Las Vegas Review-Journal

California law bars restaurant­s from pushing plastic straws

- By Sophia Bollag The Associated Press

SACRAMENTO, Calif. — If you want a straw with your drink or a soda with your child’s meal at a California restaurant, you’ll need to ask for them starting next year.

A law signed Thursday by Gov. Jerry Brown makes California the first state to bar full-service restaurant­s from automatica­lly giving out single-use plastic straws. Another law he approved requires milk or water to be the default drink sold with kids’ meals at fast-food and full-service restaurant­s.

Neither law is an outright ban on straws or sugary drinks in kids’ meals. But some Republican­s have called the measures government overreach by the heavily Democratic state.

California restaurant­s that don’t comply with the new straw law will get two warnings before being fined up to $300 per year. It will apply only to full-service restaurant­s, not fastfood establishm­ents.

Democratic lawmakers who support the policy call it a small step toward reducing ocean pollution.

Brown, who has made environmen­tal issues a signature priority, pointed to the large amount of plastic dumped in oceans every year that can kill whales and fish and contaminat­e people’s food and water supplies.

“Plastic has helped advance innovation in our society, but our infatuatio­n with single-use convenienc­e has led to disastrous consequenc­es,” Brown said in a statement. “Plastics, in all forms — straws, bottles, packaging, bags, etc. — are choking the planet.”

California’s law doesn’t go as far as those in cities, including San Francisco and Seattle, that ban straws outright.

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