bags and straws throughout the city. Meanwhile, Jersey City, which approved its own ban in June 2018, is set prohibit the use of single-use plastic throughout the city on June 28.

If Bayonne approves its ordinance, it would join Hoboken, and dozens of other municipalities in the state including Belmar, Point Pleasant and Teaneck by banning all retail locations from providing single-use plastic bags to customers.

The Bayonne council is expected to vote on the ordinance June 19.

“Our administration supports a cleaner community. This proposed ordinance is an important step towards achieving that goal,” Mayor Jimmy Davis said.

Like Jersey City, Bayonne’s ordinance includes some exceptions: plastic for loose produce; newspaper bags; dry-cleaning bags; bags to wrap frozen food, meat or fish; and bags intended for use as garbage, pet, or yard waste will be permitted.

All food service establishments, with the exceptions food trucks and mobile food courts, would be affected by the ban.

Bayonne’s ban would go into effect on Jan. 1, 2020.

Last year state legislators passed a bill that would force customers to pay 5 cents for each plastic bag, but it was vetoed by Gov. Phil Murphy, who said the bill did not go far enough.

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New York City Council passes paper bag fee — again — following a statewide plastic ban

New York City shoppers soon will pay 5-cents per paper grocery bags under a new ordinance

Cole Rosengren reports for WasteDive

The New York City Council recently voted 38-9 to approve a bill (Intro 1527) that will establish a five-cent “paper carryout bag reduction fee” to accompany the upcoming statewide plastic bag ban.

Following guidelines set forth in the state legislation, the city will receive two cents from every fee “for the purpose of purchasing and distributing reusable bags, with priority given to low- and fixed-income communities.” Customers using various income assistance programs will be exempt from the fee entirely.

The bill was quickly introduced, passed out of committee and brought for a full vote in response to the new state policy passed earlier this month. The paper bag fee, like the statewide plastic bag ban, will take effect in March 2020.

The backers of this particular bill have been pushing for a city bag policy since at least 2013 and appeared to have succeeded in 2016 when the measure passed in one of the council’s tightest votes of the session. Yet a chain reaction of preemption by the state legislature and delayed promises for action from the governor paused any local movement on the policy until this spring. FY20 budget legislation established a statewide ban on plastic bags and offered local governments the option to go further (within certain parameters) and establish their own policies on paper bags.

That fresh opening, along with a shift in council membership and politics since 2016, led to the swift passage of a paper bag fee for the second time. Mayor Bill de Blasio has expressed support for the concept and is expected to sign the bill soon.

Tying plastic bag bans with a fee on alternatives is seen as critical to ensuring that stores and customers don’t just switch to other options — which generally require more resources to produce — with a similar rate of consumption. California, the only other state with an official plastic bag ban, has a 10-cent fee on alternative bags. A bill was recently introduced in San Francisco to raise that city’s fee to 25 cents and set tighter standards on bag exemptions and material composition.

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NY blazes the trail with a statewide ban on single-use plastic bags. Will NJ follow?

Scott Fallon reports for North Jersey News

New Jersey’s efforts to ban plastic bags, straws and foam food containers has remained in legislative limbo for six months, with no action in Trenton on a bill championed by supporters as the strongest set of plastic regulations in the nation. 

Now environmentalists hope New York’s adoption this week of a ban on thin supermarket bags will help reinvigorate efforts in New Jersey to do away with products that make up a sizeable portion of pollution found in every corner of the Garden State.  

New York’s ban “takes away the idea that New Jersey would be the guinea pig for plastic bans on the East Coast,” said Doug O’Malley, director of Environment New Jersey. “We’re not California but there’s a lot of DNA we share with New York. If they can do, so can we.”

New York will become the third state after California and Hawaii to institute a ban of single-use plastic bags under an agreement made by lawmakers in the state budget approved Monday. The ban takes effect in March 2020.

And while the lack of progress in New Jersey has disappointed supporters, they say New York’s ban is still critical to help reduce pollution in New Jersey because plastic bags easily travel between the two via wind and shared waterways like the Hudson River and New York Harbor. 

Surrounded on three sides by water and sandwiched between New York and Philadelphia, New Jersey has been inundated with plastic pollution. 

Plastics have made up the vast majority of trash collected each year from New Jersey’s beaches by the advocacy group Clean Ocean Action. A 2016 report by NY/NJ Baykeeper estimated that about 165 million pieces of plastic float at any one time from Sandy Hook to the Tappan Zee Bridge along with several other waterways that make up the New York-New Jersey Harbor Estuary.

With more than a dozen New Jersey municipalities passing bans in recent years, the push for a statewide measure appeared to gain momentum last summer. 

First, Gov. Phil Murphy vetoed a bill that would require a 5-cent fee on grocery store bags, signaling that he supported stronger measures. A month later, a bill — S2776 — that would ban bags, straws and polystyrene containers was approved by a Senate environment committee.

Since then, there has been little movement in a legislature that has tackled large-scale issues like the minimum wage, recreational marijuana, medically-assisted suicide and now the state budget.

The plastic bill’s primary sponsor, Senator Bob Smith, D-Middlesex, said last summer that he expected the full legislature to take up the measure before the end of 2018. That did not happen.

The bill was sent in September to the Senate Appropriations Committee but no hearing has been held. An identical bill was introduced in the Assembly in July, but there has been no movement.

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Who’s next to ban single-use plastic bags? Maybe Massachusetts or Vermont

Cody Ellis reports for WasteDive

  • As legislative sessions across the U.S. continue, several states are making moves toward banning single-use plastic bags and charging for replacement options. In Washington, for example, SB 5323 passed the state Senate and is in committee in the House of Representatives. An environmental committee already evaluated the bill favorably and recommended its passage.
  • Last week, the Vermont Senate advanced a bill (S.113) that would prohibit single-use plastic bags and expanded polystyrene foam, mandate a fee for paper bags and require vendors to only give out single-use plastic straws on request. Gov. Phil Scott is “not opposed” to the plastic bag ban, according to VT Digger.
  • In Massachusetts, a bill (H.771) that would ban single-use carryout bags and charge for replacement options was the subject of an April 2 hearing. At least 90 communities in Massachusetts, including Boston, already have some sort of restrictions on bags.

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After decade of strikeouts, Philly might ban plastic bags

Yes, you’ll still be able to pick up dog poop.
squilla-americanbeauty

AMERICAN BEAUTY; ANGELA GERVASI/BILLY PENN

Michaela Winberg reports for Billy Penn
Fifth time’s the charm? Councilman Mark Squilla hopes so. The District 1 lawmaker is planning to introduce a bill to ban or tax plastic bags in the city — again.
Nationwide, the idea is gaining steam. In the name of environmental sustainability, 12 states and 200 municipalities have either already halted bag distribution, or are working on preemptive measures to do so.
In Philly, not so much. Squilla’s attempt will mark nearly a half-dozen times people have tried — and failed — to reduce the use of an item that contributes to the city’s litter epidemic as it turns into urban tumbleweeds.
But Squilla appears confident that this is the year. He’s got support from the city and a few of his fellow legislators, and said much of the opposition from lobbyists has died down as bans have become more common.
“This is a great opportunity right now,” Squilla told Billy Penn. “Before the end of 2019, this legislation will pass.”

A decade’s worth of strikeouts 

The first time City Council debated a bill to curb plastic bag use, it was 2007.
Backing the idea were then-councilmembers Jim Kenney and Frank DiCicco (now Zoning Board of Adjustment chair), along with four others. But lobbying from grocery and petrochemical industries proved too strong, and the bill flopped.
The same cohort tried again in 2009. And got the exact same result. That’s two flops.
In 2012, activists took up the cause. A Green Philly-spearheaded petition to ban disposable bags got 1,328 signatures, and a Facebook page dedicated to photos of bags that had littered city streets gained traction.
But to the advocates’ dismay, no sitting councilmembers took immediate action. Strike three.
Enter Squilla. The year is 2015, and the second-term lawmaker is ready to go to bat for this small-scale sustainability initiative. He suggests a 5-cent fee for anyone who uses plastic to bring home goods from city retail establishments.
Squilla had support from the Clean Air Council and the Clean Water Action, and he could point to other cities that has recently implemented bag reduction measures like Washington, D.C.and Honolulu, Hawaii.
Still, no dice. After lawmakers voiced their concerns that a plastic bag fee would be a regressive tax on poor Philadelphians, Squilla tabled it. Strike four.

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Big Plastic’s trash plan is just a drop in the polluted ocean

                                                                                 Photo:vegnews.com
Jack Kaskey reports for Bloomberg:
With all those plastic-trash haters filling the Internet with images of garbage-choked oceans and demanding bans on everything from drinking straws to grocery bags, chemical companies are beginning to get alarmed.
Their solution: A public pledge by the new Alliance to End Plastic Waste to spend $1 billion over five years to clean up marine debris, improve recycling and develop new technologies to reduce pollution. That may sound like a lot of green, but the Alliance is made up of 28 companies that make plastics, packaging and consumer products, which averages out to each company spending just over $7 million on the effort each year.
That’s pocket change for alliance members like LyondellBasell Industries NV, which sells about $20 billion a year in plastics and related chemicals, and for Procter & Gamble Co., the only consumer products company in the alliance, whose $67 billion in sales depend on disposable plastic packaging. Meanwhile, Dow Chemical, now a unit of DowDuPont Inc., is ramping up plastics production with a recently completed $6 billion U.S. investment.
The alliance represents groundbreaking collaboration to solve the pollution problem, said Lyondell Chief Executive Officer Bob Patel, one of the leaders of the project. They’re just getting started, he says, with recruiting underway for more members that would boost funding to as much as $1.5 billion, as well as plans for growing their investments.

‘Powerful’ Collaboration

“This approach is unique because it brings together and focuses the efforts and knowledge of plastics producers, consumer goods companies and retailers, as well as waste management companies,” Patel said. “Having the resources and knowledge of the entire global value chain under one umbrella with the same goal is really very powerful.”
So is even $1.5 billion over five years likely to fulfill Patel’s goal to “end plastic waste”? Not even close, according to an Ocean Conservancy report that estimated it would cost $5 billion a year for a package of initiatives to reduce the global leakage of plastics into the ocean by 45 percent in the next six years. Even that plan wouldn’t see the trash flow ending until 2035.

Big Plastic’s trash plan is just a drop in the polluted ocean Read More »

NJ businesses bringing in big guns to fight plastics ban

Scott Fallon reports for the North Jersey Record

More than two dozen NJ towns have banned thin plastic takeout bags like the ones found at many grocery and big box stores. Lawmakers are considering a statewide ban on bags along with foam food containers and straws. (Photo: Mitsu Yasukawa/Northjersey.com)

The global push to ban everyday plastic products that litter oceans and waterways has no greater fight in the U.S. in 2019 than in New Jersey where the most far-reaching set of plastics regulations in the nation is slowly making its way through Trenton.
Manufacturers and retailers are gearing up to defeat a bill that would ban plastic bags, foam containers and plastic straws fearing passage in New Jersey could prompt other states to adopt similar regulations.
“No state or a major city has taken on all three so the stakes are high,” said John Weber, Mid-Atlantic manager of the Surfrider Foundation, a clean ocean and beach advocacy group. “A lot of other states are taking note because it would be the most comprehensive plastics legislation in the country.”

Supporters, like Weber, say the measure will curb plastic litter that is inundating New Jersey’s beaches, riverfronts, streets and even some of its most serene waterways.

osprey_stuck_to_plastic_bag_at_nest_in_Bayville_[_Beverly_Morris_photo
Osprey stuck to plastic bag at nest in Bayville, NJ. (Beverly Morris photo)
Support is growing with more than two dozen towns and cities enacting their own regulations from large cities like Hoboken and Jersey City to Shore towns like Bradley Beach and Point Pleasant to curb the 4.5 billion plastic bags and other products given to New Jersey shoppers each year.
But a coalition of plastics manufacturers, convenience stores, supermarkets and other businesses that turned out in force at a September legislative hearing to oppose the bill say the measure will cost jobs and do little to curb litter.

Lobbying lawmakers
Leading the way is the American Progressive Bag Alliance, which lobbies on behalf of manufacturers that employ 25,000 workers in 40 states and has fought against bans on its product in California, New York and other places across the country.

The group has hired New Jersey’s largest lobbying firm – Princeton Public Affairs – and the world’s largest public relations firm – Edelman – in its fight against a statewide ban.

New Jersey’s proposed ban “goes way further than anything any state or municipality has done,” Matt Seaholm, executive director of the bag alliance, said in an interview last month.

Seaholm said defeating New Jersey’s bill is on the top of his group’s national agenda. He intends to concentrate on lobbying lawmakers who have a bag manufacturer or plastics recycling facility in their district including the sponsor of the bill Sen. Bob Smith, D-Middlesex. Smith did not respond to a request for comment.

Unlike his organization’s campaign in California, Seaholm said his group would not be giving campaign donations to New Jersey lawmakers or political organizations. His organization raised more than $6 million to try to defeat California’s ban, which was ultimately approved by a public referendum in 2016.

“Our focus is working with legislators to help them understand the unintended consequences of anything they might do,” Seaholm said. “I would argue that the bill is trying to take a sledgehammer to a mosquito.”


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NJ enviros forego bird-in-hand plastic bag fee bill for harder-to-pass ban that adds Styrofoam and straws

NJ State Senator Bob Smith (center) encourages colleagues to support a ban on plastic bags,

By Frank Brill, EnviroPolitics Editor 

A month ago, New Jersey’s environmental community was split over legislation that sought to wean shoppers off single-use, plastic, grocery-store bags by charging a 5-cent fee per bag. 


Bill supporters hoped the fee would convince consumers to opt for reusable, heavy-duty plastic or cloth bags that many stores offer for $1. 

Environmentalists who preferred legislation banning the sale of single-use bags said their more dramatic approach was needed to respond faster and more effectively to plastics’ growing environmental threat.
  
The goal of both the fee and ban camps was to reduce the disposal of plastic bags that litter neighborhoods, show up on state beaches, in highway drains, streams, and in the ocean, too, where they are ingested by fish and contaminate the food chain.

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When a fee bill landed on Gov. Phi Murphy’s desk in June, he was lobbied by environmentalists on both sides. Those favoring the fee approach believed that half a loaf was better than none. They recognized that the fee bill had passed the Legislature in part because the influential grocery store lobby (New Jersey Food Council) had dropped its long-standing opposition to a bag fee in return for a guarantee that the legislation would prohibit, town-by-town fees or bans. 

Murphy eventually vetoed the fee bill and signaled that a more comprehensive approach was needed. By default, that meant that he would entertain legislation banning the bags.

Proponents of a bag fee had feared that an outright ban might lose the grocers’ support and trigger wider opposition from the business community. They were right. 

At a three-hour committee meeting Thursday in Trenton, members of the Senate Environment and Energy Committee were besieged with arguments against–and for–an outright sales ban on plastic bags. The sponsor of that approach, committee chairman Bob Smith, had posted his bill, S-2776, which not only would ban single-use plastic bags but also the sale of plastic straws and Styrofoam.
 

***Related news coverage***

Ban bags and straws? N.J. proposal would be the strictest in the nation 
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NJ plastics ban could be one of the toughest in the nation


Smith said an aggressive approach was necessary to curb additional environmental damage. He cited statistics from recent studies that found an alarming increase in plastic products and plastic microbodies in the Passaic and Raritan rivers, as well as plastics counted during the annual Beach Sweeps conducted by Clean Ocean Action.

He called on his legislative colleagues to respond to this “serious environmental and public health crisis.”

A small sample of the testimony


NJ Sierra Club’s Jeff Tittel (click arrow above for video) gave the legislation rare high praise and predicted that it will encourage other states to follow. 


Mark Daniels of Novolex, however, told committee members that  S2776 could jeopardize a $70 million investment that his company is contemplating for their plastics and paper factories in Elizabeth and Logan Township. 

The NJ Food Council’s Mary Ellen Peppard said her members appreciate that the bill would prohibit individual municipalities from establishing plastic bag fees or bans. She asked for clarification on several provisions in the legislation. When Chairman Smith asked if New Jersey grocers would support the bill if their recommendations were met, she diplomatically did not provide a direct yes or no.   


What’s next?
The bill was released on a 4-1 vote with Kip Bateman providing the one Republican vote necessary. It now goes to the Senate Budget Committee which is not as green-leaning as Smith’s. In casting the get-out-of committee vote, Bateman (perhaps anticipating an eventual party-line decision) said he might go the other way if the measure gets to the Senate floor. 

One thing is sure. Senator Smith will have to make changes in order to lighten the collective weight of the bill’s current opponents. That’s common for bills as ambitious as this. 

You can expect to see a lot of events at which bill supporters will work to increase public awareness. Opponents will work behind the scenes, reminding lawmakers of the state’s troublesome business climate. 

Where they line up on S2776:

Support
Association of New Jersey Environmental Commissions
Association of New Jersey Recyclers

Environment New Jersey
Clean Ocean Action
Clean Water Action

Food and Water Watch
Humane Society of the United States
New Jersey Environmental Lobby
New Jersey League of Conservation Voters
New Jersey Audubon
Raritan Headwaters
Rutgers University

Sierra Club

Opposed
Alliance Center for Independence
Americans for Tax Reform

American Progressive Bag Alliance
Asian American Retailers Association
Chemistry Council of New Jersey
Commerce and Industry Association of New Jersey
Dart Container Corporation
National Federation of Independent Businesses
New Jersey Gasoline, Convenience Store Association
New Jersey Retail Merchants Association
Novolex


Seeking Amendments
New Jersey Business and Industry Association
New Jersey Farm Bureau
New Jersey Food Council
New Jersey Restaurant and Hospitality Association
New Jersey State Chamber of Commerce


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