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May 14 - Malibu Set to Ban Plastic Bags

The Malibu City Council is expected to unanimously adopt an ordinance this week that will make it the fourth municipality in the State, after San Francisco, Oakland and Fairfax, to ban plastic bags. Tami Abdollah writes in the LA times that the law will help local governments beat the costly problem of plastic urban litter pollution:

Environmental groups hailed Malibu's ordinance as a model that they hoped others would emulate, to keep the bags from clogging storm drains and drifting to sea, where they can kill marine life....It costs California taxpayers about $25 million a year to collect and dispose of plastic bags, according to Californians Against Waste.

Read the Complete Article

CAW and Plastic Bags:

  • Support AB 2058, which will require retailers recycle 7 out of every 10 bags handed out by 2011.

 


May 9 - Press Conference in the Works for Plastic Bag Reduction Bill, AB 2058

Preliminary Release:

AB 2058 (Plastic Bags) Press Conference

Where: Santa Monica (Specific location TBA)

When: Saturday May 17, 11 AM

More About AB 2058:

-Author: Assembly Member Lloyd Levine (LA), Coauthors: Assembly Members Mike Davis (LA) and Julia Brownley (LA)

-Co-sponsored by Californians Against Waste and LA County

-Also supported by: City and County of San Francisco Department of the Environment, East Bay Municipal Utilities District, Heal the Bay, Marin County Board of Supervisors, Northern California Recycling Association, Sonoma County Waste Management Agency

-Would enact toughest restrictions on single-use bags in country

-Would require retailers to recycle 7 out of every 10 bags handed out by 2011

-If benchmarks are not met, they would be required to charge a 25 cent per-bag fee

 


May 9 - Pacific Grove Bans Polystyrene Food Packaging

The Pacific Grove City Council has voted unanimously to ban foamed polystyrene takeout food containers, joining a number of California cities that have done so in the past year.

Kevin Howe of the Monterey County Herald writes that it had already been policy to not use polystyrene in city facilities:

Polystyrene foam "is highly durable, persisting longer than any type of litter," City Manager Jim Colangelo said in a report to the council. It is lightweight, and its tendency to break into tiny pieces causes it to float or be blown into the Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary, where birds and other animals eat it, often with fatal results.  Biodegradeable takeout packaging made of paper, sugarcane, corn by-products and potato starch is available locally, Colangelo said, and the council made it city policy in 1989 to not purchase or use polystyrene if biodegradeable alternatives are available.

Read the Complete Article>>

CAW and Polystyrene Litter Pollution:

  • CAW has supported many local communities that have banned foamed polystyrene takeout food packaging.
  • CAW is sponsoring AB 904 (Feuer), which would require that all takeout packaging by made from recyclable or compostable materials. 

 


May 8 - San Jose Moves Closer to Banning Plastic Bags

A motion to draft an ordinance that will decrease plastic bag distribution and littering--possibly through a plastic bag ban and a fee on paper bags--passed a San Jose City Council Committee this week.  Stephen Baxter of the San Jose Mercury News writes that after ten years of unsuccessfully trying to recycling plastic bags in their curbside programs, the City may be ready for a ban:

City environmental services officials said on May 5 that San Jose's trash contractors have struggled to clean used plastic bags and to find steady buyers for recycled bags since curbside plastic collection began 10 years ago. With a lack of buyers, they said that half of bags collected for recycling in the city end up in landfills, and the ones that are recycled often are chugged to Asian buyers by diesel ship.

Read the Complete Article>>

CAW and Plastic Bags:

  • CAW supports the San Jose ordinance and is sponsoring AB 2058 (Levine), which would require retailers to divert 70% of plastic bags by 2011 or be forced to charge a 25 cent fee on plastic.
  • More about Plastic Bags