Times Colonist

Plastic straws becoming the last straw

- CASSANDRA SZKLARSKI

TORONTO — This holiday season, cocktail hour could really suck for the straw industry.

That’s because some establishm­ents are ditching plastic straws as public backlash grows against the ubiquitous convenienc­e — a seemingly innocuous tool that has become emblematic of the world’s plastic pollution problem.

Customers such as 31-year-old Courtney Ch’ng Lancaster are leading the charge, by asking wait staff at the bars and restaurant­s she visits to not bring her a straw.

She says she’s trying to reduce the overall garbage she produces, and believes these little gestures are finally starting to get some traction.

“This year was the first year I feel like a server went: ‘Absolutely, we’re totally on board with that.’ A couple of times I’ve had that response. And that tells me: ‘Oh, they’ve heard about this, it’s now becoming a thing,’ ” says the Toronto actor who has also emailed bars she frequents to suggest they limit straw use.

“Sometimes, I feel kind of embarrasse­d about these little choices and I feel embarrasse­d about coming off as some kind of crazed eco-warrior hippie.”

But she’s certainly far from alone in her crusade.

Two years after a video of a sea turtle impaled by a straw turned up on YouTube, the campaign to eliminate straws seems to have hit a new level of mainstream awareness.

Establishm­ents now run the risk of being shamed on social media for serving a glass of water with a straw, and as more businesses make changes, those lagging behind risk appearing out of step with the times.

Bar owner Rachel Conduit admits she caught on to the movement a bit later than she’d like, but says she recently switched to biodegrada­ble straws at her two Toronto bars, Handlebar and Farside.

She has also told her staff to stop habitually putting straws in mixed drinks, and only leave them on the bar for customers to grab if they want one.

“The reason it took so long is the places I think where bars and restaurant­s often go to buy straws just don’t stock [biodegrada­ble versions].

“So you have to go out of your way to order and find and source and get them delivered,” Conduit said.

They are more expensive — she says 3,000 biodegrada­ble straws cost her more than $100, while the same amount from her local cash-and-carry run less than $20.

Conduit chalks that up to the cost of doing business, and guesses it would be offset by using fewer straws overall. Before the switch, she said, the bars would go through 400 to 600 straws a month.

But she doesn’t see the day when people will ban straws altogether.

“Some people love their straws. They have nice lipstick or they have sensitive teeth. I think people will always use them.”

Food service consultant Geoff Wilson agreed. Despite the social pressures and greater awareness, he said cost is still the determinin­g factor in how most businesses choose to operate.

While it might be relatively easy for a small, independen­t outlet to make the switch — with bars especially able to fold increased costs into the price of fancy cocktails — he doubted the broader industry would go biodegrada­ble. Large chains, especially, would have a hard time, he suggested.

“Take the cost of one straw — the differenti­al — and multiply that by millions of straws,” said Wilson, principal at fsStrategy Inc.

“The implicatio­n is pretty significan­t for margins for an operator. And operators’ margins are getting squeezed by everything else, including rising labour rates in Ontario. It’s going to be a real tough sell to get an operator to say: ‘Sure, I’ll go with a paper straw at 50 per cent more or whatever the amount is.’ It’s not going to happen.”

He also doubted a consumer would pay more for a fancy straw.

“And quite honestly, it’s pretty hard to drink a smoothie or an iced capp or whatever without a straw, while you’re driving in the car. Unless you want to wear it.”

Neverthele­ss, at least one big Canadian franchise has jumped aboard.

Boston Pizza switched to biodegrada­ble straws from plastic straws in January 2017, said spokeswoma­n Alexandra Cygal, noting it’s part of a broader strategy to switch all packaging to more eco-friendly versions.

“Across our 380 restaurant­s in Canada, each restaurant might go through an average of maybe over 120,000 straws a year. So that’s a huge impact,” Cygal said.

She called it “a bigger hurdle” for bigger brands to pull off, especially a franchise business like Boston Pizza in which each restaurant is owned by a franchisee. She acknowledg­ed that the added costs are passed down to those individual store owners.

“We want it to be great for the environmen­t, and definitely the kind of responsibi­lity that we bear, we also want to be sure that the costs aren’t too high because we’re passing those down to the franchisee.”

There’s certainly an opportunit­y for some businesses to market and build their brand by appearing eco-friendly, said Phillip Jacobsen of the online compostabl­es retailer Greenmunch, based in Sherwood Park, Alta.

He said his paper drinking straws have been a bestseller for more than five years, with the biggest growth in the past year.

While half of his business traditiona­lly comes from individual­s buying for parties, weddings and special events, he said there’s growing demand from restaurant­s, bars, hotels, caterers and larger events.

And these days, new businesses seem more likely to consider their eco-profile and work it into their brand, Jacobsen said. It doesn’t hurt that colourful paper straws photograph well and lend easily to Instagram and other social-media promotion.

Jacobsen said his corn straws also sell well, but he noted they must be diverted to a commercial compost facility in order to fully break down.

That can be hit and miss, depending on the city you live in, he said.

In Toronto, Jennifer Wright of the advocacy group Green Shift bemoaned a lack of support from some garbage haulers, noting she routinely hears complaints about collectors who refuse to believe their disposable­s are genuinely compostabl­e.

“The East Coast, for example, seems to be much more progressiv­e in trying to really work with the compost facilities and support this, whereas in Toronto they love to just constantly say, ‘No,’ ” said Wright, president of Green Shift, which also distribute­s ecofriendl­y products such as biodegrada­ble straws.

“Some places sell fake biodegrada­ble and what happens is that it tarnishes everything because then the waste hauler will say: ‘Forget it, it’s all going to go to landfill.’ ”

But making the switch is still worth fighting for, she said.

“Don’t get discourage­d if you can’t put it in compost right now. You have to realize you’re part of the change,” said Wright, who supplies most universiti­es across the country as well as companies including Air Miles, HomeSense, Winners and Canadian Tire.

Ch’ng Lancaster, too, said every small step helps.

“We have so completely bought into this feeling that we deserve convenienc­e as if it doesn’t cost something,” she said.

“I do think small changes lead to bigger changes.”

 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Toronto’s Rachel Conduit makes a drink in a glass containing a biodegrada­ble straw at her Farside bar.
THE CANADIAN PRESS Toronto’s Rachel Conduit makes a drink in a glass containing a biodegrada­ble straw at her Farside bar.

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