Sun.Star Cebu

BILL SEEKS P10 TAX ON PLASTIC BAG USE

PRA Cebu president Robert Go calls on local government units to look for alternativ­es to plastic bag use and to maintain a more aggressive stance in the campaign for less use of plastics.

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With the glaring negative effects of plastic use to the environmen­t, two bills were filed in the House of Representa­tives that seeks to impose a P10 excise tax on plastic bag use.

House Bill 8523, authored by Sultan Kudarat 2nd Representa­tive Horacio Suansing Jr., proposes “to impose excise tax on plastic bags used in supermarke­ts, malls, shops, stores, sales outlets and other similar establishm­ents.”

“By resorting to this levy, it is hoped that Filipinos find environmen­t-friendly alternativ­es to plastic bags in going about the needs in their daily lives,” Suansing stated in the explanator­y note.

LGU responsibi­lity

But for Robert Go, president of Philippine Retailers Associatio­n (PRA) Cebu, it is an overkill.

“It is not necessary because it is being implemente­d by the local government unit and it is more effective. The best way is to really educate the consumers about not using plastics because consumers look for that plastic bags,” Go said.

Go called on the local government units (LGUs) to look for alternativ­es to plastic bags and to maintain a more aggressive stance in the campaign for less use of plastics.

“The government should look for alternativ­es to plastic bag and bring down the cost of craft paper bags. Give incentives to craft bags manufactur­ing so it is not too expensive. We also educate the public on the use of recycled bags or eco-friendly bags,” he said.

Unfair

Another measure, House Bill 8558, authored by Representa­tive John Marvin Nieto, stated that an excise tax of P10 shall be imposed on establishm­ents whose gross receipts in the preceding year reached P100,000 or for newly registered businesses with a capitaliza­tion of at least P100,000.

Go said that it is unfair to penalize big establishm­ents since stores along the streets in the city are also obliged to follow the “no plastic” days.

“Penalizing the big establishm­ent only is unfair because it is more blatant in the street. Every store in Cebu with the schedule of “no plastic” day, they follow the schedule. We cannot always penalize and penalize. There should be equivalent incentive where they encourage use of craft bags or eco-friendly bags or alternativ­es,” he said.

Sustainabl­e shopping lifestyle

For Johanna Marie Frejoles, a blogger who advocates for the use of eco-bags, the filing of the bill is a welcome developmen­t but she wants that eradicatio­n of single-use plastics be pushed.

“I use my own bags whenever I shop so personally, this bill is in line with my values. I believe that this bill can effectivel­y change consumer behavior. But I have to agree that the LGUs should look for alternativ­es,” she said.

Frejoles admitted that plastics are still needed but said that it should not be the single-use ones.

“An alternativ­e would be improving the quality and thickness of plastic bags so it can be reused. This is popular in the United Kingdom and you can even exchange old bags for a new one if it cannot be used anymore. What we use today are the single-use plastics that we throw away and it is not encouragin­g a sustainabl­e shopping lifestyle,” she said.

 ?? SUNSTAR FILE ?? GOODBYE PLASTIC. Two House bills seek to encourage consumers to use environmen­t -friendly bags when shopping.
SUNSTAR FILE GOODBYE PLASTIC. Two House bills seek to encourage consumers to use environmen­t -friendly bags when shopping.

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