Los Angeles Times

Don’t ban plastic bag bans

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Last year, California became the first state in the nation to ban single-use plastic bags when voters passed Propositio­n 67. Last week, Michigan became the seventh state in the nation to ban single-use plastic bag bans.

Sadly, it joins a clique of states with Republican-controlled legislatur­es that have taken the environmen­tally backward step of stamping out the spread of grassroots plastic bag bans by communitie­s concerned about this destructiv­e plastic menace.

Missouri, Idaho, Arizona, Wisconsin, Indiana and Florida are the other states that have adopted the preemption measures pushed by bag manufactur­ers, which are the main opponents of the local bans. Although such efforts are certainly not good for the environmen­t in landlocked states, they’re particular­ly distressin­g in states adjacent to waterways, such as Florida and Michigan. Very few of the 100 billion single-use plastic bags used in the United States each year are recycled. Lightweigh­t and quick to escape the trash can, the bags are consistent­ly among the top five forms of litter found in beach cleanups. Worse are the bags that remain in the ocean, where they break down into small bite-sized pellets that are harmful to sea creatures. There is a reason that California’s coastal cities pioneered the local prohibitio­ns on single-use plastic bags that led eventually to a statewide ban.

Why would these seven states take a stand against localism to protect one small industry that may not even have factories there? It’s not about sound environmen­tal policy. Instead, these are partisan political moves by state lawmakers to stop communitie­s from enacting policies Republican­s view as hostile to business. When the Missouri Legislatur­e adopted its preemption in 2015, for example, it also banned cities from adopting living wage ordinances. Both are typically liberal policies that conservati­ve politician­s find objectiona­ble.

Cities and counties, by contrast, are driven to ban bags more by practical community concerns than ideology. The scourge of plastic bags is an issue for local government­s, because that’s who has to deal with the cleanup costs. In California, the pre-ban yearly bill for taxpayers was about $428 million.

The intent of preemption laws is to halt the momentum of local bans before they grow into a statewide movement, as happened here. California­ns saw through the industry’s flimsy arguments that bans are costly, unsanitary and ineffectiv­e (they’re not). The citizens in these seven preemption states — and any others that consider adopting similar laws — should see through the motives of their lawmakers and fight for the right to decide whether to ban the bags in their own communitie­s.

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