Journal Pioneer

Bag ban proposed in private member’s bill

- BY MITCH MACDONALD

P.E.I. could become the first province to eliminate singleuse checkout bags from grocery stores, says Liberal MLA Allen Roach.

Roach tabled a private member’s bill during Tuesday’s evening session of the legislatur­e that would largely prohibit businesses from providing the plastic checkout bags to customers. Roach said there are already some jurisdicti­ons in Canada that regulate the use of plastic bags through municipal bylaws.

However, if the act is passed, P.E.I. would be the first entire province to embrace the idea.

“We’re a very small province. I think this is something we can do, and as a province we can certainly be a leader in the country,” said Roach.

The act’s stated purpose is to reduce the use by businesses of single-use checkout bags, to reduce waste and environmen­tal damage and to promote responsibl­e, sustainabl­e business practices in P.E.I. The act would only allow businesses to provide a checkout bag if customers confirm they need a bag, the bag provided is paper or reusable and the customer is charged a fee.

The act also states that businesses cannot deny or discourage customers from using their own reusable bags. Roach said he also believes the public doesn’t need convincing on the issue, pointing to environmen­tal concerns of plastic in the ocean and the growing number of individual­s who have reusable grocery bags.

“I think a lot of Islanders are on board now,” said Roach. “We have to take it upon ourselves to look after our own environmen­t and make sure we don’t end up with stockpiles of plastic… I think it’s really a good first step.”

If passed, the act would be gradually implemente­d, with a fee of 15 cents per paper bag and $1 for a reusable bag charged to customers starting on July 1, 2018.

Those fees would be increased to 25 cents for a paper bag and $2 for a reusable bag on Jan. 1, 2019.

The act also proposes that corporate offenders that contravene the act could see a fine ranging from $100 to $10,000. Individual offenders could be fined between $50 to $500.

Those fines would also start on Jan. 1, 2019.

The act would not apply to bags used to package prescripti­on drugs, loose bulk items such as fruits or nuts, hardware, flowers, frozen foods and meats. Another exception would be large items that don’t easily fit into reusable bags. Roach said it was important for the act to be gradually implemente­d, in order to give businesses who’ve already purchased bags a chance to “phase them out.” “We’re not proposing that it’s going to be a hard hammer down, we’ll be looking for lots of time for people to catch on,” said Roach.

 ?? MITCH MACDONALD/THE GUARDIAN ?? Montague-Kilmuir MLA Allen Roach, left, chats with Summerside-Wilmot MLA Chris Palmer prior to Tuesday’s question period. Roach tabled a private member’s bill Tuesday evening that aims to reduce single-use, plastic checkout bags by P.E.I. businesses.
MITCH MACDONALD/THE GUARDIAN Montague-Kilmuir MLA Allen Roach, left, chats with Summerside-Wilmot MLA Chris Palmer prior to Tuesday’s question period. Roach tabled a private member’s bill Tuesday evening that aims to reduce single-use, plastic checkout bags by P.E.I. businesses.

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