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San Diego Eyeing Ban on Plastic Bags

By  GENE CUBBISON

Updated 10:21 AM PDT, Thu, Dec 4, 2008

Related Topics: San Diego

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Get ready to shell out a nickel a bag each time you get groceries.  Or you can just go green.
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Get ready to shell out a nickel a bag each time you get groceries. Or you can just go green.

 

A move to stop supermarkets and drugstores from offering customers plastic carryout  bags is making its way through San Diego's City Hall.

Banning Plastic Bags

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A move to stop supermarkets and drugstores from offering customers plastic carryout bags is making its way through San Diego's City Hall.

Several California cities already have banned the bags, despite legal action from the grocery and plastics industries.

Studies show the average Californian is given more than 500 of these "single-use" bags a year.

And, that billions wind up littering the landscape, waterways and oceans.

San Diego is now looking at promoting a switch to paper, and -- ultimately -- reusable cloth bags.

There'd be no choice of 'paper or plastic' under the proposed San Diego ordinance, modeled after laws in San Francisco, Malibu and Manhattan Beach.

Plastic carryouts would be off-limits at big supermarkets and chain drugstores --  whose lobbyists argue that cities should do more to promote recycling the bags, not just ban them.

But backers of the measure say only 4 percent of plastic bags get recycled, because it just doesn't pay.

"It costs $4,000 to process and recycle one ton of plastic bags, which can then be sold on the commodities market for $32," Coronado resident Barbara Denny told the Council's Natural Resources & Culture Committee at a hearing Wednesday.  "So it's just really not a solution."  

At that same hearing, industry representatives warned that a plastics ban would create a run on paper bags -- for which the stores likely would begin charging customers.

"On the surface it may not sound that bad," said Matthew Dodson, governmental relations director for the California Grocers Assn.  "But when you look at the technology and processes that are used to produce single-use paper bags, there are fairly dramatic and negative impacts."

And that brings the argument around to cloth bags -- whose use is growing, and encouraged by nickel discounts from a lot of supermarkets.

Are shoppers ready to make that switch?

"My sense is, 30 percent of the people jump on board right away; another 30-40 percent are waiting for everybody else to come on," says Richard Anthony, an activist with Zero Waste San Diego.

"And then we'll deal with the recalcitrants,"  Anthony said in an interview.  "But I think it as to happen.  We don't have enough stuff on this planet, and it's getting worse.  And we have to change the way we do things."

The Council committee referred the measure to the City Attorney's office for analysis and a report to the full council in 90 days.

Meantime, other cities around the county are looking at varying approaches to the problem -- knowing that industry lawyers are 'on call' to take them to court.

Comments (5)

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  • Julia Friday, Dec 5 at 6:43 PM FLAG COMMENT I stopped by the grocery store today to pick up a few things.. A 10 pound bag of potatoes, which I told the checker "not to bag" (the bag they are in is strong enough),the bagging guy double bags them. The 2 gallons of milk, I also asked him not to bag,( they have handles which are stronger than the plastic bags they put them in) they were each going to be doulble bagged, until I stopped him on the second one. a 6 packet of d ... MORE >
  • Carson Friday, Dec 5 at 5:17 AM FLAG COMMENT If people would recycle thosse bags, we would require no new law to restrict them. If the police would enforce laws against drunkenness we would need no law banning beer from the beach, if people would follow their doctor's instructions we could afford public health care, if people would wear their seatbelts we would need no law to force them, if...
  • voter Thursday, Dec 4 at 1:00 PM FLAG COMMENT I want the government to LEAVE ME ALONE!!!
  • Poff Thursday, Dec 4 at 12:38 PM FLAG COMMENT Dumb. Why does everything have to be dictated by a law? Try getting the large grocery companies to promote reusable bags more heavily and educate the public. It would save the companies money if they get people to use reusable bags. Besides, the plastic bags are useful. I have reusable bags but I still get a few plastic bags here and there to use around the house.
  • Bob Thursday, Dec 4 at 1:35 AM FLAG COMMENT We're going to ban ourselves back to 1920 when all is said and done. Another ban, another tax, when will this end? Maybe they should do what is done on glass and cans. Charge a deposit but encourage the stores not to promote returning them there. Instead, charge the citizen for recycling pickup and keep the profits from the recycling. What more can you ask for? Tax on buying, tax on disposing! Anything modeled after a plan ... MORE >

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