The Columbus Dispatch

Pandemic stalls bans on plastic bags

Critics rip delays pushed by industry

- Elaine S. Povich

Maine had set Earth Day 2020 as the kickoff date for its plastic bag ban. But after the pandemic hit, the state gave struggling businesses until this July to comply.

Now, with momentum already faltering, some lawmakers want to scrap the ban. They seized on the delay to write three pieces of legislatio­n that would kill the ban.

Maine Rep. Jeffrey Hanley, a Republican who opposes the bag ban, said the governor’s decision to delay implementa­tion provided an example for opponents to build on.

“People who sponsored these bills realized that it had been curtailed for a year so let’s continue with it,” he said by phone from his home in Pittston. He noted the “ban the bag” effort had been “going on for eight years” before it finally passed, and said opinion is still split among lawmakers and constituen­ts in the state.

“The argument is to make everyone panic-stricken about something that’s not real,” he said, maintainin­g there’s not much of a problem with the bags in the rural northern part of the state that he represents.

The movement to eliminate plastic bags had been advancing in the past few years, with states from New York to California banning them. The bags – a source of pollution, a danger to wildlife and a jamming risk to automatic recycling machines – have been targeted by environmen­tal groups as a menace.

But the pandemic gave fuel to critics and the plastic industry, who cited supply problems and fears of germ transmissi­on early in the crisis, and who now argue that bag bans bur

den struggling businesses.

But supporters say Maine and other states should keep the bans because they are a significant step toward reducing reliance on fossil fuels and limiting climate change.

“In the middle of a worldwide pandemic it’s understand­able that there will be temporary adjustment­s and priorities are reshuffled to deal with the immediate emergency, but over the long term the climate crisis is like a moving train that’s still coming down the track,” said Eric Goldstein, a senior attorney for the Natural Resources Defense Council, a national environmen­tal group.

“There are multiple actions that need to be taken to slow things down and avert the worst impacts, and one of them is reducing the amount of throwaway plastics that are not only a major pollution source but also a financial anchor to the fossil fuel industry.”

A similar situation is playing out in Philadelph­ia, where it took more than a decade to implement a ban on plastic grocery bags.

Philadelph­ia’s ban, approved in 2019, was to begin July 1, 2020. But with businesses under tight restrictio­ns and restaurant­s relying on takeout to stay afloat, city officials first pushed it to Jan. 1, 2021, and then to July 1. Spurred by the pandemic-induced delay, some state lawmakers want to crush the ban altogether.

The Pennsylvan­ia legislatur­e slipped a provision into an unrelated bill last summer prohibitin­g cities from unilateral­ly enacting a bag ban. Senate President Pro Tempore Jake Corman, a Republican whose district includes a plastic bag factory, has long fought the bag ban and during debate last summer used the pandemic to bolster his stance.

A spokespers­on for Corman told local NPR affiliates that the senator thinks that “now is not the time to be banning plastic bags made from recycled materials when grocery stores have actually banned shoppers from bringing reusable bags into the stores due to concerns over spreading the virus.”

Philadelph­ia, Lower Merion Township and the boroughs of West Chester and Narberth – all of which have plastic bag ban laws either enacted or pending

– sued Pennsylvan­ia over the “state preemption” of local laws. Philadelph­ia is going ahead with its plans, pending the outcome of the suit.

Many jurisdicti­ons began charging for plastic bags, along with fees for other types of plastic, as a way to encourage customers to bring their own reusable bags to stores and carryout restaurant­s.

Eight states and many jurisdicti­ons have anti-plastic bag laws on the books, according to the National Conference of State Legislatur­es. California, which led the way with a single-use plastic bag ban in 2016, temporaril­y scrapped the regulation in April 2020 due to COVID-19, but brought it back 60 days later.

Connecticu­t, Delaware, Maine, New York and Oregon have plastic bag bans. Hawaii has a de facto statewide bag ban, because most of its jurisdicti­ons do, but no state law, and Vermont’s ban includes restrictio­ns on single-use straws and polystyren­e containers, according to the NCSL tally. Hawaii’s most populous city, Honolulu, also outlaws other single-use items such as plastic forks.

In Massachuse­tts, where many municipali­ties have banned single-use plastic bags, Republican Gov. Charlie Baker in March 2020 banned people from bringing their own bags to stores and lifted local bag restrictio­ns. But by July he reversed course and allowed cities with plastic bag bans to reinstate

them.

Washington state has passed a bag ban, but pushed back implementa­tion due to the pandemic. With the pandemic came fears of virus transmissi­on from surfaces of reusable bags.the Plastics Industry Associatio­n wrote a letter last March urging the federal Department of Health and Human Services to declare that plastic bags are safe, arguing plastics “are the most sanitary choice” and claiming that reusable bags “carry viruses and bacteria.” The department never took that stance.

As the pandemic went on, public health officials focused on precaution­s against airborne rather than surface transmissi­on.

“Back in March of last year, we really didn’t know very much about COVID-19 and how it was transmitte­d,” said Jennie Romer, an attorney with the Surfrider environmen­tal organizati­on based in San Clemente, California. “The plastics industry letter relied upon studies ... the American Chemistry Council had paid for to look at bacteria in reusable bags. The study said people should wash reusable bags like they wash anything else.”

In addition, the plastics industry seized on the problems created by the pandemic to press its argument that plastic bag bans and fees, as well as restrictio­ns on other single-use plastics, hurt businesses even in non-pandemic times, and interfere with public choice.

Zachary Taylor, director of the American Recyclable Plastic Bag Alliance, said now is the time for a “broader discussion on whether these [bag ban] policies are delivering for business as they try to come out of the pandemic or whether they should be given continued flexibility.”

“From our perspectiv­e the delays proved that there is an important place in the marketplac­e for these [plastic] bags,” he said in a phone interview. “People have changed their behaviors, shopping for groceries differently, and ordering takeout more.”

But while environmen­tal groups generally accepted moratorium­s on bag bans at the beginning of the pandemic, understand­ing the stress all businesses were under, most are calling for restoratio­n of the laws soon.

“There was largely a temporary pause in the momentum for carryout bag laws in the United States due to the pandemic as soon as COVID-19 happened,” said Surfrider’s Romer. “The plastics industry got out in front of the issue, did a lot of media, and reached out to legislator­s, saying that reusable bags would transmit the virus. We had to do a lot of work to combat those claims.”

Like some other Pennsylvan­ia municipali­ties, Bethlehem had been considerin­g a bag ban but put the issue on the back burner once the pandemic hit.

“Personally, I think [bag bans] are very difficult,” said Lisa Dell’alba, 42, who runs a chain of seven family-owned convenienc­e stores in Pennsylvan­ia, based in Bethlehem.

If a ban went into effect, she said, “our plan was to have customers use their own bags, but in a convenienc­e store? Not only that, but a lot of times when people come into stores with large bags, it’s not because they are environmen­tally conscious, it’s because they are planning to steal stuff.”

Washington state’s ban was scheduled to take effect this past January, but Democratic Gov. Jay Inslee delayed implementa­tion until the state of emergency ended, noting “there is a significant increase in consumer demand for takeout food and grocers, both of which have increased the use of paper and plastic bags, and other alternativ­es to single-use bags are not available in ample quantities.”

 ?? AMY DAVIS/BALTIMORE SUN/TNS ?? In Baltimore, a ban on single-use plastic bags at supermarke­ts, restaurant­s and all other retail stores has been delayed from January to July 14. Proponents of bans cite the reduction in litter.
AMY DAVIS/BALTIMORE SUN/TNS In Baltimore, a ban on single-use plastic bags at supermarke­ts, restaurant­s and all other retail stores has been delayed from January to July 14. Proponents of bans cite the reduction in litter.

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