Lodi News-Sentinel

Sweeping law to phase out single-use plastics in California

- Susanne Rust and Anabel Sosa

LOS ANGELES — Striking a blow against a pernicious form of pollution, California lawmakers on Thursday passed the nation’s most far-reaching restrictio­ns on single-use plastics and packaging, with Gov. Gavin Newsom expected to sign the bill Thursday.

The legislatio­n heads off a November ballot measure that many lawmakers and the plastics industry hoped to avoid, and it puts California at the forefront of national efforts to eliminate polystyren­e and other plastics that litter the environmen­t, degrade into toxic particles and increasing­ly inhabit human blood, tissue and organs.

Sen. Ben Allen, D-Santa Monica, has tried for years to get state legislator­s to tackle the growing plastic pollution crisis but has faced opposition from the plastics industry and some food container manufactur­ers.

Late Wednesday night, the California Assembly passed the bill 67-2, with the Senate passing it Thursday morning with 29 "ayes" and no “nos.” Backers applauded.

“With this legislatio­n, California continues its tradition of global environmen­tal leadership — tackling a major problem in a way that will move and grow markets, create incentives for investment, and give tools to other states and countries to help play their part in this fight,” said Allen in a statement.

For the past six months, a team of roughly two dozen negotiator­s have hammered out language designed to reduce plastic, increase recycling and shift the economic burden of waste disposal to plastic producers and packagers — all the while trying to find language that would satisfy those producers, as well as waste managers, packaging companies and environmen­talists.

The bill requires that by Jan. 1, 2028, at least 30% of plastic items sold, distribute­d or imported into the state are recyclable. By 2032, that number rises to 65%. It also calls for a 25% reduction in single-use plastic waste by 2032 and provides CalRecycle with the authority to increase that percentage if the amount of plastic in the economy and waste stream grows.

In the case of expanded polystyren­e, that number needs to reach 25% by 2025. If the number isn’t hit, the ubiquitous, hard-to-recycle foamy plastic will be banned.

“It’s a de facto ban,” said Jay Ziegler with the Nature Conservanc­y, noting that current recycling rates for polystyren­e are in the low single digits, making it improbable that a 25% recycling target could be met in three years.

Plastics waste has become an increasing scourge nationwide as plastics packaging has become ubiquitous in groceries, fast-food outlets and other businesses, and consumers — especially during the pandemic — have embraced take-out items delivered in single-use packaging. The resulting waste pollutes marine environmen­ts and clogs landfills, in part because of challenges in recycling plastics, including China’s decision to end imports of plastics waste several years ago.

The bill is based on a policy concept known as Extended Producer Responsibi­lity, which shifts the responsibi­lity of waste from consumers, towns and cities to polluters. It also gives plastics companies extensive oversight and authority in terms of the program’s management, execution and reporting, via a Producer Responsibi­lity Organizati­on, which will be made up of industry representa­tives.

Among various duties, the group will be responsibl­e for collecting fees from its participat­ing organizati­ons to pay for the program, as well as an annual $500-million fee every year that will be directed to plastic pollution mitigation fund.

CalRecycle has ultimate authority over the program.

Negotiator­s, including Heidi Sanborn, director of the California Stewardshi­p Council, said past failures in Extended Producer Responsibi­lity laws influenced how this legislatio­n was written, enabling the authors to identify areas that could be abused or ignored.

In 2010, the state created a similar producer responsibi­lity law mandating carpet recycling. Overseen by the industry, the target was 24% recycling by 2020. Recycling rates decreased after the program was instituted. CalRecycle sued the group for $3.3 million in 2017 for failing to meet its target, and in 2021, they settled for $1.175 million.

In another case that involved California’s Paint Care program, the manufactur­ers ultimately sued the state and used the funding from the program to cover their litigation costs.

Language in this new plastic bill includes clear dates and consequenc­es for failure, including a $50,000-per-day fine on any company or “entity” not in compliance with the law, as well as directions for how collected fees can and cannot be used.

“We’ve learned from mistakes in the past,” said Sanborn. “This legislatio­n is solid.”

Not everyone is happy. A front group for the plastics industry, the Environmen­tal Solutions Coalition, has been sending mailers to households.

The American Chemistry Council’s vice president of plastics, Joshua Baca, issued a statement on Wednesday saying that although his organizati­on had worked alongside Allen and the negotiator­s for months, the final version “is not the optimal legislatio­n to drive California towards a circular economy.”

 ?? GINA FERAZZI/LOS ANGELES TIMES/TNS ?? Plastic trash lies on the beach after heavy rains near the Santa Ana River in California in 2018. State lawmakers on June 30, 2022, passed legislatio­n to phase out sales of single-use plastic containers by 2032.
GINA FERAZZI/LOS ANGELES TIMES/TNS Plastic trash lies on the beach after heavy rains near the Santa Ana River in California in 2018. State lawmakers on June 30, 2022, passed legislatio­n to phase out sales of single-use plastic containers by 2032.

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