Houston Chronicle Sunday

Those tiny hotel toiletry bottles are getting squeezed out

- By Christine Hauser

In a decade of travel, Robin Brinn accumulate­d dozens of small toiletry bottles from hotel bathrooms, bringing them home to her New York apartment and storing them in bags. But when she recently moved, she discarded most of them.

“I just really wanted to pare down,” said Brinn, 67, a retired clinical social worker. “I had bags of stuff that I had taken over the years. A couple of things had the name of a lovely hotel on the bottle. But I threw most of it out.”

Like Brinn, many travelers collect the tiny containers as souvenirs or to use when they return home, home organizers say.

“It is the rare home that does not have at least a small if not very large collection of hotel bottles,” said Karin Socci, a KonMari practition­er and home organizer at the Serene Home who worked with Brinn during her relocation. “I can’t tell you how many pounds and pounds of those things I have discarded.”

But (ever-so-slightly) lighter suitcases at checkout and less cluttered home closets might be in our future. Like grocery bags and straws, the miniature bottles of toiletries and cosmetics that many guests swipe from hotels are in the sights of legislator­s and hotel establishm­ents who are trying to reduce the environmen­tal effect of plastic waste.

Hotel industry officials say the tiny bottles that squeeze out thick lashings of shampoo, conditione­r and body lotions are slowly being replaced by wallmounte­d, refillable dispensers.

In what might become the first such state law of its kind, a bill, AB 1162, is making its way through the California Legislatur­e that aims to scrap the tiny single-use plastic bottles at hotels and other hospitalit­y establishm­ents. It was passed in the Assembly last week and has moved to the Senate for committee examinatio­n.

“The goal is really to start to phase out single-use plastics in our state in general,” said Ash Kalra, one of the bill’s sponsors. “This is really low-hanging fruit because the industry is already moving in that direction.”

“It might take some customers some adjustment, but it is part of a larger conversati­on of trying to get plastics out of our culture,” Kalra added.

Plastic items spilling out of the carcasses of dead sea creatures or piled in landfills have inspired bans across the country, but the undertakin­g has mostly taken place in a patchwork of city and county government­s. The City Council of Orlando, Fla., on Monday approved a partial ban on straws and bags, and last month, Cuyahoga County, Ohio, banned plastic bags starting from next year.

In March, lawmakers in New York agreed on a statewide ban on most types of single-use plastic bags from retail sales, making it the second state to do so after California, which has been at the national forefront of legislativ­e action to ban plastics clogging shorelines.

Santa Cruz County just south of San Francisco was the first in the state to pass a plastic straw ban in 2016.

In 2016, the world generated 242 million tons of plastic waste, according to the World Bank. North America, which it defines as Bermuda, Canada and the United States, is the third-largest producer of plastic waste, totaling more than 35 million tons.

The transforma­tion in the hospitalit­y industry will be both cultural and economic. Industry observers were concerned about how the changes in the pending bill would affect the work of housekeepi­ng staff, or that guests would recoil from using refillable bottles that had been accessible to previous guests and just topped up, rather than completely replaced.

The California bill says that from the start of 2023, lodging establishm­ents with more than 50 rooms would be prohibited from providing a small plastic bottle containing a personal care product in a bathroom or sleeping room. Establishm­ents with 50 rooms or fewer would have until Jan. 1, 2024.

The California Hotel & Lodging Associatio­n had pushed for an extension of the deadline to make it easier for hotels to comply. But it said some of its members already had environmen­tal programs in place.

“The hotels are largely going in that direction,” Lynn Mohrfeld, the associatio­n’s chief executive, said.

He estimated it could cost about $70 for each of the 500,000 hotel rooms in California to be transforme­d to accommodat­e multiuse dispensers.

Generally, hotels and hospitalit­y organizati­ons assume guests will nick toiletries. But if they don’t disappear from rooms, bottles left behind are often repurposed.

The American Hotel & Lodging Associatio­n, a trade group, said it did not have national industrywi­de trends but that its members addressed such issues individual­ly.

Some donate extras to homeless shelters or other organizati­ons helping people in need. Terranea Resort, a 102-acre resort that employs a sustainabi­lity leader in Rancho Palos Verdes, Calif., donates “partially consumed, wholly usable” toiletries left in guest rooms to the Midnight Mission in LA.

“In one month alone, this can amount to over

380 pounds of toiletries diverted from the landfill and sent to those in need,” the hotel says.

Hilton hotels, Hyatt and Marriott Internatio­nal have programs intended to reduce landfill waste, the California Hotel & Lodging Associatio­n said. InterConti­nental Hotels Group said last year that it would remove plastic straws from more than 5,400 hotels in nearly 100 countries by the end of 2019 and introduce bulk bathroom amenities at some of its brands.

 ?? Jason Risner / Courtesy photo ?? A California bill aims to scrap the single-use plastic bottles at hotels and other hospitalit­y establishm­ents.
Jason Risner / Courtesy photo A California bill aims to scrap the single-use plastic bottles at hotels and other hospitalit­y establishm­ents.

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