Las Vegas Review-Journal

Coronaviru­s exposes folly of plastic bag bans

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RECENTLY, many politician­s were in a hurry to ban plastic bags. California and Hawaii banned them, then New York. Then Oregon, Connecticu­t, Maine and Vermont. More than 400 cities did, too.

Why? Because plastic bags are evil, didn’t you know?

“Look at the damage done by plastic bags! It is everywhere!” New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo complained. A Washington state senator cited “videos of animals choked by plastics, tangled in garbage!”

So what should we use instead of plastic? Cloth bags! They’re reusable! “Certainly the way to go!” New Jersey’s assembly speaker said.

But now politician­s are canceling their bans. Instead, they’re banning the once praised reusable bags. It’s because of COVID-19, of course. Studies found reusable bags crawling with dangerous bacteria.

But environmen­tal groups, such as Greenpeace, call those disease fears misinforma­tion. “There are no studies or evidence that reusable bags are transmitti­ng viruses,” Alex Truelove of the Public Interest Research Group said in my new video.

He’s right. There are no human studies, but COVID-19 is so new. Millions of piglets died from swine coronaviru­s. The U.S. Department of Agricultur­e concluded that reusable feed bags were probably the cause.

Still, even now, some politician­s can’t wait to ban plastic again. Boston Mayor Marty Walsh said, “As soon as this crisis is over, we’ll go back to all paper bags and reusable bags.”

Supermarke­t executive Andrea Catsimatid­is complains that “politician­s are always just looking for something to do.” She points out that paper bags cost five times what plastic costs: “When you’re talking billions of bags, it really adds up.”

And paper bags don’t hold as much. They rip. Plastic is more convenient. Why must politician­s take away what’s convenient?

“Over two-thirds of everything we use is not recycled or composted and ends up in a landfill,” Truelove complained.

So what? People think America is running out of room for landfills, but that’s not true.

“All America’s trash for the next century would fit in one landfill just 18 miles square,” environmen­tal economist Ross Mckitrick said. And modern landfills hardly pollute. They’re surrounded by layers of clay and plastic that keep nasty stuff in the garbage from leaking out.

But what about all that plastic in the ocean? Plastic bags are sometimes eaten by animals. Some sea turtles mistake the bags for jellyfish and then starve. Islands of floating garbage have formed in the Pacific Ocean.

Green groups have convinced Americans that we are to blame. But we aren’t. Even if you litter — and today, fewer Americans do — your litter is unlikely to end up in an ocean.

Almost all of the plastic in oceans comes from Asia and Africa. Less than 1 percent comes from North America. In other words, banning plastic bags in America will accomplish roughly … nothing.

What it will do is inconvenie­nce Americans and make some of us sick.

“If we are concerned about other countries’ waste going into their river systems,” Mckitrick said, “there are better things we can do. We can share technology with them so they process their waste better. That’s better than imposing on consumers’ tiresome inconvenie­nces in hopes that it will somehow change behavior on the other side of the planet.”

Politician­s “looking for something to do” routinely do more harm than good.

John Stossel is author of “Give Me a Break: How I Exposed Hucksters, Cheats, and Scam Artists and Became the Scourge of the Liberal Media.”

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