The Palm Beach Post

Seattle first major U.S. city to ban straws

Compostabl­e paper, plastic straws allowed under ban.

- By Cleve R. Wootson Jr.

In one fell sip, Seattle on Sunday became the first major U.S. city to ban drinking straws, an environmen­tally friendly move that leaders hope will spark a nationwide conversati­on about small, everyday changes that people can make to protect the planet.

A decade ago, the city adopted an ordinance requiring that all one-time-use food items be compostabl­e or recyclable, according to the Seattle Times. But straws and other cutlery were exempted from that law because there were not many good alternativ­es.

So the straws stayed, along with the environmen­tal problems they cause.

Most plastic straws aren’t heavy enough to make it through industrial recycling sorters, according to the Strawless Ocean campaign, and can ruin an otherwise good load of recycling. Or they end up getting blown out of trash cans and car windows and ultimately wind up in the oceans, where they can hurt wildlife.

Strawless Ocean estimates that 71 percent of seabirds and 30 percent of turtles have some kind of plastic in their stomachs, which can cut their mortality rate in half.

Now customers at grocery stores, restaurant­s, food trucks, even institutio­nal cafeterias have to find another way to get liquid into their mouths. Compostabl­e paper and plastic straws are allowed under the ban.

People who have a medical need to use a straw are exempt.

Failure to comply may result in a $250 fine, although city leaders told the Times that the initial phase of the law is more about raising awareness than going table to table and giving tickets to rogue customers.

In September, 150 businesses participat­ed in Strawless in Seattle, an attempt to reduce the use of plastic straws. In that month alone, Strawless Ocean estimates, 2.3 million plastic straws were removed from the city.

“When you get your iced latte, you’re going to get a straw. When you go get your mojito, you’re probably going to get a straw,” Dune Ives, executive director of the Lonely Whale Foundation, which led the campaign, told the Times. “Once we start observing our daily life, it’s really easy to see how quick” the plastic adds up.

U.N. Goodwill Ambassador Adrian Grenier has lent his celebrity to the #StopSuckin­g campaign.

But consumers also have been putting pressure on companies to do away with plastic straws. There is, for example, a petition on Change.org demanding that McDonald’s switch to strawless lids.

“Imagine a world where we could stop consuming 500 million straws a day, just in America!” the campaign says.

 ?? JUSTIN SULLIVAN / GETTY IMAGES ?? Most plastic straws aren’t heavy enough to make it through industrial recycling sorters.
JUSTIN SULLIVAN / GETTY IMAGES Most plastic straws aren’t heavy enough to make it through industrial recycling sorters.

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